My Daughter Rang From Hospital: “Mum, They Beat Me”-heuh

“Mum… please come get me. My husband’s family beat me…”

The words came through the phone in a broken whisper, so thin and frightened that, for a second, Colonel Mara Vale did not recognise her own daughter.

Then the line went dead.

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Mara sat perfectly still behind her desk, the phone cooling in her hand, while the light above her hummed and rain scratched at the window.

There were folders open in front of her.

There were two officers waiting for her answer.

There was a wall clock clicking with the kind of ordinary rhythm that felt insulting when a life had just cracked open.

She had spent years teaching herself not to react before she understood a situation.

Fear, panic, anger, shock — all of it was supposed to be put in its proper place until the facts were clear.

But this was Lena.

Her only child.

The girl who used to ring from university to describe the weather as if every sunset had been made personally for her.

The woman who had smiled through her wedding photographs with one hand tucked into her mother’s elbow, whispering, “I’m all right, Mum. Honestly.”

Mara had believed her because mothers sometimes believe what their children need them to believe.

Now the silence on the line told her everything Lena had not been able to say.

The phone screen dimmed.

Mara stood so quickly that her chair hit the wall.

One of the officers at the desk looked up. “Colonel?”

“Cancel the review,” she said.

“There’s the division call in ten minutes.”

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