I took out the camera and began photographing everything with clinical precision. The finger-shaped bruises on her neck. The swelling around her eye. The split lip. The bruises and scratches on her forearms where she had tried to shield herself. I bagged her torn, bloodstained sweater for DNA testing.

“Mom,” Rachel whispered from the bed, her good eye following me. “My phone… it keeps buzzing.”

I picked it up from the tray beside her things. The screen glowed with incoming messages.

All from Dylan.

I unlocked the phone with her passcode and began screenshotting every text, sending them directly to my secure work email.

They were not apologies. They were threats.

1:15 a.m.: You’re making a huge mistake, Rachel.
1:22 a.m.: If you tell your mother anything, if you tell the police, I will destroy you. You know I can.
1:30 a.m.: Come home now before I come find you and make you.

Not panic. Not remorse.

Control. Intimidation. Terroristic threats.

He was documenting his own pattern for me.

About an hour later, Dr. Mercer, an ER attending physician I had worked with on assault cases for years, pulled back the curtain and stepped inside. His face was grim in a way I had rarely seen.