Page 127
My fists clench.
I broke my arm. I had to tell the doctor I fell.
Her dad shoved her to the ground, and she had to fucking lie about it.
I can’t imagine how that must’ve felt. To be in pain, surrounded bya hospital full of people, but to still be alone.
Those doctors failed her.
Society failed her.
I turn off the lights and cross to the bed.
I failed her.
I get into bed as slowly as possible, not wanting to wake her.
Under the blankets, I roll onto my side, facing my Rosie.
She’s on her back, face turned away from me, hands folded on her chest.
I scoot closer.
I need to touch her.
When she let me help her change, I had to grit my teeth at all the bruises and scrapes that covered her body.
The side of her thigh.
Her knees.
Her arms.
Her ankle.
I wanted to scream at the injustice of it all.
Hasn’t she been through enough?
I slide my hand across the inches between us, then gently rest it on her stomach. The one place I know it’s safe to touch.
And with my shame hidden in the darkness, I cry.
I did earlier.
Couldn’t stop myself when I was reading those fucking letters.
But I was still trying to hold back.
I still had things to do.
But now, with her in my bed, with her visible wounds treated, I let out the pent-up rage.
The panic.
The sorrow.
The fucking guilt.