Chapter 8: The Last Night Under That Roof

1543 Words
Chapter 8: The Last Night Under That Roof (Zara POV) I was right. By the time I pushed the door open and stepped inside, the atmosphere in the house had already shifted into something tense and expectant, like a scene that had been prepared ahead of my arrival. I didn’t need to ask to know what had happened. Keisha had called. Of course she had. She would not miss an opportunity to tell her version first, to shape everything before I even had the chance to speak. My father was already in the living room, standing in the center like he had been waiting for me. My stepmother stood a few steps behind him, her arms folded, her expression composed in that familiar way that always made it clear she was enjoying this more than she should. I didn’t sit. I didn’t even drop my bag. I just stood there, still holding onto the last bit of control I had left. “What did you do this time?” my father asked. There was no greeting. No pause. Just accusation, immediate and sharp. I let out a slow breath. “I went to work.” His jaw tightened. “Don’t play games with me, Zara. I just got off the phone with Keisha.” Of course you did. “She said you attacked her,” he continued. “In public. In your workplace.” I let the words settle for a second before responding. “She slapped me first.” My stepmother let out a quiet scoff from behind him. “There’s always an excuse with you.” “I’m not making excuses,” I said, my voice steady despite the way my chest felt tight. “I’m telling you what happened.” “What happened,” my father repeated, his tone sharpening, “is that you embarrassed this family again.” Something in me shifted at that word. Again. “I embarrassed this family?” I asked, unable to keep the edge out of my voice anymore. “Not the part where my boyfriend got my half-sister pregnant? Not the part where she walked into my workplace to provoke me?” “Watch your tone,” he snapped. “No,” I said, before I could stop myself. “You watch yours.” The room went still. For a moment, even my stepmother looked slightly surprised. I had never said that to him before. Not like that. Not without backing down immediately after. My father’s expression hardened, the kind of cold that didn’t come from anger alone. “I’m still your father,” he said slowly. “And I’m still your daughter,” I replied. “At least, I’m supposed to be.” That landed. I saw it in the slight shift in his expression, the way his shoulders tightened just enough to give it away. “You want to talk about embarrassment?” I continued, my voice no longer as controlled as it had been when I walked in. “Let’s talk about how you stood there and told me to apologize to her. After everything she did.” “She’s pregnant,” he said, like that explained everything. “And I’m not?” I shot back. “I’m not hurt? I’m not allowed to react?” “You’re supposed to act like an adult,” he replied. A short, disbelieving laugh slipped out of me. “An adult? Is that what you call this? Ignoring what she did and blaming me for reacting to it?” “You’ve always been difficult,” my stepmother added calmly, stepping forward slightly now. “Always making things harder than they need to be.” I turned to look at her fully. “I make things harder?” “Yes,” she said without hesitation. “You don’t know when to let things go. You hold onto every little issue and turn it into something bigger.” “Every little issue,” I repeated. “Is that what this is to you?” “Zara,” my father cut in, clearly losing patience, “this is not the time to argue about feelings.” “No,” I said, shaking my head slowly. “It never is with you, is it?” He frowned. “What is that supposed to mean?” “It means,” I continued, the words coming faster now, pulled from places I had kept quiet for years, “that every time something happens, I’m the one who has to adjust. I’m the one who has to be quiet. I’m the one who has to let it go.” “That’s not true.” “It is,” I said firmly. “It’s always been true.” I took a step closer, my grip tightening around the strap of my bag. “When I was younger, and she broke my things, you told me not to make a fuss,” I said, looking directly at him. “When she lied about me, you told me to be patient. When she treated me like I didn’t belong in this house, you said I should try harder.” My stepmother shifted slightly, but I didn’t look at her again. “And now,” I added, my voice lower but heavier, “she sleeps with my boyfriend, gets pregnant, walks into my workplace to humiliate me, and somehow I’m still the problem.” My father’s face didn’t soften. If anything, it closed off more. “You’re overreacting,” he said. That was it. That was the line that broke whatever was left in me that still hoped he would understand. “I’m overreacting?” I repeated quietly. “You knew about them. You said it yourself. You’ve known for a week.” He didn’t answer. “You knew,” I said again, more firmly this time, “and you didn’t think I deserved to hear it from you first.” “It wasn’t my place—” “I’m your daughter,” I cut in, my voice rising for the first time. “If it’s not your place, then whose is it?” Silence filled the room, heavy and uncomfortable. For a moment, I thought he might actually say something different this time. He didn’t. “Apologize to Keisha,” he said instead, like we had gone in a circle and ended up exactly where he wanted us to be. “Publicly. Properly. And let this go.” I stared at him. For a long moment, I didn’t say anything. I just looked at him, really looked this time, like I was seeing him clearly for the first time in years. All those moments. All those times I stayed quiet, thinking it would make things easier. Thinking that if I just waited long enough, if I just tried hard enough, eventually he would see me. He didn’t. He wasn’t going to. “Or what?” I asked finally. His expression didn’t change. “Or you leave.” There it was clear, simple and final. I nodded once, slowly. “Okay,” I said. I turned and walked upstairs before either of them could say anything else. --- My room looked exactly the same as I had left it, and for a second, that almost felt worse than anything that had just happened downstairs. Like nothing had changed. Like everything had. I moved around the space quietly, pulling a bag from under my bed and setting it on top. I didn’t rush, but I didn’t hesitate either. I packed what I needed. Clothes. Documents. A few personal things I couldn’t leave behind. My eyes paused briefly on a photo of me and my dad on the desk. I didn’t pick it up. I didn’t take it with me. Some things didn’t need to follow me anymore. When I was done, I zipped the bag and took one last look around the room. Then I picked it up and walked out. --- They were still in the living room when I came back down. My father glanced at the bag, then at me, like he was waiting for me to say something. To change my mind. To apologize. I didn’t. I walked past him without a word. Each step toward the door felt heavier than it should have, but I didn’t stop. I was almost there when my stepmother spoke. “Don’t come back unless you’re ready to behave like you belong here.” Her voice was calm. Precise. Like she had been waiting for the exact right moment to say it. I stopped, not for long but just enough before I turned. I looked at her first, at the woman who had spent years making sure I never felt like I had a place in this house. Then I looked at my father. For a second, I waited. I didn’t know what for exactly. Maybe for him to say something. Anything. To stop me. To correct her. To choose me. He didn’t. He looked away. That was all it took. I nodded once, more to myself than to them, then turned back to the door. I opened it and stepped outside. The sound of it closing behind me was quiet. But it felt final.
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