Her Family Used Her Credit, Then One Knock Changed Everything-Lian

My dad smashed my jaw for “talking back.”

That was what he called it.

Talking back.

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Not asking a fair question.

Not noticing the one rule that had shaped our whole house for years.

Not pointing out that Kyle, my older brother, could lie on the couch all morning while I cleaned, cooked, paid, apologized, and swallowed everything.

Just talking back.

The crack came in our kitchen under the yellow overhead light, the kind of light that made the chipped cabinets look tired and the old tile look permanently dirty no matter how hard I scrubbed.

The pan on the stove hissed with burned butter.

The refrigerator hummed.

My father’s fist hit the side of my face with the calm certainty of a man who had never mistaken himself for anything but right.

My teeth slammed together.

A flash of white exploded behind my eyes.

Then the floor rushed up and hit my palms.

For a second, I did not understand why my hand was wet.

Then I saw the red smear on the tile.

Blood.

Mine.

My mother laughed.

That was the part my mind kept returning to later, not because my father’s fist did not matter, but because laughter has its own kind of violence when it comes from the woman who taught you how to tie your shoes.

“That’s what you get for being useless,” she said, stepping around me with the coffee pot like I was a spill.

Dad stood over me, breathing hard through his nose.

“Maybe now you’ll learn to keep that gutter mouth shut.”

Kyle was in the doorway.

He had one shoulder against the frame, his phone in his hand, his mouth curled into that familiar lazy smirk.

He did not look shocked.

He looked entertained.

All I had said was, “Why can’t he do anything around here?”

That was it.

One ordinary question.

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