metro

CHAPTER 2 — The Call After Midnight

I didn’t sleep that night.

Not because I was angry anymore.

Because I was waiting.

Waiting for the moment my phone would ring again.

And it did.

12:43 a.m.

Unknown number.

I already knew it wasn’t a mistake.

I answered without speaking.

A breath came through the line first. Shallow. Nervous.

Then my brother’s voice.

“Ally… what did you do?”

I sat up slowly in bed.

“Wrong question,” I said. “Try again.”

A pause.

Then Jason, quieter now. “Dad is furious. Mom won’t stop crying. Everyone’s saying you humiliated him.”

I let out a short laugh.

“That’s interesting,” I said. “Because I thought I was the one being humiliated.”

Silence.

Then: “It was just a joke. You know how Dad is.”

That sentence.

You know how Dad is.

Like cruelty was a personality trait instead of a choice.

I stood up and walked to the window of my apartment. Boston lights stretched out like a grid of quiet lives pretending they were stable.

“I gave him a ten-thousand-dollar watch,” I said. “At his retirement party. In front of everyone.”

Jason sighed like I was being difficult.

“And he said I was still a disappointment.”

Another pause.

Then, softer: “He didn’t mean it like that.”

That was the moment I knew.

Nothing had changed.

So I said the only thing left to say.

“Then you’ll understand why I stopped all payments.”

The line went dead silent.

“What payments?” he asked.

I leaned against the window.

“The house. The taxes. The insurance. Dad’s credit line. Mom’s medical supplement. The loan you took out last year that I guaranteed.”

A long silence followed.

Then Jason laughed nervously.

“You’re bluffing.”

“No,” I said. “I’m just done.”

And I hung up.

I didn’t expect what came next.

Because at 2:18 a.m., my bank app lit up.

Not with a notification.

With alerts.

Dozens of attempted transactions.

All declined.

All from accounts tied to my family.

And the last message from my father arrived at 2:21:

“Fix this. Now.”

That’s when I realized something.

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They didn’t think I left.

They thought I was still theirs.

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