Marcus Kicked In My Door To Save My Son — Then The X-Rays Exposed Something Even Worse-thuyhien

“Oh, God—Ethan’s arm.”

Marcus’s voice came through the speaker raw and low, like the words had scraped his throat on the way out. Then I heard him move fast—boots on hardwood, a child crying somewhere deeper in the house, the slam of something hitting a wall, a man cursing, the sharp crack of my brother’s voice when he wanted obedience more than conversation.

“Step away from him.”

Image

I missed the next red light by inches. Horns tore open behind me. The inside of my car smelled like hot plastic, sweat, and old fast-food salt from the takeout bag under the passenger seat. Sunlight flashed across the windshield so bright it made the road look white for a second.

Then Marcus came back on the line, breathing hard.

“I’ve got Ethan.”

The breath I took after that hurt going in.

“Is he conscious?”

“Yes.”

“Is Kyle there?”

A pause. Somewhere in the background, Ethan whimpered.

“Yes,” Marcus said. “He’s here.”

I heard another sound after that. Not a punch. Not a struggle. Just Marcus shifting his weight and saying, in that terrible calm voice, “You move again, I’ll put you through the drywall before the police even hit the curb.”

By the time I turned onto our street, two patrol cars were already there, blue lights jumping across mailboxes, pickup trucks, and the pale siding of the houses. Marcus stood in my front yard with Ethan pressed against his chest. My son’s face was blotchy and wet, his little hand twisted in Marcus’s shirt. His left arm hung strange and careful against his pajama top, held close to his body the way children protect pain without understanding the word for it.

I stopped my car half on the curb.

The gravel bit through the soles of my shoes when I jumped out. Ethan saw me and made that sound kids make when they’ve been brave too long.

“Daddy.”

I took him from Marcus and felt the heat coming off him right away. He smelled like tears, laundry detergent, and the sweet stale scent of cereal milk dried somewhere on his shirt. His cheek was damp against my neck. His breathing came in fast little catches.

“It’s okay,” I said, even though my voice shook so hard the words hardly sounded like mine. “I’ve got you. I’ve got you.”

His fingers dug into the back of my collar.

“He got mad,” Ethan whispered into my shoulder. “I dropped the remote.”

I shut my eyes for one second. No longer than that.

An officer was coming down the porch steps with Kyle in front of him, wrists pinned behind his back. Kyle’s face had gone a chalky gray under his patchy beard. He wore jeans and Lena’s old Falcons hoodie like he had every right to be standing in my house on a Tuesday afternoon. He looked at me once, then away.

“What happened to the child?” the officer asked Marcus.

Marcus pointed toward the hallway inside. “Bat on the floor. Kid was between the linen closet and the wall. Arm swelling already. Guy smelled like beer and tried to say he ‘tripped.’”

Read More