The pool was completely drained—a dry, sunbaked shell, about three feet deep. And there, on her knees at the bottom, was my daughter.
Amelia was scrubbing algae off the concrete with a stiff brush. Her little arms moved in jerky, exhausted strokes. Sweat drenched her hair, plastering it to her forehead. Her T-shirt clung to her back, soaked through.
Next to her sat an open bottle of strong pool-cleaning chemicals. No gloves. No mask. Nothing to protect her.
For a second, I couldn’t move. My brain refused to connect the image with reality.
Then something inside me snapped.
“Amelia!” I screamed, running to the edge of the pool.
I jumped down, my shoes hitting the hard concrete with a thud that echoed. She turned her head slowly, like it physically hurt to move. Her lips were cracked. Her cheeks were flushed a dangerous red.
When she saw me, she tried to smile.
“Mom,” she whispered, her voice barely a thread. “I… I almost finished scrubbing.”
Her hands were red and raw, some fingers already blistered.
“Baby, stop. Stop.”
My voice shook so badly I hardly recognized it. I dropped to my knees and pulled her into my arms.
The moment my skin touched hers, I realized how wrong everything was. She was burning. Her whole body trembled against me.
“Ethan!” I screamed toward the front of the house, my voice cracking. “Ethan, get out here now!”
But before the words were fully out, Amelia’s eyes rolled back and she went limp in my arms.
Right then, the world narrowed to a thin tunnel of sound and panic.