PART 2: “YOUR DAUGHTER ISN’T AFRAID OF THE DENTIST… SHE’S AFRAID OF HIM.”
Dr. Harris kept talking to Lily in that same calm, practiced voice dentists use with children.
But something had changed.
I saw it the moment he leaned closer to examine her mouth.
His expression froze.
Just for half a second.
Then his eyes flicked toward Daniel.
Not casually.
Carefully.
Like a man recognizing something he wished he hadn’t.
“Does this tooth hurt here?” Dr. Harris asked gently, tapping near the back molar.
Lily flinched violently.
Not from pain.
From fear.
Daniel moved immediately.
“She’s always dramatic about doctors,” he said with a chuckle.
Too fast.
Too rehearsed.
Dr. Harris didn’t laugh.
Instead, he adjusted the overhead light and said something strange.
“Lily, sweetheart… can you open a little wider for me?”
She obeyed silently.
Then Dr. Harris went completely still.
His gloved hand paused inside her mouth.
I watched his eyes narrow slightly as he examined the inside of her cheek.
Then he slowly removed his tools.
“How long has she had this injury?” he asked.
“Injury?” I repeated.
Daniel answered first.
“She bites her cheeks when she sleeps.”
Dr. Harris looked at him again.
This time longer.
Too long.
Then he smiled politely.
“I’d like to take an X-ray.”
Daniel crossed his arms immediately.
“For a toothache?”
“Just to rule things out.”
The room suddenly felt colder.
Lily’s hands were shaking in her lap.
And then I noticed something horrifying:
She wasn’t looking at me.
She was watching Daniel.
Watching him the way hostages watch unstable people.
The hygienist led Lily to the imaging room while Daniel stayed behind with me.
The second the door closed, Dr. Harris lowered his voice.
“Has Lily had any falls recently?”
I blinked.
“What?”
“Any injuries to her mouth? Bruising? Accidents?”
“No…”
Before I could finish, Daniel stepped closer.
“Why are you asking that?”
Dr. Harris held his gaze calmly.
“Because I’m a doctor.”
Daniel smiled.
But there was something ugly beneath it now.
“She’s a kid,” he said. “Kids get hurt.”
Dr. Harris nodded slowly.
“Yes,” he said quietly. “They do.”
When Lily came back from the X-rays, her face looked pale.
She climbed into the chair again without speaking.
Dr. Harris studied the scans on the monitor for a very long time.
Too long.
Then he turned toward us with a careful smile.
“There’s no cavity,” he said.
I frowned.
“Then why is she hurting?”
He hesitated.
Then:
“I think the pain may be coming from repeated trauma.”
My stomach dropped.
“Trauma?”
Daniel laughed lightly.
“She grinds her teeth.”
Dr. Harris didn’t answer immediately.
Instead, he crouched beside Lily.
“Sweetheart,” he said gently, “has anyone hurt your mouth?”
Lily froze.
Completely froze.
Daniel’s voice sharpened instantly.
“She’s ten. You’re scaring her.”
But Dr. Harris never looked away from Lily.
And then—
very slowly—
tears filled my daughter’s eyes.
I stopped breathing.
“Lily?” I whispered.
Her lip trembled.
Then Daniel stood up abruptly.