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HE CAUGHT FEELINGS FOR MY SISTER AT OUR ENGAGEMENT PARTY, SO I MARRIED HIS MOST FEARED BROTHER BEFORE THE CHAMPAGNE WENT...
13/06/2026

HE CAUGHT FEELINGS FOR MY SISTER AT OUR ENGAGEMENT PARTY, SO I MARRIED HIS MOST FEARED BROTHER BEFORE THE CHAMPAGNE WENT FLAT

When I saw my fiancé's hand settle over my sister's lower back at our own engagement dinner, I did not cry.

I did not throw the champagne flute in my hand.

I did not gift the ballroom the public collapse it was quietly hoping for.

I counted.

One second for the way his thumb moved once, slow and proprietary, like it already knew the map of her body.

Two seconds for the way my sister leaned into him instead of away, not startled, not ashamed, just comfortable.

Three seconds for the way they both looked up at the exact same moment and realized I had seen everything.

By the time the quartet drifted into another polished, expensive arrangement, I had reached a decision that was either going to ruin the rest of my life or save it.

Anyone who has ever been humiliated in a room full of people pretending not to notice knows the sensation. It is not heat. It is not anger. It is a clean, freezing blade sliding in under your ribs while someone asks whether you're excited for the wedding.

I was.

Just not for the wedding they thought they were attending.

The dinner was being held at Blackthorne House, the Marrow estate outside Boston, in a ballroom full of antique mirrors, silver candelabras, and old money pretending it had never done anything ugly. Beyond the windows, the gardens were iced over in neat white patterns. Inside, everyone glittered. State senators. Museum donors. Bankers. Developers. The kind of people who kept their voices low because power never needed volume.

My name is Alina Voss. I was thirty-two, the founder of a preservation architecture firm, and for three years I had been engaged to Julian Marrow, the polished heir everyone in New England called safe. Ours was not the kind of romance that made people write songs. It was supposed to be something better. Rational. Elegant. Mutually useful. He brought reach, capital, and the Marrow name. I brought credibility, discipline, and a reputation clean enough to survive daylight.

At least that was the version we sold.

Then I saw him touching my sister.

Sophie Voss was standing beneath the chandelier in dark green silk, laughing up at him like the rest of the room belonged to them. My younger sister had the kind of beauty that changed oxygen levels. Men sharpened around her. Women measured themselves against her without meaning to. Growing up, people always reduced us to a sentence they thought was harmless.

Sophie is the pretty one.

Alina is the serious one.

As if beauty and worth could not survive in the same daughter.

I crossed the marble floor with my usual calm pace. Sophie saw me first. Her smile flickered. Julian moved his hand, but not quickly enough.

"Mom's looking for you," I told Sophie, my voice so even it made her blink. "The photographer wants family portraits before Senator Carlisle leaves."

"Oh. Right." She picked up her clutch. "Of course."

She drifted away into the crowd with irritating grace.

Julian adjusted his cuff links. He always did that when he needed his hands to look innocent.

"You look pale," he said softly. "Are you all right?"

"How long?"

He glanced at me. "What?"

"How long have you been sleeping with my sister?"

Nothing in his face shattered. That was one of Julian's true talents. Under pressure, he did not crack. He reorganized.

"This is neither the time nor the place," he said.

"That isn't a denial."

"You're upset."

"Yes," I said. "Try not to make me do all the work here."

His jaw flexed once. "Six months."

Six months.

Half a year of menu tastings, venue contracts, board dinners, and wedding consultations while he was sleeping with my sister and smiling across breakfast tables.

I looked at him for a long beat. "Does she love you?"

He hesitated, and that hesitation told me more than the affair had.

"She thinks I'll leave you after the Wharf vote," he said quietly.

The air changed.

That was the real betrayal.

The Boston Harbor Wharf restoration project was the biggest contract of my career, and Julian knew it. My firm's endorsement would unlock a development plan worth hundreds of millions to the Marrow family. He had not just been cheating on me. He had been using me. Keeping me polished, useful, respectable, and blind until he no longer needed the costume.

I laughed then, once, low and cold.

Julian misread it as surrender. "Alina, don't do something dramatic. We can still manage this privately."

Manage.

As if my humiliation were a scheduling conflict.

