Dad Locked The Dining Room, But My Fake Bank Page Called Police-ngyen

The lock turned with a click so small that, for a moment, I wondered if I had imagined it.

My father stood by the dining room door with one hand still resting on the brass key, his back straight, his shoulders set, as if he had just completed an ordinary little household task.

Outside the window, rain tapped against the glass and blurred the dark garden into a smear of wet brick and black branches.

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Inside, the roast sat untouched beneath the light, the gravy had already begun to skin over, and the kettle in the kitchen clicked as it cooled beside two mugs nobody had finished.

Dad did not hurry back to the table.

He slipped the key into the inside pocket of his jacket first.

That was the moment the family dinner stopped being a family dinner.

It became a trap.

Mum sat opposite me with her wine glass lifted halfway to her mouth, her lipstick leaving a red mark on the rim, her eyes fixed not on me but on the open laptop beside my sister.

Jessica was hunched over it like a person warming herself at a fire.

Her red nails struck the keys in quick little taps, and the forged ID card she had brought with her lay flat beside the trackpad, its plastic surface catching the dining room light.

My contactless card had been shoved under her elbow as if it were something she had already won.

Dad returned to his chair.

He picked up the steak knife from beside his plate, wiped the clean blade across his napkin, and studied it for a second too long.

Then he pushed it towards me.

The knife slid over the white cloth with a dry, dragging whisper.

It stopped with its point aimed at the centre of my chest.

“Transfer the money, Rosalind,” he said quietly. “Or we find out how much you really value your life.”

There are rooms where shouting would be easier to bear.

This was not one of them.

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