It was dread.
Because she expected anger.
Because she expected punishment.
Because she expected what she’d probably seen happen to other kids: adults making it worse.
I took one step forward and knelt.
Not in front of Lily first.
In front of the children.
So they could see my hands weren’t clenched.
So they could see my face wasn’t hard.
“Hey,” I said softly. “You’re not in trouble.”
One boy—freckles, thin, maybe twelve—swallowed hard. “We’re not?”