As the event plays on repeat in the mother’s mind, she wonders if the man had seen her before, and what his motive was.
The man, described as about 30 to 40 years old, poured the hot liquid over the nine-month-old before fleeing.
As the boy’s screams rang out through the park, the mother’s friend chased the attacker, but he managed to escape.
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Nearby CCTV showed him running down a street near the park.
It has since been revealed that the man was seen outside a church on Duke and Cornwall streets in Annerley, where he changed his clothes after the attack. It’s believed he then caught a rideshare car to Caxton Street, near Suncorp Stadium.
“I tried to call triple zero, but I was absolutely frantic and screaming and yelling, so I couldn’t actually speak to them, and then a man came up and was like, ‘Do you need me to call emergency services?’
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“I said, ‘yes, yes’, and I was trying to tend to my son.”
The mother said by the time they got the boy into a shower at the nearby home of a woman who came to help, paramedics had arrived.
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“I was just screaming, yelling, saying, ‘please give him pain relief’ because he was in so much pain, and we had to do the 20 minutes in the shower, the cool water.
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“All the emergency services were absolutely amazing.”
The boy was rushed to the hospital, where his little body has remained almost entirely bandaged for days in between surgery and treatment.
But on Saturday morning, his family saw the first spark of recovery.
Photos show him smiling into the camera while on a hospital bed.
“He’s amazing, I mean, the first couple of days were really awful, but he’s perked up, and he’s back to laughing this morning,” his mother said.
“I haven’t heard him laugh in days.
“He’s smiling. We’re just trying to make it as normal as possible, you know, like giving high-fives, and he’s clapping and giving us all kisses. All the things we were doing before.
“He was very, very wary of people the first few days. He didn’t want anyone touching him other than us, which is understandable.
“Whereas now, he just gave the nurse a high-five before.”
Her son had begun playing again, the mother said, and was due to see his older sister on Saturday.
He will undergo another operation on Tuesday, and doctors have told his mother that the burns on his neck and chest will scar and likely need skin grafts.
“But the other burns, on his face, chin and cheeks, his head, arms and back should heal well,” she said.
“He’s got to have surgeries every three or four days for the next three weeks or so, then after that, it’s like four months at least before the skin starts to change colour … after that he has to have special creams and sunscreens.
“He’s strong, he’s doing way better than I am … he’s not letting this stop him from doing anything.”
The mother said she had been operating on adrenaline and had only slept for about one hour since the attack.
“Yesterday it started to wear off, I did not cope at all. I was just crying all day long,” she said.
An online fundraiser for the boy and his family has so far raised about $100,000. Hundreds of members of Brisbane’s community continue to share the attacker’s image in the hopes police will find him.
“Just hand yourself in,” the mother said. “I don’t even know what I would say to him if I saw him other than ask ‘Why? Why us, and what did you achieve?’
“What was the point in this?
“If anyone is hiding this person, take a look at yourself and come forward to the police.”