“Yes,” I said. “I called your father.”
Walter plated the steak and eggs with the same care he might once have used cleaning a service weapon, then set a plate in front of Caleb without asking him to sit.
“Eat if you want,” he said. “This conversation will go better if your blood sugar isn’t doing the lying for you.”
Caleb remained standing.
“Emma, whatever story you told them—”
Vivian opened her folder and slid the printed photos across the table.
“My story,” I said, “has timestamps.”
He looked at the pictures.
My face.
The bruise.
The dresser.
The room.
I watched his calculation change from dominance to damage control.
That was Caleb’s true gift. He could change masks faster than some people change subjects.
The shock vanished.
The anger softened.
Then came the civilized tone, the one he used with clients, neighbors, and my friends when he needed to sound wounded instead of dangerous.
“This is being blown way out of proportion,” he said. “It was one moment. I was exhausted. She was screaming in my face. I barely touched her.”
Walter finally turned around.
He looked at his son the way a coroner might look at a body after cause of death stops being a mystery and becomes something insultingly obvious.
“You hit your wife,” he said. “After cheating on her. And then you slept. Don’t insult us by adding adverbs.”
Caleb’s jaw tightened.
“I knew you’d take her side.”
Walter gave a cold little shrug. “I take truth’s side. You just make that easy.”
Caleb turned to Vivian next, because men like him always search the room for the softest point before accepting that none exists.
“With all due respect, this is a marital dispute,” he said. “I don’t understand why you’re even here.”
Vivian smiled, small and deadly. “I’m here because Emma called a lawyer before breakfast instead of apologizing to her abuser. It restored my faith in civilization.”
He flinched at the word abuser.
That mattered.
Because some men can survive being called selfish, immature, unfaithful, even cruel. But the right word terrifies them when it lands in a room full of witnesses.
“I’m not an abuser,” he snapped.
I spoke before anyone else could.
“You hit me.”
“I pushed you.”
“You hit me.”
“You were hysterical.”
“I was holding your phone.”
The room fell still.
That exchange held our whole marriage in miniature: the act, the denial, the shrinking of it, the panic when facts refused to cooperate.
Walter sat down at last.
He did not shout.