I counted every blow because counting was the only thing left that still belonged to me.
One came across my mouth.
Two hit the same cheek.

Three made someone at the far end of the room draw in a breath and then swallow it, as if even pity had become impolite.
By the time my son Ryan struck me for the thirtieth time, I could taste blood and expensive red wine in the air.
The room had gone still in that awful British way, not brave enough to intervene and too embarrassed to look away.
My name is Leonard Mercer, and I am sixty-eight years old.
I built things for a living long before my son learnt how to fasten a cufflink or speak as if the world owed him a clear path.
Commercial buildings, private developments, office sites, hotels, road contracts, all the heavy ugly work that looks glamorous only after the scaffolding comes down.
I knew men who lied with handshakes.
I knew companies that smiled while delaying payment until smaller firms folded.
I had stood in rain before dawn, eaten sandwiches in freezing site cabins, argued with lenders, soothed workers, fought through legal letters, and slept with one eye open during recessions.
I had survived enough to know when a man was dangerous.
That night, the dangerous man was my son.
It began as a birthday dinner.
Ryan was thirty-two, successful in the way people are when they have learnt to borrow confidence from other people’s money.
His house looked immaculate from the pavement.
Wide windows.
Soft lighting.
A polished door with a smart brass handle.
Inside, it smelt of candles, perfume, roasted meat, and money trying very hard to announce itself without sounding vulgar.
I parked away from the house because the drive was full of expensive cars, the kind with spotless interiors and owners who kept their voices just a little too loud.
The February air was damp enough to settle in my coat.
I remember standing on the front step with the present under my arm, hearing laughter through the door, and thinking, foolishly, that perhaps the evening might pass without insult.
The present was wrapped in plain brown paper.
Inside was an antique Rolex from the 1960s, carefully restored, the model my father once admired when he was a young man with cracked hands and no money to spare.
He had never owned one.
I had bought it for Ryan because part of me still believed a son could be reminded of where he came from without feeling accused.
That was my mistake.
Ryan’s wife Vanessa opened the door.
She looked at the parcel before she looked at me.
“Leon,” she said, not Dad, not even Leonard, just Leon with that polished little pause she used when she wanted people to hear she was being tolerant.
I stepped into the hallway.
There were coats hung neatly, shoes tucked under a bench, a damp umbrella in a stand, and the faint whistle of a kettle clicking off somewhere beyond the kitchen.
Everything in that house had the careful finish of a life curated for visitors.
The irony was that I had paid for every inch of it.
Six years earlier, after closing the biggest deal of my career, I bought the property outright through one of my companies.
Ryan and Vanessa had just married.
They said they needed space.
They said renting was a waste.
They said starting married life in a proper home would give them stability.
I handed them keys and let them move in.
I did not transfer ownership.
I did not gift it.
I did not sign away the asset.
I let them live there because I still thought generosity could build gratitude.
Over time, they began to call it theirs.
At first it was small.
“Our kitchen.”
“Our garden.”
“Our house.”
Then it became public.
Friends were shown round as if Ryan had earned every room.
Vanessa gave little speeches about taste and hard work.
Once, at a dinner, I heard her tell another woman that Ryan had always had an eye for property.
I nearly laughed into my tea.
Ryan had never negotiated a planning delay, never argued with a contractor over cracked foundations, never held a payroll together while a client stalled for six weeks.
But I let it go.
Parents let too much go.
We tell ourselves we are keeping peace when really we are training disrespect to grow bold.
The warnings had been there for years.
Ryan stopped ringing unless he needed something.
Vanessa asked me to send a message before coming over, as if the man who bought the place required an appointment to stand in its hallway.
They made comments about my old car.
They laughed about my coats.
They looked at my hands as though the roughness embarrassed them.
Those hands had signed the cheques that kept their life shining.
Still, I came to his birthday.
That is what fathers do when they are still hoping.
Dinner began with polite noise.
People spoke about holidays, kitchens, interest rates, schools their future children might attend, and the exhausting problem of finding decent staff for renovations.
I sat near the end of the table, listening more than speaking.
