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Father Spots a Bruise Under His Daughter’s Eye and Makes One Call—His Son-in-Law’s Life Was Ruined.

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Father noticed a bruise under his daughters eye and made a callhis son-in-laws life was about to unravel.

Emily stood in the doorway, greeting her parents with her usual cheerful smile. Only the dark, swollen shadow beneath her eye betrayed the subject she refused to discuss.

“Mum, its nothing, dont worry about it,” she said quickly, catching her mothers sharp gaze.

Margaret sighed deeply. “Its your life, love. You have to live it…”

Her father didnt even acknowledge his son-in-law. He walked slowly to the window and stared blankly outside, as if he hadnt heard his daughter muttering something about a wardrobe and the dark.

“Honestly… I just tripped last night. Come on, Mum, everythings fine with me and Daniel!”

Fine? Emily remembered exactly what had happened. Daniel, always quick to anger, hadnt just shouted at her. When shed dared to say shed had enough, hed grabbed her dressing gown so hard the fabric tore at her chest.

“What, you ungrateful cow, dont you remember who put a roof over your head?” hed snarled, shaking her. “Forgotten how I dragged you back from the pub when you ran off with that bloke, James? Forgotten who loved you, you stupid tart? I carried you in my arms!”

Then a hard punch. Like a man would throw. Stars had burst behind her eyes, pain searing through her. And Daniel had kept shouting, his words ugly.

“Yes, love. Wardrobe… dark,” her mother murmured, though she knew the truth.

And she felt guilty. Shed been the one who pushed Emily to marry Daniel. Shed been the one who drove James away, convinced he was a bad influence.

“And your wardrobe, love, by the looks of it, has fists,” Margaret said pointedly, glancing at her son-in-law.

Henry never turned from the window. He stepped onto the balcony for a smoke. Unlike his wife, hed never approved of Daniel. The man was hollowselfish, charmless. Yes, he came from moneya flat in Chelsea, a flash car, connections. But inside, he was rotten.

Now the rot had surfaceda bruise under his daughters eye.

Of course, Henry couldve grabbed Daniel by the collar and laid into him. But that would only cause a scene. And he didnt want to. He barely held back. So he stepped outside.

He knew how to handle this. And he already had a plan.

Hed spent a long time on the phone from that balcony…

Meanwhile, Emily made her mother tea, chatting about nothing. Half an hour later, her parents left.

Daniel, whod braced for a shouting match, relaxed at last. He sprawled on the sofa, cracked open a beer, and smirked. To him, their silence meant approval. Family sticks together, and bruises? Just life. No one kicks up a fuss.

“See, Em? Told you itd blow over,” he drawled. “Your parents are decent. Not like you… whinging yesterday. Had a few drinks, so what?”

He took a swig and reached for crisps.

His relief didnt last.

Not even half an hour later, someone knockednot rangon the door. Firm. Confident. The sound made Daniel freeze mid-sip.

He checked the peephole… and paled.

James stood there. His rival. Emilys ex. The one whod nearly married her before stepping aside. Tall, sharp in an expensive coat, with the sort of smile that made women weak and men want to punch him.

“What dyou want?” Daniel growled, cracking the door just enough to glare.

“Times up,” James said calmly, shouldering past him.

Daniel stumbled back like a ragdoll.

Emily stood up, eyes wide.

“James”

“Pack a bag,” he said briskly. “Well go to mine, or your parents. But you dont need this washed-up waste of space.”

“Who you calling washed-up, you prat?” Daniel spat, but he stayed rooted to the corner.

He had his reasons to fear James.

“I called you, Danny boy,” James smiled. “Didnt want to step in. But when your father-in-lawgood bloke, by the wayrang me saying youd hit her? Well. I took over.”

“Whatwhatre you on about?” Daniel croaked.

“Oh, not like that,” James chuckled. “The space you rent for your club? Belongs to a mate of mine. A very good mate. Youll get noticelease wont be renewed. Already on your desk.”

Daniel sagged like a deflated balloon.

“Plus, the rent arrears. Six months worth. Remember when they said rates might rise if the club turned profit? They did. Six months ago. Notice was on your deskyou just never read it. Me and Mike let the debt pile up. Penalties, interest… Get it? Youre in the red. Deep. Want me to name the figure?”

James leaned in.

“And I know you havent got a penny to cover it. Shouldve spent less time boozing with floozies.”

Daniel crumpled into the chair like a wrung-out dishcloth.

“Thisthis is a setup!” he wheezed.

“Think what you want,” James shrugged. “Sue me. But your solicitor? Resigned. Or did you sack him? Wholl fight for you now? Your barman with the nose ring?”

Daniels mouth flapped soundlessly.

“Em, lets go. Dont bother with your things. Ill buy you new. Whats here? Market rags.”

“James, wait,” Emily said, stunned. “This is all so… fast.”

“Fast is taking a punch and making excuses for the man who threw it. This is overdue.”

James held out his hand. She took it.

“Youve all lost it!” Daniel screeched. “This is my house! My wife!”

“Wife?” James arched a brow. “You mean the woman you hit, then hid behind a six-pack and the telly? Youre not a man, Dan. Youre a joke. Loud, bitter… nothing. Cant even swing at me properly.”

“But II”

“Going to court, then? Tell them about the bruise from the wardrobe? Or how your club folded because you drank instead of worked, riding Daddys connections?”

Emily followed James without looking back. Only at the door did she pause.

“Sorry, Dan. Goodbye.”

“Piss off!” he snarled. “Yeah… go on then.”

And they left.

Two days later, Daniel sat in an empty flat. The club was shut. Papers covered the tablelease termination, debt notices.

James hadnt just been an ex. Hed been waiting. And when he struck, it was perfectswift, brutal, flawless.

Meanwhile, peace settled over Emilys parents home. Her mother cooked, her father read the paper.

Then Emily walked in.

“Hi,” she said.

“Whereve you been, love? Dan been round?” her father asked sternly.

“Been… with James.”

“So you left Dan?”

“Yeah. Im done.”

Her mother clasped her hands. Her father nodded.

“Good. Thats good, love,” he said, smiling. “And if that tosser comes near you again, Ill rearrange his face.”

“Dad… did you call James?”

“Course I did. Who else? Good lad. Proper businessmanunlike the other one.”

“Thank God you left that idiot!” her mother burst out. “Sorry, love, I nearly ruined your life. Thank heavens no kids with him…”

“Oh, Maggie, listen to you!” her father laughed. “But the main thing is she knows nowshe got it wrong.”

Outside, James leaned against his black Range Rover, grinning. He knew. No one would ever lay a hand on Emily again.

Well, unless it was with loveand pleasant surprises. But thats another story.

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