Blood has a way of making time behave strangely.
One second, Emily was sitting at the far end of her family’s dining table, hands folded in her lap, trying not to draw attention to herself.
The next, she was on the floor with the cold boards against the back of her skull and the taste of copper filling her mouth.
Above her, the chandelier broke into shaking points of light.
Around her, the people who were meant to be family were laughing.
The dinner had started with a kind of careful beauty that always made Emily nervous.
Her mother, Eleanor, had brought out the good china, the silver cutlery, and the napkins folded into stiff white triangles beside each plate.
There were candles in the middle of the table and a glass jug of water beading with condensation.
There was a roast dish under foil, potatoes crisping at the edges, and the faint comforting smell of gravy that should have made the room feel safe.
In that house, safety was usually part of the performance.
Emily knew the difference between warmth and display.
She had grown up learning when to answer, when to smile, and when to disappear into herself so completely that no one in the room remembered to be angry with her.
Madison had never had to learn that skill.
Madison arrived late, bright and laughing, with Travis at her side.
She held him by the arm as though she were presenting him, not introducing him.
He was smartly dressed, calm, expensive-looking in the way people become when they never seem to hurry.
Madison told everyone what he did before she told them anything that mattered about him.
Emily watched her mother soften at once.
Eleanor’s voice changed shape around impressive people.
It became lighter, smoother, almost girlish, with a little laugh at the end of sentences that were not funny.
Her father sat at the head of the table and nodded whenever Travis spoke.
Emily sat where she always sat, down by the sideboard, close to the draught from the hallway.
The cabinet door behind her still stuck, although her father had spent half the afternoon pretending to repair it.
The wrench he had used lay on a folded tea towel near the edge of the sideboard.
It looked out of place among the glass and polished wood, but nobody moved it.
Emily noticed it because she noticed everything that might become a problem.
That habit had kept her alive in quieter ways for years.
Madison talked for most of the first course.
She talked about restaurants, people Emily did not know, a weekend away, and how difficult it was to find somewhere with decent service anymore.
Her mother laughed at all the right places.
Her father topped up Travis’s glass twice.
Emily ate carefully, taking small bites, hoping to get through the evening without becoming the evening’s entertainment.
Then Travis looked at her.
Not glanced.
Looked.
He did not seem curious in the ordinary way.
He studied her as if she were a detail in the room that did not match the story he had been told.
“So, Emily,” he said, setting his glass down, “what exactly do you do?”
The table altered.
It was tiny, almost invisible, but Emily felt it.
Her mother’s fork paused.
Madison’s smile tightened.
Her father lowered his eyes towards his plate.
Emily could have lied in spirit, if not in fact.
She could have made her work sound neat, administrative, harmless.
Instead she told the truth.
“I’m a social worker,” she said.
Her voice was quieter than she wanted it to be, so she steadied it.
“I work with teenagers who need help getting somewhere safe.”
Travis’s expression changed by a fraction.
“Why choose that?” he asked.
Not kindly.
Not with interest.
As if he had found something faintly distasteful in his food.
Emily felt her mother watching her.
She thought of the appointment card tucked inside her bag.
She thought of the intake form she had signed that afternoon.
She thought of the girl who had sat across from her twisting a plastic keyring so hard the cheap metal split, whispering that she did not want to go home.
There were jobs people admired because they sounded important.
There were jobs people avoided looking at because they showed what polite families could hide.
“It matters,” Emily said. “The system is imperfect, but sometimes you can still make one person safer than they were when they woke up.”
Eleanor gave a small laugh without humour.
“Nobody wants those depressing stories at dinner,” she said.
The words were familiar.
They had different costumes over the years, but the meaning was always the same.
Do not bring your real life into this room.
Do not make us look at suffering unless we can blame you for it.
Do not speak as if your work matters.
Emily should have dropped her gaze.
She knew that.
She knew the rules as well as she knew the layout of the house in the dark.
A family can train a person for obedience without ever calling it training.
It can do it through sighs, silences, jokes, little punishments, and the simple fact that love is handed out like a prize you keep failing to win.
But Travis was still watching her.
Madison was smiling as if waiting for their mother to finish the job.
And Emily felt, for one strange clean moment, tired of shrinking.
“It isn’t depressing,” she said.
Her hands were trembling under the table, so she pressed them against her knees.
“It’s real. It helps people. More than pretending everything is perfect because there’s a guest here.”
No one breathed.
