I walked down the hallway of our apartment in Chicago, thinking about timing, traffic, and whether we’d make it to the recital hall near Millennium Park on time.

I had no idea my life was about to split in two.

When I stepped into her room and closed the door, Emily was sitting on the edge of her bed, back turned to me. Her shoulders were tense.

She lifted her shirt.

And I forgot how to breathe.

Purple marks. Finger-shaped bruises. Too many.

Not a fall. Not clumsiness.

Grip. Pressure. Repetition.

My blood went cold, but my voice came out steady.

“Who?”

Her fingers trembled over the keys of the small practice keyboard by her bed.

It took her a long time to answer.

“Mr. Keller,” she whispered.

Three months.

Three damn months.

Daniel Keller — the private piano instructor my wife, Laura, had insisted on hiring.

“He trained at Juilliard.”
“He has connections.”
“He can get Emily into the right programs.”

Three months.

“Did he do this to you?” I asked quietly.

She nodded.

“He said if I told anyone… I’d never get into the conservatory. That no one would believe me.” Her voice cracked. “Mom knows.”

That was the real blow.

“What do you mean Mom knows?”

Emily’s eyes were dry. Too dry.