But my world had already been destroyed on this kitchen floor.
Dave smirked and pulled out his expensive phone like he was about to put on a show. He found the contact and hit call, then set it to speaker and held it down near my face.
The phone rang once. Twice.
“Hello?” my father’s voice came through—calm, steady, familiar enough to make my throat close.
Dave’s tone turned sweet with cruelty. “Mr. Vance? This is Dave. You might want to come over. Your daughter’s bleeding all over my floor. Come clean it up.”
A pause.
Not panic. Not pleading. Just a silence that felt heavy, watchful.
When my father spoke again, the warmth was gone. His voice turned flat and hard, like steel drawn from a sheath.
“Stay on the line,” he said. “Do not hang up.”
Dave scoffed. “Or what, old man?”
“I’m five minutes away.”
Then nothing—only the open connection, a quiet presence that made the hair on my arms rise.
Those five minutes stretched like an entire lifetime. Mrs. Higgins complained about the ruined dinner. Dave paced and muttered, trying to keep his swagger intact. I pressed a dish towel against my belly and prayed through clenched teeth that I wouldn’t lose everything.
And then we heard it: a deep engine rumble outside, heavier than a car, steady and deliberate. Bright headlights swept across the windows.
Dave’s smugness returned in a crooked grin. “The old man’s here,” he chuckled. “Let me teach him how to knock.”
He walked to the front door and yanked it open.
He didn’t get to finish his first insult.
A hand shot out—fast, sure—and seized Dave by the shirtfront. In one fluid motion, Dave was pulled off balance and thrown backward into the living room hard enough to rattle the wall décor.
My father stepped inside.
Faded work jeans. Flannel shirt. Mud on old boots. Exactly the harmless “gardener” Dave had mocked.
Except for his eyes.
They weren’t angry in the loud way. They were focused—flat, assessing, like a man who had learned long ago how to recognize danger and end it.
He didn’t waste time on Dave groaning on the floor. He didn’t spare a glance for Mrs. Higgins frozen at the kitchen table.
He went straight to me.
In a few strides he was kneeling beside me, hands steady as he checked my pulse and the towel pressed against my belly. He spoke under his breath—not dramatic, not frantic—just precise, like someone trained to keep people alive when everything is chaos.