I heard the sound a fraction of a second before my brain registered the pain. It was a sickening, dry crack—the distinct, horrifying acoustic profile of bone colliding heavily with enamel—followed immediately by the violent sensation of my head snapping back on my neck. The living room tilted sharply to the left. Then came the taste: hot, metallic copper flooding my mouth, thick, warm, and overwhelming. My father, Richard, was so close to my face that I could count the broken, purple capillaries charting maps of rage across his nose. I could see the gray, bristly stubble he hadn’t bothered to shave for days. His breath, a stale, suffocating miasma of cheap black coffee and unfiltered tobacco, washed over my face, making my stomach violently churn. “You actually think you get to keep your little paycheck when your sister needs it?” he growled, his voice a low, vibrating engine of malice. The sheer force of his tone seemed to rattle the very teeth remaining in my jaw. My knees buckled. Pure biological instinct took over as my hand flew to my mouth. When I pulled my trembling fingers away, they were slick with bright, undeniable crimson. I slowly
ran my tongue over my upper gum line and felt the jagged, gaping void instantly. My right front tooth was gone. Severed cleanly at the root. I wanted to scream. I wanted to violently list the reality of our lives—that I had already paid half of her luxury apartment rent last month. I wanted to scream about the grocery bills I covered, the premium cellular family plan I financed, the endless, desperate “loans” that evaporated into the ether. But before my bleeding mouth could form a single syllable, my mother’s voice cut through the heavy air. Catherine’s voice was always sharp,
gleeful, and precise, like a surgical scalpel slicing through silk. “Parasites should learn to obey their hosts,” she said smoothly. I looked up, my vision blurring with involuntary tears. She was standing calmly by the kitchen island, smiling. It wasn’t a warm, maternal smile; it was the deeply
satisfied, chilling smirk of someone who had just scratched off a winning lottery ticket. Her cold blue eyes scanned me up and down, lingering on the drops of blood staining her pristine beige carpet. She wasn’t looking at her injured daughter. she was looking at a filthy inconvenience that
would require expensive stain remover. She turned her back to me, picked up a crystal carafe, and poured a glass of warm lemon water. She walked over to Richard, gently pressing the glass into his trembling hand. “Drink this, honey. Calm your nerves. Don’t let her raise your blood
pressure,” she cooed, completely ignoring the fact that he had just assaulted me.
On the plush, imported Italian leather sofa, my younger sister, Madison, was lounging like a profoundly bored monarch. She held her iPhone high in one hand, her thumb expertly scrolling. She paused, noticing the commotion, and framed her screen.
“Ugh, seriously?” Madison whined, her voice dripping with extreme annoyance as she examined her front-facing camera. “Victoria, move out of the frame. Your bleeding face is totally ruining my filter. And don’t get drops on the rug. It’s disgusting, and I have VIP promoters coming over for pre-drinks in an hour.”
I tried to draw a breath through the pounding, blinding headache that was blooming behind my eyes, but the auditory landscape of the room was quickly dominated by Richard’s echoing, absolute authority.
“You’ll wire your entire salary into the joint account by midnight tonight,” he commanded, stepping back but keeping a thick, accusatory finger pointed directly at my face. “Or I swear to God, I will make sure you can’t work in this city ever again. I’ll call your boss at the tech firm. I’ll tell him we found you stealing from us. Let’s see exactly how fast you lose that precious, arrogant little career of yours.”
Madison smirked, finally lowering her phone. “He has a valid point,” she drawled to Catherine, as casually as discussing the weather. “You can’t just let parasites walk around thinking they have human rights. It sends the absolute wrong message to society.”
They laughed. The three of them. A harmonious, terrifying chord of synchronized cruelty. It felt like a sick, private joke where my entire existence was the punchline.
I stumbled toward the kitchen sink, reaching blindly for the roll of thick paper towels. Catherine moved with terrifying, predatory speed, yanking the roll away from my grasping fingers.
“Those are strictly for the guests,” she said flatly. She used the toe of her designer flat to kick a dirty, gray rag from under the sink toward my feet. “Use the floor rag.”
I slowly bent down and picked it up. It smelled violently of mildew and old, rancid bacon grease, but I pressed it against my bleeding mouth anyway. The pure, unadulterated humiliation was clawing at the inside of my chest, far sharper and far more destructive than the physical trauma.
“You think I’m making empty threats?” Richard took a heavy step into my shadow. “I’ll call Mr. Harrison right now. One phone call, Victoria. One accusation, and you are entirely unemployable.”
I looked at him through a heavy blur of tears. I wanted to shatter the expensive Ming vase on the mantelpiece—a vase I had paid for with my holiday bonus. But I knew better. They fed on explosive reactions. They desperately wanted me to break, to beg, to scream, so they could easily dismiss me as “hysterical” and justify their abuse.
I wiped my chin, locked my knees, straightened my spine, and forced my trembling legs to hold my weight.
“You will regret this,” I said. My voice was incredibly quiet, muffled by the dirty rag, but it was anchored in solid steel.
His eyes narrowed, a thick purple vein pulsing rapidly at his temple. “You’re already regretting it,” he mocked, tapping a thick finger against his own perfectly capped front tooth.
“You’ve always thought you were so much smarter than us,” Catherine chuckled, slowly shaking her head in pity. “But you are absolutely nothing without this family. Remember your place.”
Madison sighed dramatically, setting her phone face-down. “Actually, let’s make this super easy. Just hand over your banking app password, Victoria. I’ll do the transfer myself right now. It saves time.”
