The Officer Everyone Praised Was the Man Who Sold Me at Five-congtien

I was sixteen when the police put me in a room with the man who had bought me and asked me to point him out.

The room was too bright.

The ceiling lights buzzed. The floor smelled like rain, old coffee, and disinfectant. Someone had wrapped a gray paper blanket around my shoulders, but it scratched my neck every time I moved, and the cocoa in my hands was too sweet for a mouth that still tasted like fear.

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At 6:18 p.m. on a Wednesday, the station intake form said I had been recovered.

That was the word they used.

Recovered.

As if I had been misplaced behind a couch.

As if eleven years could be corrected by writing my name on a clipboard.

Commander Morales crouched in front of me with the careful patience of a man approaching a wounded animal. He had gray at his temples, coffee on his breath, and a voice that tried not to shake.

“You are safe now, sweetheart,” he said.

I did not believe him yet.

Safety had always been a word other people used before they shut doors.

He pointed to the man cuffed in the corner.

The man’s shirt was stained. His wrists were locked in silver. He looked smaller than he had ever looked in the basement, and that made me angry. Monsters should not get to shrink the second witnesses appear.

“That is him, right?” Morales asked. “You can point. You do not have to say anything if you cannot.”

The man in the corner had bought me.

He had beaten me.

He had told me I should be grateful because he had paid good money.

But my eyes moved past him.

They landed on the young officer standing near the copy machine.

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