Ryan was at the centre of it all, leaning back, accepting attention like a man born to be toasted.
Vanessa watched him with pride and watched me with amusement.
The watch came out after dessert.
I handed him the parcel and told him it had belonged to no one famous, but it carried a story.
Ryan tore the paper with the impatience of a child.
For half a second, his face changed.
He knew it was valuable.
Then he remembered his audience.
He lifted the box, glanced at the watch, and set it down too sharply.
“Is this supposed to mean something?” he asked.
I said, “Your grandfather wanted one like it. He never could.”
Ryan smiled without warmth.
“Well, I’m not him.”
A few people chuckled because they were not sure what else to do.
Vanessa took a sip of wine.
I felt something tighten in my chest, but I kept my voice calm.
“No,” I said. “You are not.”
That was enough to irritate him.
He pushed back from the table and looked around the room, making sure everyone saw him take command.
“I’m sick of you acting like we owe you something,” he said.
The words landed harder than they should have because they were not new.
They were simply the first time he had said them plainly.
“You turn up with your sad little presents and your old stories,” he continued. “You look at everything like you still own it.”
Someone murmured his name.
Vanessa did not.
She sat on the sofa now, glass lifted, smiling as if the scene had finally reached the part she had paid to watch.
I looked at Ryan.
“This house has given you a comfortable life,” I said.
He laughed.
“This house has nothing to do with you anymore.”
That sentence emptied the room.
Even the people who had been pretending to admire the curtains stopped moving.
The kettle in the kitchen clicked once in the quiet.
Rain tapped faintly against the windows.
I should have stood up and left then.
Instead, I gave him one final chance to remember himself.
“Careful, son,” I said. “Don’t forget who built the ground under your feet.”
His face hardened.
Not hurt.
Exposed.
That is what frightened him.
A spoiled man can survive being disliked, but he cannot bear being seen.
Ryan stood so quickly his chair went over behind him.
He came round the table in three strides and shoved me.
I hit the edge of a chair and caught myself.
For a moment, nobody breathed.
Then he slapped me.
The sound was flat and ugly.
A woman near the doorway covered her mouth.
One of Ryan’s friends shifted forward, then stopped when Vanessa’s eyes cut towards him.
The second slap came before I had straightened.
The third knocked my head sideways.
After that, the count began in my mind.
Four.
Five.
Six.
I did not count because I was weak.
I counted because if I spoke, I might beg him to remember being a child, and I refused to give him that power.
Seven.
Eight.
Nine.
The room blurred at the edges.
I saw fragments more than faces.
A bracelet glinting.
A wine stain creeping across a napkin.
The watch box lying open on the floor.
Vanessa’s mouth curved above the rim of her glass.
Ten.
Eleven.
Twelve.
Every strike removed something.
Not love all at once.
Love is stubborn.
It clings.
First went denial.
Then hope.
Then the quiet habit of blaming myself.
By twenty, I understood that my son was not losing control.
He was enjoying control.
By twenty-five, I understood that his guests were not shocked enough to stop him.
By thirty, I understood that I had been mourning a boy who no longer existed.
Ryan stepped back, breathing hard.
He looked triumphant.
That was the part I remember most clearly.
Not the pain.
Not the blood.
The pride.
He believed he had humiliated me in his house, before his wife, before his friends, before the life he thought he owned.
I wiped my mouth with the back of my hand.
Blood marked my skin.
My jaw ached.
My eye was already swelling.
Still, I bent down and picked up the watch box.
The room remained silent.
A lifetime of work had taught me that silence is often where the truth hides.
Ryan said, “Go on then, Leon. Run home.”
No one corrected him.
No one said Dad.
I walked down the hallway with the present under my arm.
The umbrella stand knocked gently against my leg as I passed.
My coat brushed the wall.
Outside, the air was cold and wet, and I stood on the step for a moment while the door closed behind me.
I could have called the police.
I could have shouted through the letterbox.
I could have gone back in and made the kind of scene men like Ryan fear most because it cannot be polished afterwards.
But anger burns quickly when it has waited for permission for years.
Mine went cold.
I drove home slowly.
