Full part: My stepbrother shouted, “Choose how you pay or get out!” while I sat in the gynecologist’s office with fresh st:itches. When I said no, he sla:pped me so hard I h:it the floor, my ribs bur:ning in pa:in. Then he sneered, “You think you’re too good for it?” as police arrived in horror.

The room went silent so fast I could hear the paper sheet under my palms crinkle. I was sitting on the edge of the exam table, one hand pressed against my lower abdomen, the other gripping the paper gown closed at my knees. The fluorescent lights made everything look too clean, too white, too public for what had just happened.

“No,” I said.

It came out small, but it was the first full word I had spoken to him without apologizing.

Derek Vance’s face changed. The smirk vanished. He looked toward the door, then back at me, his jaw working like he was chewing glass.

“You think you’re too good for it?” he sneered.

Dr. Amelia Rhodes stepped between us. She was forty-something, calm-faced, with gray-blond hair pulled into a tight bun and a badge clipped to her coat. “Sir, you need to leave this room now.”

Derek laughed once. “This is family business.”

“I said leave.”

He moved too fast.

His palm cracked across my face with such force that the world went sideways. My shoulder hit the metal step of the exam table. Then my ribs slammed the floor, and bright p:ain tore through my body. I tasted bl:ood. Somewhere above me, a nurse screamed.

Derek stood over me, breathing hard. “She lies. She always lies.”

I curled around my ribs, trying not to cry, because crying always made him angrier at home. But this was not home. This was a clinic in Columbus, Ohio, with cameras in the hallway, nurses at the desk, and a doctor who had already seen the br:uises I tried to explain away.

Dr. Rhodes grabbed the wall phone. “Security. Now. And call 911.”