That was when I looked past him and saw Lucian Marrow standing near the bar, one shoulder against a column, watching us with the stillness of a man who missed very little. Lucian was Julian's older brother, the one the family called difficult when they meant dangerous. He was not dangerous in the loud way. He was dangerous in the honest way. He saw through people, remembered everything, and had built a reputation shredding liars in courtrooms and boardrooms until they begged for gentler enemies.

Julian was afraid of many things. Lucian was one of them.

Months earlier, Lucian had looked at me across a planning meeting and said, very calmly, "Julian likes beautiful structures. He is less loyal to foundations."

I had thought he meant buildings.

I moved toward him before I could second-guess myself.

His eyes dropped to my face, then to Julian behind me, then back again. He understood immediately.

"How bad?" he asked.

"Bad enough," I said, "that I need a favor."

He straightened. "What kind?"

I looked him directly in the eye. "Marry me tonight."

For the first time all evening, a man in that room actually looked startled.

Lucian's expression changed by a fraction. "To hurt him?"

"No," I said. "To survive him. And to make sure he never uses me again."

He studied me for a long, unsettling second. "You understand what you're asking."

"Perfectly. Do you?"

His gaze flicked once toward Julian, who was starting to realize I had not gone to the powder room to cry.

Then Lucian said, very quietly, "Give me twenty minutes."

Old money can do impossible things when its own blood is at stake. A family attorney was fetched. A retired judge who owed Everett Marrow three favors was pulled from the terrace. A private chapel at the end of the east corridor was lit in silence. By the time the champagne had gone from crisp to warm, I was standing beneath stained glass with Lucian Marrow beside me in a dark suit that made him look less like a groom than a verdict.

When I took the microphone before we left the ballroom, every fork and flute in the room went still.

"Thank you all for coming," I said. "There has been a small correction to tonight's plans. I won't be marrying Julian Marrow after all. But I will still be leaving Blackthorne House with a Marrow husband."

The sound that followed was not one sound. It was fifty gasps trying to become language.

Sophie went white.

Julian started toward me, but Lucian's hand found the center of my back, steady and unmistakable, and for some reason that nearly undid me more than the betrayal had.

In the chapel, Lucian's vows were simple. He promised never to lie to me to make his own life easier. I promised never to confuse kindness with weakness again. It was the strangest, sharpest, most honest thing I had ever done.

When we walked back into the ballroom wearing rings, Julian looked like someone had reached into his chest and removed the air by hand.

"What the hell is this?" he demanded.

Lucian didn't answer him immediately. He took a black folder from the family attorney, then placed it in my hands instead.

"You deserved the truth before dessert," he said.

I opened it.

The first page had my firm's letterhead.

The second had my digital signature.

The third was an approval for the Wharf project that I had never given.

And when I turned the next page and saw my sister's name attached to the transfer trail, I finally understood that Julian sleeping with Sophie had only been the distraction.

What he had really stolen from me was much bigger than a fiancé.

NEXT BELOW, IN COMMENT

I married a twice-widowed pastor—and on our wedding night, he opened a locked drawer and said, "Before we go any further...
13/06/2026

I married a twice-widowed pastor—and on our wedding night, he opened a locked drawer and said, "Before we go any further, you need to know the whole truth."

I was forty-two when I became a wife for the first time.

By then, I had already taught myself how to stop hoping too loudly. Every relationship I tried to build had collapsed sooner or later, and I had started to believe marriage was simply one of those doors that would stay closed for me.

Then I met Nathan.

He was a pastor at a nearby church, gentle in the way that makes you feel safe without even noticing it. He was in his late forties, thoughtful, dependable, and kind in all the quiet ways that mattered.

He was also a widower. Twice.

His first wife had died after a long illness. Years later, he remarried, only to lose his second wife in a terrible accident.

We didn’t speak about them often. Whenever their names came up, pain moved across his face so quickly that I learned not to push.

So when he asked me to marry him, I said yes with my whole heart. I loved him. I trusted him. I thought, at last, my life was beginning.

Our wedding was small and beautiful. Church friends came. Our families filled the pews. Everything felt soft and blessed and exactly right.

That night, we went back to his house. We had waited until marriage to live under the same roof, so it was my first night there as his wife.

I went to the bathroom to change, smiling at my reflection like a foolish girl who still couldn’t believe she had made it here.

