He looked shockingly aged in only a few days. The hair product that had always kept his gray hair immaculate was gone, leaving it flattened and uneven. His shirt was wrinkled and torn at the shoulder where he’d resisted arrest. Dark circles sat under his eyes. His posture, once so forceful, sagged with the weight of reality.
The moment he saw me, his face twisted into fury.
“Denise!” he shouted, slamming his hand against the acrylic. The sound was dull, pathetic. “What have you done? What did you tell the police? Withdraw the charges immediately!”
He leaned close to the partition, eyes bloodshot. “This is a family matter, isn’t it? We just visited your house, that’s all.”
Visited.
He used the word like it could rewrite trespassing into something benign.
Behind him, my mother appeared on another screen, eyes swollen from crying. Kristen wasn’t there yet; I’d been told she’d caused a scene and was being held separately.
My father’s voice cracked, shifting strategy. “Kristen is remorseful now. She’s still young. If she gets a criminal record, what will happen to her life? Are you really going to send your own sister to prison?”
I stared at him through the acrylic, and something in me hardened—not with hatred, but with recognition. Even now, he wasn’t apologizing. He was negotiating. He was trying to use guilt as currency.
“You still don’t understand,” I said.
My voice was quiet, but it carried.
“I didn’t call the police because you visited,” I continued. “I did it because you systematically tried to destroy my life—my work, my privacy, my home.”
My father’s mouth tightened. “We didn’t destroy anything—”
“Before you worry about Kristen’s future,” I said, cutting him off, “why didn’t you stop her when she tried to steal tens of thousands of dollars worth of items from my closet?”
His eyes flashed, offended at the accusation rather than the act.
“Because she wanted them,” he said, as if that were explanation enough. “As her sister, it’s only natural for you to give them to her.”
Natural.
The word hit me like a door finally closing.
That single word extinguished the last thin ember of attachment I hadn’t known I was still carrying. Natural. The justification for every sacrifice I’d been forced to make, every boundary I’d been punished for drawing, every success that had been turned into their entitlement.
I leaned forward, close enough that my breath fogged the acrylic slightly.