The sound came first—a dull, heavy thud of wood hitting bone that seemed to suck the oxygen right out of my lungs. The baseball bat clattered across the hardwood and slid under the mahogany side table while I dropped to my knees, tasting the metallic tang of blood and the dust of a house I hadn’t stepped in for a decade.crsaid
My father’s heavy work boots planted themselves firmly in front of my face as I struggled to find a single breath. “Sell the place, Callie,” he barked with a coldness that made the room feel like a tomb. “Your sister is drowning in debt, and she needs the equity from this house more than you need a trophy.”
I tried to draw air, but a sharp, stabbing pain under my ribs made every gasp feel like a blade was twisting in my chest. This living room used to smell like fresh pine and cinnamon rolls, but tonight, it only smelled like old grudges and sudden violence.
“Harold, please, just stop it,” my mother’s voice trembled from the hallway, though she didn’t move an inch to help me. My sister stood behind her with her arms folded tight, her eyes narrow and filled with a bitter kind of greed.
“Grandmother wanted this home to stay in the family, and I’m the only one with a family to raise,” my sister snapped. I tried to tell them that the will was clear and that our grandmother had left it specifically to me, but the words died in my throat as the pain intensified.
My father reached down to grab the bat again, his face twisted in a mask of rage that I didn’t recognize from my childhood. Suddenly, the evening air was shattered by the high-pitched wail of sirens growing louder as they turned onto our quiet street in Silver Ridge.
The front door was thrown open with a bang, and three men in uniform filled the entryway—a local sheriff’s deputy and two federal officers from the naval base. “Drop the weapon and put your hands where we can see them!” the deputy commanded, his hand resting on his holster.
The bat fell to the floor for the last time, and my father’s hands went up, his bravado vanishing the moment he saw the law. One of the naval officers stepped forward, his eyes widening as he recognized me lying there on the rug.
“Commander Sterling,” the officer said, his voice instantly switching to a tone of deep professional respect. “Ma’am, stay still, we have an ambulance on the way.”
The room seemed to freeze as my mother’s hand flew to her mouth in shock and my sister’s face went pale. My father looked at the officer, then at me, then at the shadow box on the wall containing my service ribbons, looking like a man who had just realized he was standing on a landmine.
“I’m fine, Officer Jenkins,” I lied, though the world turned white and blurry the moment I tried to shift my weight. The deputy handcuffed my father right there in the middle of the foyer, reading him his rights while my father stared at me in total silence.
