He Was Laughing While She Bled Until Her Father Answered The Phone-Tep

The front door closed behind me at 7:15 PM.

That number stayed in my head because it glowed on the microwave clock while the rest of the house felt too still.

I was fifteen minutes late.

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Not an hour.

Fifteen minutes because a client emergency had dragged past closing, and my supervisor had asked me to finish the incident note before I left.

My phone still had the work message time-stamped 6:52 PM.

The shift log still had my initials.

None of that mattered inside my house.

Bradley was waiting in the hallway before I set my bag down.

To everyone else, Bradley Pembroke was charming.

He opened doors.

He remembered names.

He smiled at neighbors like kindness was a habit instead of a costume.

At home, especially after whiskey, the costume came off.

“Do you know what time it is?” he asked.

“I’m sorry,” I said quickly. “There was an emergency at work. I tried to call, but—”

The slap landed before I finished.

The hallway tilted.

The porch light blurred through the front window.

Then I tasted blood.

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