About thirty minutes later, I stepped into the bedroom.

Nathan was standing in the center of the room, still wearing his suit. His face had gone almost white.

My chest tightened. I asked if he was all right.

He didn’t answer. He walked to the nightstand, reached into his pocket for a small key, and unlocked the bottom drawer.

Then he turned to me and said, very quietly, "Before we go any further, you need to know the whole truth. I’m ready to confess what I’ve done."

My stomach dropped.

He pulled out a thick bundle tied with a faded ribbon—letters, documents, and two photographs turned face down in his hand.

And the moment I saw the names written across the top page, I realized my wedding night wasn’t beginning at all.

It was opening a grave, and what I learned next belongs in the comments...

She had spent every New Year’s Eve alone for as long as she could remember.This year, she was curled up on a sagging cou...
13/06/2026

She had spent every New Year’s Eve alone for as long as she could remember.

This year, she was curled up on a sagging couch in flannel penguin pajamas, sipping cheap red wine and giving a dramatic pep talk to a half-dead succulent.

Then, ten minutes before midnight, her boss rang the buzzer.

Nora Hale froze with her fingers still buried inside a bowl of stale caramel popcorn.

For one disbelieving second, she thought the sound had come from the television.

Her apartment never buzzed.

Not at night.

Not on holidays.

Not on New Year’s Eve.

The building was an aging walk-up in Astoria with narrow stairs, chipped green paint, radiators that hissed like angry cats, and neighbors who had mastered the art of pretending no one else existed. Nobody visited Nora. Nobody brought surprise bottles of champagne or spontaneous plans or midnight kisses. If someone stood downstairs asking to be let in, it usually meant they had the wrong apartment, the wrong package, or the wrong intentions.

The buzzer went off again.

Short.

Sharp.

Impossible to ignore.

Nora slowly placed the popcorn on the coffee table. On the television, a holiday romance she had seen a dozen times sat paused on the exact frame where the heroine finally realized she had been in love with the wrong man all along. Beside the remote sat an almost-empty bottle of wine that had cost just enough to make regretting it feel sophisticated. On the windowsill, her limp succulent—Steve—leaned toward the glass like he, too, was trying to escape his circumstances.

Nora looked down at herself.

Penguin pajamas.

Fuzzy gray socks.

Hair twisted into a lopsided knot and stabbed through with a pen.

Mascara probably under both eyes because she had cried earlier at an airport reunion scene she would deny finding emotional.

"This is exactly how women end up in documentaries," she whispered to Steve.

Steve, as always, offered no insight.

The buzzer sounded a third time.

Heart pounding now, Nora crossed the room and pressed the intercom button.

"Hello?"

A beat of silence answered her.

Then a low male voice came through the old speaker, roughened slightly by cold air.

"Nora. It’s Matteo. Can I come up?"

Everything inside her stopped.

Matteo.

As in Matteo DeLuca.

Her boss.

The man whose schedule she controlled, whose meetings she arranged, whose impossible life she kept from collapsing under the weight of secrets, power, and fear.

The man people in the office called cold when they thought he couldn’t hear them.

The man everyone in the city knew by reputation, even if no one was foolish enough to say certain words out loud.

The man she had spent nearly three years pretending she did not love.

He was supposed to be downtown at a glittering New Year’s gala packed with judges, donors, businessmen, politicians, and elegant women who never spilled coffee on legal files or wore novelty sleepwear from discount bins.

Instead, he was downstairs.

At 11:50 p.m.

At her apartment.

"Nora?" he said again. And then, more softly, "Please."

That one word hit her harder than it had any right to.

She buzzed him in before her common sense had time to organize a defense.

Panic arrived immediately afterward.

Her apartment was not prepared for Matteo DeLuca. It was barely prepared for human dignity. There was a cardigan draped over a lamp, a mug in the sink with a lipstick stain she had been ignoring since Tuesday, unopened mail on the counter, and a laundry basket in the hallway that had become less of a basket and more of a lifestyle.

She rushed into the bathroom.

Red eyes.

Pink nose.

Pajama collar crooked.

She splashed water on her face, tried to fix her hair, made it worse, yanked the pen out, shoved it back in, and hurried to the door just as three soft knocks landed against it.

