That made him pause.
Michael pulled out the first document.
“This is a request for a temporary protection order. Not filed yet. That depends on what you do today.”
Another paper.
“This cuts off your access to her money. No cards, no accounts, no car.”
Another.
“This prevents you from returning if you leave and break the conditions.”
Then a brochure.
“And this is your place at a residential center. Therapy, anger management, evaluation. Your mother is giving you a chance before pressing charges.”
Ethan stared at me like I was a stranger.
“You want to lock me up? You think I’m crazy?”
“No,” I said. “I think you’ve become dangerous.”
Anger rose in him.
“After everything I’ve been through? After he left?”
Michael stood slowly.
“This isn’t about the divorce. It’s about you hitting your mother.”
“You don’t know anything!”
“I know enough. You quit jobs. You’ve taken money. You’ve made her live in fear.”
Ethan turned to me.
“Fear? You told him you’re afraid of me?”
I hesitated.
Because it was true.
“Yes,” I said. “I’m afraid of you.”
His expression cracked, then hardened again.
“Of course. I’m always the problem.”
It hurt, because part of it was true. We had failed him too. But pain doesn’t justify abuse.
“We cared,” I said. “So much that we let you destroy everything just to avoid confronting you.”
He finally broke a little.
“I’ve been drowning,” he said quietly.
Michael answered:
“That doesn’t give you the right to become someone who hurts others.”
Ethan looked up.