After the Wine Glass Hit Me, My Parents Finally Feared My Silence-heuh

During Easter dinner, my parents hurled a wine glass at me after I refused to let my sister and her children move into my house.

“You’re so selfish!” my mother snapped, while my father added, “You’ve got all those extra bedrooms sitting empty!”

I just smiled, stood up, and drove myself to A&E.

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While bleeding in the waiting room, I texted my solicitor: “Phase one is done.”

Less than an hour later, the police showed up.

The glass struck the side of my forehead before my mind could make sense of my father’s hand moving.

There was a sound like a plate cracking against tile, only sharper, wetter, and far too close to my face.

The dining room went still in the way rooms go still when everyone has witnessed something that cannot be politely folded back into conversation.

For a heartbeat, I stared at the ham in the middle of the table.

Its glaze had begun to set beneath the warm yellow light, glossy in some places and dull in others, while the bowl of potatoes steamed gently beside it.

The kettle had clicked off in the kitchen minutes earlier, but nobody had poured the tea.

Rain tapped against the back window with a patience none of us had.

Then warmth slipped down my cheek.

I thought it was wine at first.

It was Easter dinner, after all, and wine had been in his glass.

Then the liquid touched the corner of my mouth.

It tasted metallic.

Blood has a way of telling the truth before people do.

My mother, Genevieve, stood at the far end of the table with both palms flattened on the lace cloth.

She was breathing hard, nostrils flared, as though I had struck her by bleeding in front of everyone.

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