It was the beginning of something else entirely.
Daniel’s hands twitch as if he wants to run, but there’s nowhere to go. Sheriff Reed’s patrol car is parked behind his in the driveway, and my sister’s rental car is blocking the curb. I watch him calculate his options, eyes darting, chest rising faster now.
“I said sit down,” the sheriff repeats, voice firm.
Daniel lowers himself into the chair, slow and stiff like a man headed to his own execution. The chair creaks under his weight, and for a moment, no one says a word.
I keep my eyes on the bacon. I don’t need to look at him. I’ve looked at him long enough—watched the sweet boy I raised twist into someone I no longer recognize. But I hear the tremor in his breath, the tightness in his throat, and I know he’s scared.
He should be.
Sheriff Reed clears his throat and sets a small, black recorder on the table. “Margaret gave a statement this morning. I’ve got the photos, too. You want to explain that bruise on her face?”
Daniel glares at me, defiant. “She tripped. She’s old. Clumsy.”
My sister’s jaw clenches, and Pastor Harris closes his eyes like he’s praying for strength. But I don’t flinch. I’ve played the fool long enough.
“That’s funny,” I say softly, lifting my coffee to my lips. “Because I remember your hand coming at me.”
“Margaret,” Pastor Harris says gently, “you don’t have to speak. We’re here for you.”
But I want to speak. I’ve been silent for too long. I set the cup down, letting the porcelain click against the saucer.
“He was drunk,” I say clearly. “He had been drinking in the garage all afternoon. Came in ranting about a missed job interview. Blamed me for not waking him up, even though I knocked twice. He grabbed my arm, shoved me against the counter, and when I told him to stop, he hit me.”
“That’s a lie!” Daniel snaps, voice rising an octave. “You’re twisting everything!”
Sheriff Reed leans forward, his voice like gravel. “Daniel, we can do this here, or we can do it down at the station. But make no mistake, this is happening.”
My son’s hands clench into fists on the table. For a second, I think he might lunge across it—might try to make me pay again for daring to speak out loud.
But then his shoulders sag, and his mask cracks.
“She let me live here,” he mutters. “She knew I was trying to get back on my feet. After the divorce. After losing my job. I didn’t mean to…”
Elaine scoffs. “Oh, please. You’ve been ‘getting back on your feet’ for eight years. How many times has she cleaned up after you, paid your bills, made excuses?”
Daniel shoots her a venomous look. “No one asked you to fly down here and play hero, Elaine.”
“I didn’t come to play hero,” she snaps. “I came because my sister called me crying. For the first time in thirty years.”
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