Not pounding.

Not demanding.

Just three controlled, careful knocks that somehow made her more nervous than anything else could have.

Nora opened the door.

Matteo DeLuca stood in the dim hallway wearing a tuxedo that looked as if it had been tailored by vanity itself. His black overcoat was damp at the shoulders from the mist outside. His bow tie hung undone around his collar. His dark hair was slightly windblown, and his expression—usually carved into something unreadable—was stripped bare enough to make her pulse stumble.

He looked tired.

And tense.

And, unbelievably, uncertain.

"Hi," he said.

Nora stared at him like her brain had forgotten how conversation worked.

"Hi."

From another apartment came the muffled sound of laughter and someone counting down too early. A car horn blared from the street. Somewhere below, fireworks cracked in the distance like faraway warning shots.

Matteo’s gaze dropped briefly to her penguin pajamas.

Then rose back to her face.

He didn’t laugh.

He looked at her the way a starving man might look at a lighted window in winter.

"Can I come in?" he asked.

She stepped aside.

He entered slowly, as if he understood he was walking into a world far smaller, poorer, quieter, and somehow more real than the gold-and-crystal ballroom he had just abandoned.

His eyes took in the room.

The paused movie.

The wine.

The blanket kicked half off the couch.

The dying plant.

"Steve is hanging on," Matteo said.

Nora blinked. "What?"

He nodded toward the windowsill. "Your plant. Steve. He looks dramatic, but stubborn."

She stared at him. "I mentioned his name once."

"Seven months ago," Matteo replied. "You came in late because you tried to save him after overwatering him and got dirt all over your blouse."

Her mouth parted. "You remember that?"

His eyes met hers. "I remember everything you tell me."

Outside, somewhere in the city, the noise level surged. People were beginning to gather near midnight.

Nora’s heart beat harder.

"Matteo," she said quietly, "what are you doing here?"

He turned to face her fully then, as if he had finally reached the point he had driven all this way to reach.

"I couldn’t stay there."

"At the gala?"

"No."

"Why not?"

He exhaled once, slow and unsteady.

"Because I was standing in a ballroom full of people who have known me for years, and I have never felt more alone in my life."

Nora said nothing.

He stepped closer.

"They were all talking," he continued. "Laughing. Pretending. Making promises for the new year they won’t keep. And all I could think about was this apartment."

She swallowed. "This apartment?"

"You on this couch. That terrible wine you always buy when you’re sad but trying to act ironic. The movie you watch when you don’t want to admit you’re lonely."

Her throat tightened.

"You know I’m lonely?"

Matteo’s expression changed then, something almost pained moving through it.

"Nora," he said quietly, "I know the difference between when you say you’re fine and when you mean it."

She felt the room tilt.

He took one more step.

There was barely any space between them now.

"Do you know why I came here tonight?" he asked.

She shook her head because trusting her voice seemed reckless.

"Because for months I have been telling myself to leave this alone. That you deserve someone easier. Safer. Cleaner than me. Someone who can bring you flowers in daylight instead of showing up at your door ten minutes before midnight like a man who has finally run out of excuses."

Her pulse was loud enough to drown out the street.

"Matteo—"

"No, let me say it before I lose the nerve." His jaw tightened. "You are the first good thing I think about in the morning and the last thing I want to hear before I sleep. You walk into a room and I notice the room change. You hand me coffee and I remember the exact shade of your nails all day. You tell me some ridiculous story about a dead printer or your neighbor’s cat and I carry it with me like it matters more than half the men in my world."

Nora’s eyes burned.

Outside, a roar rose from the street.

Ten.

Someone had started counting.

Matteo looked at her as if the answer to his entire year stood in fuzzy socks in front of him.

"I left because I didn’t want to begin another year pretending I don’t belong wherever you are."

Nine.

Nora couldn’t breathe.

Eight.

She had imagined him saying many things in her most reckless moments.

Not this.

Never this.

Seven.

"Say something," he whispered.

Six.

She looked at the bow tie hanging loose from his collar, the damp coat, the raw honesty in his face, and realized with terrifying certainty that the most dangerous man she had ever known had come to her door looking afraid.

Five.

So she told the truth.

"I’ve been in love with you for two years," she whispered back.

His eyes closed for half a second, like the words had hit somewhere deep.

