Part 2: The first officer stepped into the exam room with his hand already lifted, not in threat, but in warning, like everyone needed to slow down before one wrong word scared Emma even more. Dr. Stevens gave him the bottle, the dose count, and the timeline. The room felt smaller with every word, and Emma pressed her bunny against her chest. I watched the officer’s expression harden when he heard “our secret.”
Then my husband called back.
I put him on speaker because my hands were not steady enough to hold the phone. He started with the sentence I knew was coming: “My mom would never do that.” Dr. Stevens did not raise his voice. He simply said, “Your daughter has been given an adult antipsychotic without medical reason or parental consent.”
My husband stopped breathing for a second.
The officer asked where Diane was.
At our house.
Alone.
With access to Emma’s room, the trash, the medicine cabinet, and whatever else she had hidden before I found the bottle.
Then the receptionist knocked once, opened the door, and whispered, “There’s a woman in the lobby asking for Emma.”
Through the crack, I saw Diane standing there with Emma’s stuffed bunny tucked under one arm.
She was smiling like a grandmother arriving to save the day.
Then Emma saw the pocket of Diane’s cardigan move.
She made one tiny sound.
And every adult in the room turned.