I sat by my son’s hospital bed, watching him sleep, when the head nurse brushed past and slipped a note into my hand: “Don’t come again. He’s lying. Check the camera at 3 a.m.” My stomach dropped. That night, I replayed the footage alone in the dark. My hands started shaking—because what I saw wasn’t an accident, and the truth was far more terrifying than his broken bone.

I sat by my son’s hospital bed, watching him sleep, when the head nurse brushed past and slipped a note into my hand: “Don’t come again. He’s lying. Check the camera at 3 a.m.” My stomach dropped. That night, I replayed the footage alone in the dark. My hands started shaking—because what I saw wasn’t an accident, and the truth was far more terrifying than his broken bone.

The hospital room was dim except for the monitor glow and the thin line of hallway light under the door. My son Eli slept with one arm flung across his chest, the other wrapped in a clean white cast that looked too big for a kid who still had a baby face when he forgot to scowl. A broken bone was supposed to be simple—painful, inconvenient, but simple.

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