The Folded Drawing, Wrong Pills, And Doorbell That Broke A Mansion’s Perfect Story-QuynhTranJP

The county social worker did not rush when I opened the door.

She stepped into the foyer with rain shining on the shoulders of her navy coat, shook her umbrella once over the marble threshold, and looked past me into the kitchen.

Her name was Patrice Bell.

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I knew that because twenty minutes earlier, I had spoken to her from the laundry room with the dryer running beside my hip, my voice low, my phone pressed hard against my ear.

Now she held a flat brown envelope in one hand and a plastic evidence sleeve in the other.

Marissa saw the envelope first.

Daniel saw the badge clipped to Patrice’s coat.

Ethan saw neither. His eyes stayed on my hand, on the folded drawing I had refused to surrender.

The officer straightened.

Patrice walked into the kitchen without asking permission.

That changed the room more than shouting would have.

The Holloway kitchen had been built for display. White stone counters. Brass fixtures. A refrigerator wide enough to hide behind. Bowls of polished green apples no one ate. But when Patrice set the brown envelope beside the chocolate milk, every expensive object around it looked suddenly decorative and useless.

Marissa recovered first.

“This is inappropriate,” she said.

Her voice was still soft. Still trained. Still the kind of voice that made people wonder whether they had misunderstood her.

Patrice did not answer her.

She looked at the officer. “Has the child been separated from the adults in question?”

The officer’s hand paused on his radio.

“No,” he said.

Patrice’s mouth tightened by the smallest amount.

“Separate him now.”

Daniel took one step forward. “That’s my son.”

Patrice turned her head.

“Then you’ll want this done correctly.”

Daniel stopped.

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