The motion dragged my broken leg across the floor. White-hot agony tore through my nervous system, a blinding flash that nearly made me black out. I screamed, my grip faltering just enough for him to rip his foot away.
The phone clattered loudly as Emma dropped it, scrambling backward into the walk-in pantry.
But the call had already connected. And the speakerphone was engaged.
From the plastic receiver lying on the floor, a voice resonated. It was low, gravelly, and carried the terrifying, absolute authority of a man who had spent three decades destroying criminals.
“Emma,” William, my father, commanded through the speaker. “Hide in the pantry. Close the door. Now.”
The pantry door clicked shut. Emma was secure.
David scrambled to the phone, snatching it off the floor and pressing the speaker button off, bringing it to his ear. He was panting, his charm entirely stripped away, leaving only a desperate, cornered man.
“Robert—William, listen to me,” David stammered, desperately trying to inject his usual smooth cadence into his voice. “Sarah had a terrible accident. She was agitated, she slipped on the marble—”
For two agonizing seconds, there was absolute silence on the line.
Then, my father spoke. Even without the speakerphone, in the quiet of the kitchen, I could hear the lethal precision in his words.
“Touch either of my girls again,” William said softly, “and the next accident in that house will be yours.”
David’s thumb violently crushed the ‘end call’ button. He stood frozen, staring at the plastic device as if it had just bitten him.
Margaret stepped forward, her face drained of its usual haughty color. The pearls at her throat trembled. “David. He’s calling the police. We need to leave. We need to get out of here before they arrive.”
“No,” David snapped, tossing the phone onto the counter. He ran a hand through his perfectly styled hair, ruining it. “We do not run. We need control. If we run, we look guilty.”
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