“Oh, that was me,” he said with a smug grin. “Instead of congratulations, I gave her a slap.”
Linda released a brief, uneasy laugh, the kind people make when they sense something is wrong but lack the courage to challenge it. Derek leaned farther back in his chair, clearly assuming Dad would chuckle along or at least complain and move on. Derek had always confused silence with fear and courtesy with weakness. He had absolutely no idea who my father really was.
Dad studied him for a long moment, face completely blank. Then he slowly unclasped his watch and set it beside the cake on the counter. He rolled the sleeves of his blue button-down shirt up with the same steady concentration he used to show while fixing engines in our garage. Nothing about his movements was hurried, and somehow that made the atmosphere far more frightening.
Then he turned toward me.
“Emily,” he said, keeping his eyes fixed on Derek, “step outside.”
I staggered toward the back porch, my heart hammering so violently I struggled to breathe. Through the window above the sink, I looked back into the kitchen. Derek rose too quickly, his chair scraping across the tile floor. Linda abruptly pushed herself away from the table, panic overtaking whatever loyalty she had left. Wanting no part of what was about to happen, my mother-in-law dropped down and scrambled out of the room on all fours, bumping into a barstool as she hurried away.
Then my father moved toward my husband.
What followed lasted less than a minute, yet it changed the entire direction of my life.
Dad didn’t charge or raise his voice. He simply walked across the kitchen, grabbed Derek by the front of his expensive gray sweater, and slammed him against the wall hard enough to make the framed family photo beside the refrigerator shake. Derek’s confidence vanished so fast it looked unreal. One second he was smirking; the next he looked like someone who had just woken inside the wrong nightmare.
“You hit my daughter?” Dad said.
Derek tried shoving him away. “Hey, man, calm down—”
Dad forced him back again. “You put your hands on my daughter and then joked about it in front of me?”
I had never seen my father like that before. He wasn’t out of control—that would have been easier to comprehend. Instead, he was composed, icy, and finished pretending this was a private marital matter. Memories of warning signs raced through my mind in ruthless sequence: Derek smashing my phone during an argument and replacing it the next day as if that fixed everything; Derek calling me dramatic whenever I cried; Derek gripping my wrist so hard at a neighborhood barbecue that his fingerprints remained; Linda telling me every couple had “rough patches”; me apologizing repeatedly for things I hadn’t even done.
The bruises on my face came from the night before. Derek had been drinking bourbon while I decorated a cake for my own birthday because he forgot to order one. When I reminded him my parents were coming over, he accused me of “making him look bad.” Then he slapped me once, and again when I stumbled against the counter. Linda had watched the entire thing from the doorway and said, “You should stop provoking him.”
Standing on the porch, I realized the most dangerous lie I had been living with wasn’t that Derek loved me. It was believing I still had time to fix him.
Inside, Derek’s voice cracked. “Richard, this is between me and Emily.”
“No,” Dad said. “It stopped being between you two the moment you decided she was something you could break.”
Linda appeared again in the hallway clutching her purse, begging everyone to calm down. Dad didn’t even look at her. He told me to call the police. My fingers stiffened around my phone for a moment—not because I doubted him, but because I felt ashamed it had taken this long for me to act.
Then Derek stared directly at me through the window and said with pure hatred, “If you do this, you’ll regret it.”
That was the moment the fear inside me finally transformed into something clearer.
Resolve.
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