The candles seemed suddenly louder than the people.
Eleanor stood.
Emily saw the movement but did not understand it quickly enough.
Her mother’s hand closed around the wrench on the sideboard.
Then the metal came sideways through the candlelight.
The first sensation was brightness.
Then sound.
Then heat.
The blow struck her face and turned the room into fragments.
Chair legs tilted.
The ceiling moved.
Her shoulder hit the floor, and then the back of her head met the wood with a dull hard sound she felt more than heard.
For several seconds, Emily could not work out where her body ended.
Her jaw would not sit properly.
Her eye was already swelling.
The left side of her face pulsed with a pain so large it seemed separate from her.
She heard someone inhale.
She waited for the chair scrape, the rush of feet, the cry of shock.
None came.
Her father stared at the table.
Madison stared at Emily.
Travis stared too, his glass halfway to his mouth.
Eleanor stood above her with the wrench hanging at her side.
There was blood on the metal.
There was blood on Emily’s tongue.
For one mad, hopeful second, Emily thought perhaps the silence meant horror.
Then Madison laughed.
It burst out of her, high and delighted, and once it started she did not seem able to stop.
“At least you’re pretty now,” she said.
She clutched her stomach as if Emily had performed some brilliant trick.
“Oh my God, Travis, look at her.”
Travis laughed.
That was worse than the pain in a way Emily could not immediately name.
He was not laughing because he was nervous.
He was not laughing because he did not know what else to do.
He laughed as though the violence had confirmed something he had come to see.
The room did not break after her mother hit her.
The room continued.
That was the horror of it.
The candles kept burning.
The plates stayed full.
The napkins remained folded.
Emily’s work bag had tipped open beside her chair, spilling the ordinary proof of her day across the floor.
A staff card slid partly under the sideboard.
A folded letter lay near the leg of the table.
A chemist receipt stuck to a smear of gravy.
The appointment card she had meant to file properly later rested near her hand.
All those small paper things seemed suddenly more alive than the people around her.
They had witnessed more honestly than any face at the table.
Emily tried to move backwards.
Her palm slipped on the floor.
Her mouth filled again, and she swallowed because she did not know what else to do.
Madison wiped her eyes.
“I really think one hit wasn’t enough,” she said.
The sentence passed through Emily like ice water.
Her mother looked down at her with a calm, tidy smile.
It was the same smile she used when asking Emily why she could not make a bit more effort with her hair.
It was the same smile she used when telling visitors that Emily had always been difficult, always sensitive, always dramatic.
Eleanor turned the wrench in her hand.
The red mark along the iron caught the candlelight.
Then she tossed it across to Madison.
Madison caught it with both hands.
“Well,” Eleanor said. “Your turn. Teach her some manners.”
Emily lifted an arm.
It was barely an arm by then.
It felt heavy, detached, foolishly small against what was coming.
Her father moved at last.
For one impossible heartbeat, Emily thought he was going to help her.
He stepped over her body, bent down, and seized her wrist.
Then he pinned it to the floor.
His grip was firm, practised, almost bored.
“Hold still, Emily,” he said.
Those words were quieter than the laughter, but they frightened her more.
They told her he knew exactly what was happening.
They told her he had chosen his place in it.
Madison raised the wrench.
Her face was flushed with excitement and something uglier than anger.
Travis had stopped laughing now, but Emily could not see enough of him to know why.
The room had narrowed to the iron shape above her, her father’s hand on her wrist, and her mother’s perfume mixing with candle smoke.
Then blue-white light moved across the front windows.
Once.
Twice.
Hard and bright through the curtains.
The colour of the room changed.
The china flashed cold.
The silver handles glittered.
The blood on the wrench looked black for a second.
Eleanor’s smile faded first.
Madison’s arm stayed in the air, but her face turned towards the glass.
The confidence drained out of her so quickly she looked almost younger.
Emily heard a sound from outside.
A car door.
Then another.
Her father’s grip loosened by the smallest amount.
Travis was standing now, chair pushed back, his attention fixed on the hall.
Nobody at the table laughed.
Nobody told Emily she was being dramatic.
Nobody asked her to apologise.
The blue-white light swept across the windows again, and this time it caught Emily’s staff card beneath the sideboard, her own photographed face staring upwards from the floor.
For the first time that evening, the whole family looked afraid.
And Emily, bleeding on the boards while Madison held the wrench above her, realised someone outside that room might finally have heard enough.