I swallowed hard.
Then asked the question that mattered most.
“Who did this?”
The doctor sighed.
“We don’t know.”
“What do you mean you don’t know?”
“Campus security found her unconscious near the science building.”
I stared at him.
“A university campus full of students?”
“Security cameras?”
“We’re reviewing footage.”
“Witnesses?”
His silence answered for him.
I stood slowly.
“You’re telling me my daughter was attacked near a crowded campus and nobody saw anything?”
The doctor looked away.
For the first time that night, something felt wrong.
Very wrong.
Because campuses have students.
Students have phones.
And attacks like this don’t simply happen without someone knowing the truth.
As I looked at Lily lying helpless in that hospital bed, one question consumed me:
Who was trying so hard to make sure nobody ever found out what really happened that night?
PART 2
By morning, the rain had stopped, but the world outside Lily’s window still looked drowned.
A police officer came at 6:20 a.m. He was young, nervous, and carried a notebook he barely opened.
“Mr. Mercer,” he said, “we’re treating this as an aggravated assault.”
“Treating it?” I repeated.
He shifted his weight. “We’re waiting on campus footage.”
“You mean the footage that should already exist?”
His eyes flicked toward the floor.
That tiny movement told me more than his words did.
I had spent years reading fear on men’s faces. Fear before an ambush. Fear before a lie collapsed. Fear before someone realized the truth was bigger than they could control.
“What are you not saying?” I asked.
The officer swallowed. “Two cameras near the science building were down.”
“Down?”
“Yes, sir.”
“On the same night my daughter was attacked?”
He didn’t answer.
I stepped closer. “How convenient.”
Before he could respond, Lily made a faint sound from the bed.
I turned instantly.
Her good eye had opened a little wider. Her fingers moved weakly against the blanket.
“Sweetheart?” I rushed to her side. “Don’t try to talk.”
Her hand trembled.
The nurse brought a clipboard and a pen. Lily’s fingers curled around it, slow and painful. Every movement seemed to cost her strength. She wrote one jagged word.
MASON
The officer leaned in.
“Is Mason the person who attacked you?”
Lily’s hand shook violently.
She wrote again.
NOT HIM
Then, beneath it:
HE SAW
My breath caught.
“Who is Mason?”
The officer frowned. “Mason Reed. Student. Junior. Son of Senator Elaine Reed.”
The room went cold.
Even before the officer said the rest, I understood why cameras went dark, why witnesses disappeared, why nobody wanted to speak.
A senator’s son.
A college campus.
A girl with a shattered jaw.
And a silence so thick it smelled like money.
By noon, a woman from the university arrived wearing a gray suit and a sympathetic smile that never touched her eyes.
“Mr. Mercer, I’m Dean Patricia Caldwell. First, let me say how deeply sorry we are.”
“Don’t,” I said.
She blinked. “Excuse me?”
“Don’t start with sorry if you came here to manage me.”
Her smile tightened.
“We’re cooperating fully with authorities.”
“Were the cameras working?”
“That’s under review.”
“Was Mason Reed questioned?”
“I can’t discuss other students.”
“Was my daughter found alone?”
“Campus security discovered her.”
“That’s not what I asked.”
Dean Caldwell looked toward Lily’s bed, then back at me.
“Mr. Mercer, emotions are high. I understand that. But public speculation could harm your daughter.”
I laughed once, softly.
She flinched.
“You think I’m worried about speculation?” I said. “My daughter can’t speak because someone broke her face. You’re worried about headlines.”
Her face hardened for half a second.

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