But the evidence was literally inside my body, written in scar tissue and old wounds. “Tell me about your childhood,” Dr. Hayes said, pulling up a chair.
“After your mother died. What was it like?”
And for the second time in twelve hours, I found myself telling the truth. I told him about Diane’s coldness and how she encouraged Douglas to be harder on me.
I told him about the escalation from harsh words to rough handling to outright violence. I told him about learning to be invisible, to be silent, to never ask for anything because asking meant punishment. Dr.
Hayes listened without interrupting, his expression growing darker with every revelation. When I finished, he was quiet for a long moment. “You survived,” he finally said.
“You got out. You built a life. You became a teacher.
That takes incredible strength. But Stacy, you don’t have to keep surviving him. You can actually be free of him.”
“I don’t know how,” I admitted.
“That’s why we’re here,” a new voice said. Patricia entered the room, and she was not alone. Behind her was a woman with steel-gray hair and sharp eyes, maybe in her early fifties.
“Stacy, this is Detective Morgan. She’s investigating the assault from last night.”
Detective Morgan shook my hand gently, careful of my IV. “Ms.
Wallace, I’ve reviewed the security footage from the emergency room and listened to Dr. Hayes’ recording. What your father did was criminal assault.
I’d like to take your statement if you’re up for it.”
I nodded, my mouth dry. Detective Morgan sat down and pulled out a notebook. She asked me to walk through the events of the previous night in detail.
I did, my voice steadier than I expected. Then she asked about my history with Douglas, and I repeated what I had told Dr. Hayes.
She took careful notes, asking clarifying questions, her face impassive but her eyes kind. When I finished, she closed her notebook. “Ms.
Wallace, based on the evidence we have, we can definitely pursue charges for last night’s assault. But I want to be honest with you. Building a case for long-term abuse is harder.
The old injuries are documented now, but without previous reports, it becomes your word against his.”
However, she paused, glancing at Patricia. “There’s something you should know.”
Patricia pulled out a tablet and turned it toward me. On the screen was a hospital intake photo of a woman with dark hair and tired eyes.
She looked to be in her thirties, with a familiar sadness in her expression. “This woman came to this hospital three months ago with injuries similar to yours. Bruising, old fractures, signs of long-term physical trauma.
She listed Douglas Wallace as her emergency contact.”
My heart stopped. “Who is she?”
“Her name is Jennifer Wallace,” Patricia said. “Does that name mean anything to you?”
I shook my head, staring at the photo.
There was something about her face, something in the shape of her eyes and the line of her jaw. “I don’t know any Jennifer.”
Patricia and Detective Morgan exchanged glances. “Stacy,” Patricia said gently.
“Jennifer is your half-sister. She’s Douglas’ daughter from his first marriage before he married your mother.”
The room tilted. I had a sister.
An older sister I had never known about. “That’s impossible. My dad was never married before my mom.”
“He was,” Detective Morgan said.
“They divorced when Jennifer was sixteen. The court records are sealed because Jennifer was a minor, but we were able to access them as part of our investigation. Douglas Wallace has a pattern, Stacy.
Jennifer reported abuse and cut contact with him years ago, but recently she tried to reconnect, hoping he had changed. The same cycle repeated. He hurt her.
His current family enabled it. Jennifer pressed charges, but they were dropped due to lack of evidence. It was her word against his, and his lawyer was very good.”
I could not breathe.
“Where is she now?”
“She’s willing to talk to you,” Patricia said. “If you want to meet her.”
I nodded, unable to speak. I had a sister.
I had a sister who had survived the same father, the same cruelty, the same cycle of hope and pain. I was not alone. I had never been alone.
They discharged me from the hospital two days later with a prescription for pain medication, strict instructions to rest, and nowhere to go. I could not return to my apartment alone while recovering from surgery. I had no family I could call.
My co-workers were friendly, but not close enough for this kind of ask. I sat on the edge of the hospital bed in my street clothes, feeling untethered. Patricia solved the problem.
“There’s a crisis center for abuse survivors about twenty minutes from here. They have private rooms and medical staff on site. You can stay there during your recovery, just until you’re back on your feet.
It’s safe and confidential.”
Pride made me want to refuse. The idea of staying in a shelter, of being classified as an abuse victim, felt humiliating. But practicality won.
I had nowhere else to go, and my abdomen still hurt too much to manage alone. “Okay,” I whispered. Patricia drove me there herself, chatting casually about the weather and the traffic, giving me space to sit with my thoughts.
The crisis center was a plain brick building in a quiet neighborhood, indistinguishable from the houses around it. Inside, it was clean and calm, with soft lighting and comfortable furniture. A staff member named Caroline showed me to a small private room with a bed, a dresser, and a window overlooking a garden.
“You’re safe here,” she said. “No one knows this location except residents and staff. Take all the time you need.”
I unpacked the small bag of belongings Patricia had helped me gather from my apartment and lay down on the bed.
Exhausted, I slept for fourteen hours straight, my body finally allowing itself to rest now that it felt safe. When I woke, it was late morning. I showered carefully, avoiding the surgical incisions, and dressed in soft clothes.
My phone had been buzzing intermittently. I had seventeen missed calls from Douglas, thirty-two text messages from Amber, and five voicemails I could not bring myself to listen to. I turned it off and left it in the dresser drawer.
Caroline knocked on my door around noon. “You have a visitor,” she said. “A woman named Jennifer.
She says Patricia told her you were here. Do you want to see her?”
My heart hammered. “Yes.”
Jennifer was waiting in a small common room with large windows and plants on every surface.
She stood when I entered, and I saw immediately that we looked alike. Same dark hair, same brown eyes, same thin build. She was taller than me and older by several years, but the resemblance was undeniable.
“Stacy,” she said, her voice soft. “I’m Jennifer. I’m your sister.”
I started crying before I could stop myself.
Jennifer crossed the room and hugged me carefully, mindful of my recent surgery. We stood there for a long time, two strangers who were not strangers at all, holding each other in a room full of light. When we finally sat down, Jennifer told me her story.
She had grown up as Douglas’ only child until her parents divorced when she was sixteen. “He was always volatile,” she said. “Angry, controlling.
He hit my mother a few times, but mostly he targeted me. By the time I was thirteen, it was constant grabbing, shoving, slapping. He said he was making me tough, preparing me for the real world.”
“My mother finally got the courage to leave him when I begged her to.
We moved to another state. I changed my last name when I turned eighteen. I thought I was done with him forever.”
“What made you reach out?” I asked.
Jennifer looked down at her hands. “My mother died last year. Cancer.
In her final weeks, she made me promise I would try to reconnect with him. She said people can change, that I should give him a chance to make amends. I was skeptical, but I loved my mother, so I tried.
I wrote him letters. He responded. We met for coffee.
He seemed different, older, softer. He apologized for what he did when I was young. He introduced me to Diane and Amber.
He said he wanted to be a family again.”
“Let me guess,” I said bitterly. “It didn’t last.”
“Three visits,” Jennifer said. “That’s how long the act lasted.
The third time I went to his house, I disagreed with something he said about politics. He grabbed my arm, twisted it, told me I was disrespectful. When I pulled away, he