Four.

Then he opened them again.

And just as the city screamed the final seconds toward midnight, someone pounded hard on the apartment door behind them.

Three.

Matteo turned instantly, every line of him changing.

Two.

The softness vanished from his face.

One.

And when the first gunmetal voice from the hallway said, "Boss, we found out who followed you," I realized midnight wasn’t bringing a kiss.

It was bringing the kind of truth that was about to tear everything open...

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"You Have Until Sunday To Move Out," Mom Texted The Family Group. Sister Already Posted Bedroom Renovation Plans. I Logg...
13/06/2026

"You Have Until Sunday To Move Out," Mom Texted The Family Group. Sister Already Posted Bedroom Renovation Plans. I Logged Into My Property Management Portal. Their Access Cards Stopped Working.

The text came through at 9:47 on a Tuesday morning, casual and efficient, like my mother was reminding me to bring a pie to Sunday dinner instead of ordering me out of my own home.

I was in my glass office at Cornerstone Commercial Real Estate, halfway through a lukewarm coffee and an acquisition model I was supposed to present to investors in three hours, when the family group chat lit up.

Mom: Maya, we need to discuss your living situation. Jen and her fiancé need the apartment now. You have until Sunday to be out. It’s what works best for the family.

I stared at the message, waiting for the punchline.

There wasn’t one.

Then Jen dropped a Pinterest board into the chat called Downtown Loft Transformation. Exposed brick. matte black fixtures. cream boucle chairs. Open shelving. A bed frame almost identical to mine.

Jen: I’m so excited. Mom, can we start painting this weekend? I want the bedroom ready before Mia’s stuff is even gone.

Mia’s stuff.

Not my furniture. Not my clothes. Not my home.

Mia’s stuff.

Tyler jumped in next.

Tyler: Honestly, it’s about time. Ma’s been letting her have that place forever. She doesn’t even need all that space.

My fingers tightened around the paper coffee cup until the lid popped loose and burned my hand. Still, I didn’t answer. Years of being the quiet middle child had taught me how to keep my face neutral while something sharp and private split open in my chest.

Instead, I set the cup down and opened the browser tab hidden behind my work dashboards.

It looked like another operations portal.

It wasn’t.

It was the management system for Morrison Holdings LLC, the company I formed six years ago when I bought my first income property and learned that the safest thing in the world wasn’t love, promises, or family loyalty.

It was paperwork.

The building loaded instantly.

847 Sterling Avenue.

Twelve units. Mixed-use. Bought for $2.8 million. Current valuation just over $4.1.

Owner: Maya Morrison, via Morrison Holdings LLC.

Then I clicked Unit 4B.

My unit.

Two-bedroom corner loft. Concrete ceilings. Floor-to-ceiling windows. The apartment my family casually referred to as “that place Maya got lucky with.” The apartment my mother once told relatives belonged to “one of your father’s old friends.” The apartment they all behaved as though they had authority over because they had never once cared enough to ask who paid for it.

The access panel opened.

Active cards: four.

Mine.

Mom’s emergency spare.

Jen’s “just in case” copy.

And one Dad had duplicated for himself last year without telling me. He’d called it practical, like my front door was something the family had community rights to.

My phone buzzed again.

Dad: Don’t make this difficult. Your mother is trying to be fair. Jen is starting a family. You’re single and financially stable. You can rent somewhere smaller.

A minute later, another text.

Mom: Please don’t embarrass us by acting emotional.

Then Jen, privately this time.

Jen: I already told Mia she can have my old guest room if you need a place for a while. Also please leave the bar stools. They match my theme.

I actually laughed.

Not because it was funny.

Because sometimes humiliation reaches a point where it stops feeling hot and starts feeling cold.

I clicked the first card.

Deactivate.

Mom’s spare went gray.

Jen’s card next.

Deactivate.

Then Dad’s unauthorized copy.

Deactivate.

I didn’t hesitate.

Then I opened the lock notes and added a new instruction for front desk and overnight security: No guest access granted to Patricia Morrison, Daniel Morrison, Jennifer Morrison, Tyler Morrison, or any moving company or contractor claiming family authorization. Entry by owner approval only.

I signed it with my digital credentials.

Owner approval only.

