The Bathroom Cabinet Evidence Made His Calm Smile Disappear In Front Of Two Officers-thuyhien

The detective did not open the cabinet right away.

That was the first thing I noticed.

She stood in my upstairs hallway at 9:09 p.m., one hand resting near her radio, the other holding the thin $38.97 receipt I had given her with fingers that would not stop shaking. The bathroom door was open behind Mark. Steam curled into the hall. Lavender soap, damp cotton, and that same sweet medicinal smell clung to the air.

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Mark’s right hand was still on the doorknob.

His smile had not fully left his face, but it had changed shape. It looked pinned there now. Forced. Too careful.

“Officers,” he said softly, “my wife is confused.”

The female officer did not look at him.

She looked at Sophie.

My daughter was half-hidden behind my legs, one small hand hooked into the hem of my shirt. Her hair was wet at the ends. Her pajama sleeve stuck to her wrist. The pink bunny I had grabbed from the hallway was pressed so hard against her chest that one floppy ear covered her chin.

The officer crouched down, slow enough not to startle her.

“Hi, Sophie. My name is Officer Patel. You are not in trouble.”

Sophie’s eyes flicked to Mark.

He tilted his head just slightly.

Not a threat anyone else would have noticed.

But I saw Sophie’s fingers tighten.

Officer Patel saw it too.

Her voice stayed calm.

“Ma’am, please take Sophie downstairs.”

Mark’s smile twitched.

“Why would she need to leave? This is a family misunderstanding.”

The second officer, a tall man named Reeves, stepped one inch closer to Mark.

“Sir, step into the hall.”

Mark gave a tiny laugh.

“You can’t be serious.”

No one laughed with him.

I lifted Sophie into my arms. Her skin felt cold from the bath, but the back of her neck was hot. She tucked her face into my shoulder and did not look up as I carried her down the stairs.

The living room looked exactly the same as it had one hour earlier. Cartoon stickers on the coffee table. A half-empty juice box near the couch. Mark’s work shoes lined neatly by the front door. The normalness of it made my stomach twist.

At 9:18 p.m., Officer Patel came downstairs.

She held a clear evidence bag.

Inside was the kitchen timer.

Inside another bag was the paper cup.

Then she held up a third bag, and my knees nearly gave out.

It was a small spiral notebook.

Blue cover. Damp corners. Mark’s handwriting on the front.

SOPHIE ROUTINE.

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