The Stuffed Rabbit From Bath Time Held The One Timestamp My Husband Couldn’t Explain-Cherry

The parking lot lights made Michael’s face look yellow through the glass. His smile stayed in place for half a second too long, like his mouth had not received the message from the rest of his body.

Detective Harris did not move toward him. He only lowered the evidence bag a few inches, enough for Michael to see the rabbit’s torn ear through the clear plastic.

The lobby smelled like burnt coffee, floor wax, and wet winter coats. Somewhere behind the front desk, a printer coughed out paper one sheet at a time. Renata’s small fingers tightened in the hem of my sweatshirt.

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Michael opened the glass door.

“Sarah,” he said softly, the same voice he used in church, at parent-teacher night, beside neighbors’ mailboxes. “You scared me. I’ve been looking everywhere.”

Detective Harris stepped between us.

“Sir, keep your hands where I can see them.”

Michael blinked at him, then gave a small laugh that did not touch his eyes.

“Is this really necessary? My wife is exhausted. She’s been anxious for weeks.”

Renata made a sound in her throat and pressed her face into my side.

That sound changed the detective’s posture. His shoulders squared. His left hand lifted just enough to signal another officer at the desk.

Michael saw it.

His gaze slid from the detective to the rabbit, then to me.

“What did you do?” he asked.

I adjusted Renata’s purple hoodie around her shoulders. My hand did not shake this time.

“I drove here.”

For the first time since I had known him, Michael had no polished answer ready.

Detective Harris guided me and Renata into a small interview room with beige walls, a square table, three chairs, and a box of tissues nobody touched. A woman named Officer Patel brought Renata apple juice with a straw and a blanket from a supply closet. She crouched to Renata’s level but did not crowd her.

“Hi, sweetheart,” she said. “You don’t have to talk to me right now. You can just sit with Mommy.”

Renata looked at the blanket first, then at the door.

“Is Daddy mad?”

The room went still.

I lowered myself beside her chair. The vinyl seat was cold through my jeans.

“No, baby. You’re safe with me.”

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