The situation was tangled, a knot of silence and fear that no one dared to untie. The girl’s whispers in that diner bathroom were the only thread I could pull.
The authorities were scheduled to send a social worker next week. A formality, a hollow hope.
I wouldn’t be allowed to attend, my concerns sidelined by bureaucracy.
The clock was ticking, and I was caught in this limbo.
The waitress moved about, refilling cups, her eyes never meeting mine. She knew more than she let on, but fear kept her silent.
Every moment ratcheted up the tension, each second ticking away like a countdown.
The girl’s plea echoed in my mind, a haunting refrain I couldn’t shake off.
It was a call for help, a lifeline thrown into the storm, but I wasn’t sure I was ready to catch it.
The diner continued its quiet hum, oblivious to the silent battle playing out within its walls.
Regulars laughed, forks clinked against plates, and yet, the weight of the situation pressed down on me.
