Lucy walked beside me clutching my hand with both of hers, her small fingers locked around mine as if she believed letting go could pull her back into that car. She didn’t chatter the way she usually did. She didn’t ask questions about the hospital or point out interesting signs. She moved like a tiny soldier.

The doctor had said all the reassuring phrases: her vital signs were good, no lasting physical injury apparent, keep an eye on her hydration, follow up with her pediatrician, watch for behavioral changes. The phrases looked stable on paper. They felt flimsy in my hands.

Chris had arrived in his car, and we drove home with Lucy in the back seat, staring out the window so intensely it was like she was memorizing the streets in case she ever needed to find her way alone. Chris kept glancing at her in the rearview mirror, his face tight.

“You okay, kiddo?” he asked softly.

Lucy nodded once without looking at him.

That nod— small, obedient— made something twist in my chest. Lucy was usually a storyteller. She narrated her world. She asked why a hundred times a day. Silence wasn’t her nature. Silence was something she’d learned.