Isaac performed the initial assessment with extraordinary gentleness, never pushing beyond what Owen could tolerate, allowing long silences, offering paper and crayons, letting the child speak through drawing when words failed. William watched with professional appreciation and paternal agony as Owen sketched a square shed with no windows, then blackened the inside so thoroughly the paper tore.

“No light,” Owen whispered.

Isaac nodded. “Okay.”

“And if I cried,” Owen said, barely audible, “it got longer.”

William looked down because his face had gone traitorous with tears.

Later, after a nurse settled Owen with medication mild enough not to dull him but strong enough to stop the trembling, Isaac stepped into the hallway with William and shut the door most of the way.

His voice when he spoke was clinical, but soft. “The exam found injuries in various stages of healing.”

William braced one hand against the wall.

“Some are recent. Some are older. There’s scarring across the upper back consistent with repeated strikes. The behavioral profile is highly concerning for prolonged abuse—physical and psychological.”