I stared at my sister. The sheer, sociopathic audacity of the request was almost surreal. “You’ve completely lost your mind,” I whispered.
Madison’s face hardened into a mask of pure stone. “No. You’ve lost your privileges in this house. And it’s about to get significantly worse for you if you keep opening your bleeding mouth.”
I turned on my heel and walked out of the kitchen slowly, my hand pressing the rag to my jaw. Richard’s voice trailed after me, echoing up the grand staircase: “Don’t be late with that wire transfer!”
I locked myself inside my small bedroom and sank onto the hardwood floor. The vanity mirror caught my reflection in the dim light: a violently swollen upper lip, a grotesque, dark gap where my tooth used to be, and eyes swollen with suppressed rage.
I touched the empty, throbbing space in my mouth, and in that exact moment, something massive and heavy shifted inside my soul. It wasn’t just physical pain anymore. It was a cold, absolute, terrifying clarity.
For nearly a decade, I had fed myself the delusion that if I just gave enough—money, late nights, suppressed dignity—they would eventually see my worth. But tonight, with my tooth shattered on their Italian tile, I finally understood the fundamental nature of the parasite. They would never, ever stop feeding. Not unless the host eradicated them.
I picked up my phone, ignoring the blood smearing on the screen, and opened a heavily encrypted blank note. My hands were shaking, but not from fear or trauma. They were shaking with adrenaline. I began to type.
Step One: Total Asset Assessment.
Step Two: The Midnight Acquisition.
Step Three: The Guillotine.
I didn’t know the exact mechanics of it yet, but the “parasite” they so deeply despised was about to bite back with a venom they could never comprehend.
The next morning, the silence in the sprawling suburban house was heavy and suffocating, like a thick winter fog. When I walked into the kitchen, Richard was already seated at the head of the mahogany table, aggressively clutching his coffee mug like a weapon. Madison was draped in a silk robe, aggressively typing on her phone, and Catherine was effortlessly flipping eggs at the stove, humming a soft tune as if she hadn’t watched her husband assault her eldest daughter twelve hours prior.
“Well?” Richard barked, not bothering to look up from his tablet. “Did the wire transfer clear yet?”
I didn’t answer him. I quietly set my leather tote bag on the granite counter. Inside the bag rested the heavy, encrypted physical hard drive I had carefully uninstalled from my personal desktop tower the night before.
“You’re not walking out that front door without paying your dues,” he growled, the threat hanging thick in the air.
I paused with my hand on the brass doorknob, turning just enough to meet his aggressive stare. “You will get exactly what’s coming to you,” I said flatly.
He laughed, a harsh, grating sound that scraped the walls. “She’s finally learning to make empty threats like a real family member,” Catherine smirked, sliding an egg onto a porcelain plate.
I walked out, got into my car, and drove straight to the corporate campus of CoreLogix Solutions. I didn’t go to the HR desk to clock in. I had been a senior systems architect at CoreLogix long enough to know exactly how the invisible machinery of the company worked. I knew where the restricted files were kept, I knew the master override codes, and most importantly, I knew exactly who owed me massive, career-saving favors.
One person, in particular, owed me his entire professional life.
Three years ago, Nate, an eager but sloppy junior developer, had accidentally initiated a catastrophic wipe on a partitioned server containing our largest client’s database. I had spent three grueling, sleepless nights recovering the fragmented data and completely re-coding the user interface, silently covering his tracks so executive management never found out. He had looked at me back then, tears pooling in his exhausted eyes, and sworn he’d do absolutely anything I ever asked of him.
Today, I was cashing in that chip.
I found him deep in the subterranean server room, the massive, rhythmic hum of the cooling fans easily masking our conversation. When he turned and saw my face—the grotesque swelling, the dark, violent gap where my tooth used to be—his coffee cup slipped from his hand, spilling across the raised floor.
“My god, Victoria. What happened to you?”
“My father happened,” I said simply, my voice devoid of emotion. “But that’s not why I’m standing here. Nate, you know The Meridian System?”
He froze, his eyes darting to the server racks. “The predictive efficiency protocol? The massive AI algorithm you’ve been secretly building in your spare time? The one that optimizes global supply chains by forty percent?”
“That’s the one. I never filed a single line of code through the company’s internal network. I built the entire architecture locally, on my personal drive.”
“It’s utterly brilliant,” Nate whispered, leaning in closer. “If the senior partners knew about it, it would be valued in the millions. They’d make you a partner.”
“They won’t know about it,” I cut him off sharply. “Not yet. But my parents… they possess a supernatural ability to sniff out money like starving sharks smelling blood in the water. If they even suspect this exists, or if they can legally argue it belongs to the family estate because I lived under their roof, they will bleed it entirely dry. I need to ensure my name is legally bound to it in a way they can never touch. And I need to do it retroactively.”
Nate nodded slowly, his brilliant mind instantly grasping the gravity of the legal loophole. “We can cryptographically timestamp the original code blocks using a decentralized ledger. We file the intellectual property rights directly to a blind LLC owned by you, dated from the moment of creation. It will completely bypass the company’s non-compete clause because you built it strictly off-hours on unmonitored, personal hardware. I can act as the digital notary and witness the filing.”
“Do it,” I commanded. “And Nate? I need complete, unrestricted backdoor access to the state’s public records database. The premium, paid tier. The one that tracks shell companies.”
