Part 2
The bruises on Harper’s arm were not random.
I had seen enough injuries to know the difference between childhood clumsiness and force. Kids fell. Kids bumped into tables. Kids collected scrapes like trophies.
But fingerprints were different.
Fingerprints meant someone had held on when the child tried to pull away.
I kept my voice calm.
“Harper,” I said softly, “who did this?”
Her face went pale.
She yanked her sleeve down so fast her little fingers fumbled with the cuff.
“Nobody.”
“Harper.”
“Nobody,” she repeated, sharper this time.
Not angry.
Terrified.
From the kitchen, Clara’s voice floated in like warm poison.
“Everything okay in there?”
Harper froze.
I looked toward the hallway.
Then back at the child in front of me.
“Fine,” I called. “Just helping with her sweater.”
Clara appeared anyway.
She leaned against the doorframe in her cream silk blouse, coffee cup in hand, smiling as if she had walked into a family postcard.
Harper immediately lowered her eyes.
Clara noticed.
Of course she noticed.
“What happened?” she asked.
“Nothing,” I said.
Her smile stayed in place, but something behind her eyes sharpened.
“Harper?”
The little girl swallowed.
“Nothing, Mommy.”
Clara stepped closer and brushed Harper’s hair behind her ear.
The gesture looked tender.
Harper trembled beneath it.
“Good girl,” Clara whispered.
That was when I understood something terrible.
Harper wasn’t afraid of being hurt.
She was afraid of being believed.
That afternoon, I called in sick for the first time in four years.
Then I drove to Harper’s school.
I did not go inside right away. I sat in the parking lot with both hands on the steering wheel, staring at the brick building while anger moved through me like a slow fire.
As a nurse, I was a mandated reporter.
As a stepfather, I was something more dangerous.
I was a witness.
When the final bell rang, children poured out in bright backpacks and messy laughter. Harper came last, walking alone, Scout the fox tucked under one arm.
The moment she saw me, she stopped.
“Where’s Mommy?” she asked.
“At home.”
Her face drained.
“I want to talk to you somewhere safe,” I said.
She looked around like the trees might be listening.
“There is no safe,” she whispered.
I crouched down.
“There is with me.”
For a moment she studied my face with an intensity no seven-year-old should have. Then, slowly, she reached into her backpack.
Her hand shook as she pulled out a small plastic bag.
Inside was a blackened scrap of fabric.
And a photograph.
The photo was old, creased, hidden badly and handled often.
It showed Harper at maybe four years old, standing in front of a backyard shed.
Behind her, flames climbed into the night.
At the edge of the picture stood Clara.
Smiling.
I felt the blood leave my hands.
“What is this?” I asked.
Harper’s lips barely moved.
“The night Mommy said I started the fire.”
I stared at the picture.
Harper looked at me with wet, desperate eyes.
“But I didn’t.”
A car horn blared somewhere behind us, but I barely heard it.
“Who took this photo?”
Harper hugged Scout tighter.
“Daddy did.”
I blinked.
“Your father?”
She nodded.
My thoughts collided.
Clara had told me Harper’s father died before the fire.
A car accident, she’d said. Tragic. Sudden. Clean.
But Harper was looking at me now with the hollow certainty of a child who had learned truth was dangerous.
“Harper,” I said carefully, “your dad was alive that night?”
Her chin trembled.
“He tried to take me away.”
Before I could speak, my phone buzzed.
Clara.
I let it ring.
Harper looked at the screen and began crying without sound.
Then a text appeared.
Bring her home now.
Three dots followed.
Then another message.
Before she says something she’ll regret.
I looked at Harper.
She whispered, “The fire is coming.”
That was when I knew we were not going home.
Not yet.