I thought I was going to die in that parking garage. His hand over my mouth. My feet dragging.
No one around. Then a motorcycle’s headlight cut through the dark—and a stranger’s roar made my attacker run.
But the real shock wasn’t that he saved me. It was why he kept coming back, night after ni… Continues…
Marcus’s answer didn’t come that fifteenth night in the parking lot. It came months later, in a quiet hospital room with a woman named Kate, whose bruises and terror looked too much like mine. She’d been attacked in a different garage. Same hospital. Same pattern. Same man. Marcus was there when the police brought her statement. He stood in the corner, fists clenched, jaw tight, eyes wet.
Afterward, he walked me outside. The air was cold; his voice was colder. “You asked why I kept coming back,” he said. “Because my daughter was attacked in a garage like this. I wasn’t there. I didn’t hear her. I didn’t save her. She didn’t make it.” His voice broke on the last word. “I can’t change what happened to her. But I can damn sure make sure I don’t miss it again.”
Marcus’s answer didn’t come that fifteenth night in the parking lot.
It came months later, in a quiet hospital room with a woman named Kate,
whose bruises and terror looked too much like mine.
She’d been attacked in a different garage. Same hospital.
Same pattern. Same man.
Marcus was there when the police brought her statement.
He stood in the corner,
fists clenched, jaw tight, eyes wet.
Afterward, he walked me outside.
The air was cold; his voice was colder.
“You asked why I kept coming back,” he said.
“Because my daughter was attacked in a garage like this.
I wasn’t there.
I didn’t hear her. I didn’t save her.
She didn’t make it.”
His voice broke on the last word.
“I can’t change what happened to her.
But I can damn sure make sure I don’t miss it again.”