Mrs. Higgins finally found her voice. “You can’t come in here and—”
My father lifted one hand without looking at her. Not a threat. A command.
She stopped mid-step as if her body remembered something her pride didn’t. The words died in her throat.
From the living room, Dave staggered up, rage twisting his face. He grabbed a baseball bat from the corner and charged back toward the kitchen.
“I’ll—” he roared.
My father rose to his full height and turned.
Dave swung.
My father moved once—quick, controlled—and the bat was no longer a weapon. It stopped short, caught and redirected, leaving Dave stumbling, shocked that his strength meant nothing here. My father didn’t beat him. He didn’t go wild. He used just enough force to disarm, to stop, to end the threat.
His voice stayed quiet.
“You’re done,” he said, as if announcing a simple fact.
Outside, sirens grew louder—because my father hadn’t come unprepared. He had already called for help. He had already decided this would end with lights, uniforms, and legal consequences, not revenge.
When police and paramedics rushed in, the kitchen filled with urgency and bright motion. Someone knelt beside me, speaking gently as they lifted me onto a stretcher. Someone else pulled Dave away from the bat and snapped cuffs on his wrists. Mrs. Higgins’s outrage collapsed into frantic excuses that no one seemed interested in hearing.
As they wheeled me out, Dave twisted toward me, his face crumpled with panic now that power had left his hands.
“Clara—tell them! Tell them it’s not like that!”
I stared at him, and the strangest part was how empty I felt toward him. No love left to break. No hope left to beg with.
I swallowed and forced the words out clearly.
“I want to press charges,” I said. “And I want a divorce.”
In the ambulance, the air smelled like antiseptic and fear. My father sat beside me, his big hand wrapped around mine like an anchor.
“I’m sorry,” I whispered, tears finally falling. “I didn’t listen. I kept making excuses for him.”
My father’s thumb brushed my knuckles, gentle enough to undo me. “You’re safe now,” he said. “That’s all that matters.”
A medic moved a cold wand across my stomach. The seconds stretched. I held my breath so tightly it hurt.
Then—there it was.
A quick, rhythmic sound. Faint, but real.
The baby’s heartbeat.