At Riverside Methodist Hospital, doctors confirmed that my ribs were badly bruised but not broken. For the first time in a long while, medical professionals spoke to me with kindness and respect. They asked questions without judgment and gave me choices instead of orders.
Later, a victim advocate named Hannah Brooks arrived. She listened carefully as I explained how Derek controlled nearly every aspect of my life. He managed money, took my paycheck, monitored my movements, and used fear to keep me obedient. What he called discipline was really control.
As the conversation continued, I admitted something even harder: my mother knew more than she ever admitted. She may not have witnessed every incident, but she knew enough to understand I was suffering. Saying those words out loud hurt more than any bruise Derek had left behind.
With Hannah’s help, I requested an emergency protection order. Police documented my injuries, doctors submitted reports, and suddenly the threats Derek had always hidden behind closed doors became evidence. For the first time, my story existed on paper, not just inside my head-