For a long moment I just stared at the screen, breathing slowly, evenly, as if I were reviewing a tenant file instead of redrawing the boundary my family had been stepping over my entire life.

At 10:06, the group chat exploded.

Mom: Did someone change the building access?

Jen: Wait, why isn’t my card working???

Dad: Maya, fix this immediately.

Tyler: Are you seriously throwing a tantrum over a simple family decision?

I still said nothing.

I went back to my financial model, finished the revisions, walked into the investor meeting at one o’clock, and delivered the cleanest presentation of my career.

When I came out, I had nineteen missed calls.

And one voicemail from the lobby concierge.

"Ms. Morrison," he said carefully, "your mother and sister are downstairs with paint samples and a measuring tape. They’re demanding to be let into 4B. Your mother says she owns the place through family rights. Your sister says she’s already promised photos to a contractor. I told them I’d need confirmation from the owner."

I listened to that message twice.

Then I opened the security cameras.

There they were in the lobby of my building, my mother in a camel coat, Jen holding color swatches against a pillar like she was already decorating, Dad pacing with his jaw clenched, performing outrage for an audience of strangers.

And when the concierge asked one more time whether he should let them upstairs, I looked at the screen, saw my family standing outside a life they had already decided was theirs, and typed back just six words:

No access. Owner does not approve.

Thirty seconds later, my phone rang again. This time, the caller ID said Mom, but when I answered, I heard my sister sobbing, my father swearing, and my mother saying the one sentence she never thought she’d have to ask me...

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At 2:00 a.m., my stepbrother drove a screwdriver into my shoulder while my parents stood there laughing and telling me t...
13/06/2026

At 2:00 a.m., my stepbrother drove a screwdriver into my shoulder while my parents stood there laughing and telling me to stop being dramatic. Blood soaked my shirt, my knees buckled, and with the last clear second I had before everything went black, I hit send on one message: SOS. What happened after that would leave an entire courtroom in stunned silence.

At 1:58 a.m., the whole house felt wrong.

Texas heat never really disappears after midnight. It just changes shape. It stops pressing down from above and starts seeping into everything instead, crawling under your skin, settling into the mattress, turning the air in your lungs thick and stale. My old bedroom still had the same faded floral wallpaper from high school, the same chipped white dresser, the same glow-in-the-dark star stuck to the ceiling above my bed. The ceiling fan spun fast enough to make noise, not enough to help.

I lay flat on my back, wide awake, staring at that plastic star and listening to the house breathe around me. The hum of the air conditioner. The tick inside the wall near the closet. The dishwasher downstairs making its usual broken rattle every few minutes.

I had come home on leave thinking I could survive a few days under that roof.

I thought I could handle Evelyn's fake sweetness. I thought I could handle my father, Thomas, pretending every cruel thing in the house was just a misunderstanding. I thought I could ignore Dylan's smug, beer-soaked swagger and get through the visit without becoming the family problem again.

I was wrong.

Earlier that afternoon, Dylan had taken my dress uniform into the backyard and set it on fire like it was a joke. Flames climbed the fabric while he laughed. My father didn't stop him. He grabbed my arm instead, hard enough to bruise, and told me to calm down. Evelyn stood beside the patio door with that quiet little smile she wore whenever something hurt me and pleased her at the same time.

After that, I locked myself in my bedroom and texted Sergeant Ruiz.

Urgent.

Ruiz never wasted words. She answered the way she always did, blunt and sharp and useful.

Don't engage. Document everything. If you feel unsafe, use the SOS shortcut.

Months earlier, after too many "accidents" and too many moments that left me shaking, I had set up my phone so typing SOS into one thread would instantly send my live location to three contacts: Ruiz, my platoon friend Marisol, and a legal hotline Ruiz trusted. It also triggered an audio recording in the background. Ruiz called it a survival habit. I called it the only reason I still trusted my own memory.

At 1:59, I heard movement in the hallway.

Not footsteps exactly. More like someone trying and failing to be quiet. A shoe scraping the baseboard. A shoulder brushing the wall. The loose, sloppy drag of somebody drunk enough to think he was stealthy.

Then Dylan's voice came through the dark.

"Think you're somebody now, little soldier girl?"

I didn't answer.

