My Son Was Beaten In His Grandfather’s Driveway While Men Laughed-Teptep

My eight-year-old son was beaten nearly to death in his grandfather’s driveway while three grown men laughed and held him down.

By the time I reached the hospital, I was not thinking like a husband, a father, or even a man.

I was thinking like the person I had spent years trying not to be.

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The corridor smelt of disinfectant, burnt coffee, and wet coats.

The rain had followed everyone inside, darkening shoulders, dripping from umbrellas, leaving little crescents of water beneath plastic chairs.

Somewhere beyond the emergency doors, a child was crying in short, tired bursts.

A vending machine hummed against the wall, bright and cheerful in a way that felt almost insulting.

My hands were locked together so tightly that the skin over my knuckles looked pale.

I kept staring at the floor because looking up meant facing the clock.

And the clock meant time had passed while my son was alone.

My phone buzzed again in my palm.

Christine.

Eight missed calls.

Eight times my wife had pressed my name, and not once had she appeared in that corridor.

I did not know what to do with that fact yet.

There are certain things your mind refuses to accept all at once.

It lets them in slowly, like cold air under a door.

Mrs Patterson, our elderly neighbour, had been the one to ring me first.

Her voice had shaken so badly that I barely understood the first sentence.

She said Jake had been seen walking along the pavement with one shoe missing.

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