My daughter, Layla Mercer, nineteen years old, sophomore at Bradley University, was lying behind a curtain ten feet away with wires holding her mouth shut, bruises blooming purple under both eyes, and blood still dried in the curls near her ear.
She couldn’t speak.
She couldn’t scream.
She couldn’t even ask me why.
I had been through war. I had held men together with my hands while helicopters chopped the night apart overhead. I had been shot twice, stabbed once, and left in a ditch outside Mosul with a radio that had no signal and a prayer I didn’t believe in.
None of that prepared me for seeing my little girl broken in a hospital bed.
The call came at 11:47 p.m. on a Thursday.
I remember the time because I had just turned off the TV. Some late-night host was laughing at his own joke, and I was thinking about washing the coffee mug in the sink before heading upstairs. My phone buzzed on the table.
Unknown number.
I almost let it ring.
Then something moved in my gut, old instinct, the kind that kept me alive overseas.
I answered.
“Is this Dominic Mercer?”
The woman’s voice was calm in the way hospital voices are calm when they are trying not to scare you too quickly.
“Yes.”
“This is Mercy General Hospital. Your daughter, Layla Mercer, has been admitted to the emergency room. You need to come immediately.”
My house went silent. Even the refrigerator hum seemed to disappear.
“What happened?”
“Sir, I can’t discuss details over the phone.”
“What happened to my daughter?”
A pause.
“She was attacked, sir. It’s serious.”
After that, my memory comes in pieces. Keys in my hand. Tires screaming against wet pavement. The smell of rain through a cracked window. My fingers locked so hard around the steering wheel that my knuckles burned.
Mercy General glowed against the night like a ship in fog. Automatic doors opened, and the smell hit me first. Antiseptic, old coffee, plastic gloves. Nurses moved behind the desk. A security guard watched me come in and stood halfway out of his chair.
“Layla Mercer,” I said.
The nurse looked at my face and stopped typing.
“Room 214, but sir—”
I didn’t wait.
The hallway lights were too bright. My boots slapped the floor. Somewhere a baby cried. Somewhere a machine beeped steadily like nothing in the world had changed.
Then I reached her room.
And the world changed forever.
Layla’s face was wrapped in white bandages stained pink at the edges. One eye was swollen shut; the other was only a dark slit. Tubes ran into her arm. Her hands were bruised. Her favorite blue hoodie, the one I bought her last Christmas, lay folded in a clear plastic evidence bag on a chair.
I dropped to my knees beside the bed.
“Baby,” I whispered. “Daddy’s here.”
She didn’t move.
A doctor stepped in behind me and said, “Mr. Mercer?”
I kept my eyes on my daughter.
“Who did this?”
“We don’t know yet. Campus security found her unconscious near the science building.”
“No witnesses?”
He hesitated.
“None have come forward.”
A college campus full of students, cameras, cars, dorm windows, and nobody saw three people beat my daughter nearly to death.