Every red light felt longer than it was.
My lip bled again when I swallowed.
At home, I did not turn on the television.
I did not pour a drink.
I put the kettle on because some habits survive even humiliation.
Then I sat at my kitchen table until the tea went cold.
The house was quiet around me.
Not grand.
Not impressive.
Mine.
There were old work boots near the door, a tea towel over the sink, a stack of post I had not opened, and a small framed photograph of Ryan at seven years old, grinning through missing teeth in a school jumper.
I turned the photograph face down.
That was the only dramatic thing I allowed myself that night.
In the morning, my face looked worse.
The bathroom mirror showed a man I recognised but did not like seeing.
One eye dark.
Lip split.
Cheek swollen.
A faint bruise along the jaw.
I washed carefully, dressed slowly, and made tea I barely touched.
Then I opened the drawer beneath the kitchen dresser and took out a file.
It was not hidden.
It had never needed to be.
Ryan had never cared enough to ask where the paperwork was because Ryan had never imagined paperwork could matter more than performance.
The file contained the purchase documents, company records, insurance papers, tax correspondence, keys, and the chain of ownership he had spent six years pretending did not exist.
The house was not his.
It had never been his.
It belonged to the company I controlled.
I laid everything across the table with the care of a man arranging tools before a job.
The brass key went beside the solicitor’s card.
The property file went beneath the watch box.
A sealed envelope sat to one side.
For the first time since the dinner, my hands stopped shaking.
Pain can make a man small if he lets it.
Properly used, it can also make him precise.
At nine o’clock, I rang my solicitor.
He had known me for years and had the dry voice of a man who trusted documents more than emotions.
When I told him I wanted the property sold, he paused.
“Leonard,” he said, “is this a considered decision?”
I looked at the blood on the handkerchief beside my mug.
“Yes.”
He asked if Ryan knew.
“No.”
He asked if there was any written tenancy agreement giving Ryan protected expectations beyond the arrangements already recorded.
I told him to read the file.
He knew what that meant.
A father may be sentimental.
A company is not.
While Ryan sat in his office that morning, probably nursing wounded pride and waiting for me to apologise for embarrassing him, calls began.
Valuations.
Instructions.
Discreet enquiries.
A property that looked untouchable at dinner became an asset on paper before lunch.
Paper has no respect for arrogance.
That is why arrogant people hate it.
Around half past nine, there was a knock at my back door.
My neighbour stood outside in a raincoat, holding her phone with both hands.
She was a quiet woman, the kind who put bins out early and apologised when other people blocked the pavement.
Her face changed when she saw mine.
“I heard shouting last night,” she said.
I did not answer immediately.
There is a particular shame in being seen after your own child has hurt you.
It is not shame for what happened.
It is shame for all the years you explained it away.
She held up the phone.
“I was worried. I recorded a bit from the window when you got out of your car. Then later, when they were in the garden.”
I nearly told her I did not want to see it.
Then I remembered Vanessa’s smile.
I let her in.
The kitchen suddenly felt too small for the truth about to enter it.
She placed the phone on the table beside the papers, the key, and the cold tea.
The recording was shaky.
At first it showed only darkness, wet glass, and the pale glow from Ryan’s house beyond the fence line.
Then the audio sharpened.
Voices.
Ryan’s, angry and low.
Vanessa’s, clearer than I expected.
She was not laughing now.
She was planning.
I heard her say my name.
Then I heard the phrase that made the solicitor’s card under my hand feel heavier.
She said they had to make me understand I had no place there anymore.
Ryan muttered something I could not catch.
Vanessa replied that once I was embarrassed badly enough, I would sign anything to keep the peace.
My neighbour put a hand over her mouth.
I sat very still.
The pain in my face seemed to move somewhere deeper.
It is one thing to be struck in anger.
It is another to hear that your humiliation had been considered useful.
The watch box sat between us.
The brass key caught the morning light.
The house papers lay open like a verdict.
My solicitor was still on hold.
Ryan was still in his office.
Vanessa was still inside the house she thought she had conquered.
And I had just learnt that selling it was only the beginning.