Not because the internet has become noble. The internet never does anything without a little circus in it. But your calm, your directness, the undeniable paper trail, and the old photograph from the hospital hallway create something people can’t easily digest and move past. There is outrage. There are arguments. There are ugly comments, of course. There always are. But there are also messages from strangers with visible scars, workplace injuries, surgeries, amputations, burns. People who say they watched you and felt, for the first time in years, less alone in their own skin.
That undoes you more than cruelty ever did.
One message comes from a woman in Ohio who writes, I spent ten years wearing turtlenecks in summer after my accident. Today I went outside in a V-neck and bought peaches. I know that sounds small. It isn’t.
You cry over that one in your kitchen.
Obinna finds you there when he drops off copies of deposition notes.
He stops when he sees your face. “Bad news?”
You hand him the phone.
He reads the message and looks at you with such quiet pride that your chest aches.
“It’s not small,” he says.
“No,” you whisper. “It isn’t.”
There is still distance between you then, but it is no longer made only of hurt. Now it also contains witness. Labor. Truth told repeatedly until it stops shaking.
The hearing happens in late autumn.
Councilman Varela arrives in a charcoal suit and the expression of a man offended that consequences learned his address. Cameras flash. Protesters gather outside. Some hold signs about corruption. One teenage girl holds a cardboard sign that reads SCARS ARE NOT SHAME, and when you see it, you nearly lose your composure before even stepping inside.
You testify for two hours.
About the gas smell reported and ignored. About the explosion. About the hospital. About the disappeared case. About what it costs when public servants sell other people’s bodies for private convenience.
No one in the room pities you.
That may be the most radical thing of all.
Afterward, in the courthouse corridor, Varela passes close enough for you to see the liver spots on his hands. He glances at your scars once, quickly, the way men like him always have, as though damage is fascinating until it speaks.
“You should let old grief rest,” he says under his breath.
You look him dead in the face.
“You first.”
Three weeks later, he resigns.
There are further investigations, more names, more documents, more slow legal machinery than any movie would allow, but the public version is simple enough: the story finally breaks open. San Judas Bakery’s old owner is charged with fraud and bribery-related offenses. Families of multiple injured workers file claims. The city launches a review of code enforcement records going back years. None of it gives you back your old skin. None of it returns the youth burned out of you at twenty.
But truth, when denied long enough, has a violence of its own when it finally enters daylight.
And in that daylight, you begin to breathe differently.
The night you decide to go back to the apartment, you do not announce it like a grand romance. You simply call Obinna and say, “Are you home?”
There is a pause. “Yes.”