In that house, silence had always been a shield. Not a perfect one, but sometimes enough to delay the next blow. We had all learned the rules early. Don't challenge Dylan. Don't embarrass Evelyn. Don't force Thomas to choose.

My heart thudded so hard I could feel it in my throat, but I stayed still and listened. I waited for another voice. My father. Evelyn. Anybody acting like an adult.

Instead, Dylan hit my door with his shoulder.

The k**b je**ed hard. The frame groaned.

Every muscle in my body went cold at once. This was not the usual hallway threat, not the usual muttered insult, not the dinner-table humiliation everyone pretended was normal. Something had shifted. Something ugly had been building in Dylan for a long time, and now it was standing outside my room.

He slammed into the door again.

"Open it," he hissed. "Open the damn door, Kenya."

I slipped out of bed and moved to the wall beside the doorway, out of direct line, exactly the way I'd been trained. But training fields are one thing. Childhood bedrooms are another. I was barefoot on worn carpet, wearing an old T-shirt, standing between a cracked dresser and a poster of the Andromeda galaxy with no real exit and nowhere to run.

The third hit blew the door inward.

Wood split with a violent crack. The hinges screamed. The door flew open so hard it smashed against the wall and knocked a photo frame sideways above my desk.

Dylan filled the doorway, broad and swaying, his breath thick with alcohol. His face looked less like anger than appetite. In his right hand was a Phillips-head screwdriver from the kitchen junk drawer, the yellow handle bright under the hall light.

He came at me immediately.

I moved on instinct, catching for his wrist, trying to redirect the downward thrust, trying to use his momentum against him. For half a second I almost had him. My fingers locked over his forearm. His balance broke.

Then he roared and yanked free.

He was bigger than me, heavier, and too drunk to feel hesitation. He slammed me backward into the wall. Pain burst through my shoulder blades. The poster behind me wrinkled under the impact. My breath left my body in one sharp sound.

I had nowhere left to go.

He drove the screwdriver forward.

The metal punched into my shoulder just below the collarbone with a hot, shocking force my brain refused to understand at first. Then the pain arrived all at once, white and electric, ripping a scream out of me. My knees folded. Warm blood ran instantly down my chest and arm.

Dylan stumbled back, almost surprised by what he'd done.

And then I heard it.

Laughter.

My father was in the hallway behind him.

Evelyn stood beside Thomas in her robe, one hand over her mouth like she was watching some ridiculous scene in a movie. Neither of them rushed toward me. Neither of them called for help.

Thomas actually shook his head.

"For God's sake," he said. "Stop being dramatic."

I stared at him, unable to believe what I was hearing.

Blood dripped from my fingertips onto the carpet in dark, fast drops. Dylan still had the screwdriver in his hand. My own father looked at me like I was the inconvenience.

"She barely got scratched," Evelyn said lightly. "Look at her performance."

I clamped one hand over the wound, but blood kept pushing through my fingers, hot and slick. The room tilted. Sound went strange, distant and warped around the edges. Dylan was breathing hard. Thomas was muttering something about me always causing chaos. Evelyn laughed again, lower this time.

That was the moment the fear changed.

Until then, some part of me had still believed this could stop. That someone would wake up and do the right thing. That there was a line they would not cross.

Looking at all three of them, I understood there was no line.

My phone was on the bed.

I staggered sideways, vision blurring, and reached for it with my good hand. Dylan cursed when he realized what I was doing and lunged again, but he was too slow. My fingers slipped across the screen, smearing blood over the glass. I opened the thread I had prepared months ago and typed three letters.

SOS.

My thumb hit send.

Location shared.

Recording started.

Dylan grabbed my wrist and slammed it down against the mattress. The phone bounced once, then dropped to the floor. Thomas barked, "Enough already." Evelyn said, almost amused, "She's making this worse for herself."

I could feel blood soaking into my shirt, into the sheets, into the carpet near my feet. My body was turning cold even though the room was sweltering. I tried to stay upright, but the edges of everything were collapsing inward.

Somewhere far away, maybe from the phone speaker, maybe only in my head, I thought I heard the faint beginning of a response.

Then the darkness rushed up fast.

And the last thing I saw before I blacked out was Dylan stepping back from me with that screwdriver still red in his hand, while my parents stood in the doorway smiling like they still believed no one would ever find out what they had done...

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