Not hard enough to leave an obvious injury.
But hard enough that she immediately flinched.
“Look at me when I’m talking.”
She tried gently pulling away.
He tightened his grip.
My chair scraped backward.
“Let go of her.”
Daniel smiled without looking at me.
“We’re having a conversation.”
“No.”
I stood.
“You are grabbing my daughter.”
Carol laughed softly.
“Oh, Margaret.”
“Don’t be dramatic.”
“It’s just a husband correcting his wife.”
The words hit me harder than anything Daniel had done.
Correcting his wife?
As though she were a child.
Or property.
Around us, diners exchanged uncomfortable glances.
No one wanted to interfere.
But everyone was watching.
I took my phone from my handbag.
Daniel finally released Sophie’s wrist.
“There.”
“You happy?”
“No.”
I unlocked my phone.
“What are you doing?”
“I’m documenting what just happened.”
His confidence faded slightly.
Carol scoffed.
“You wouldn’t.”
“I already have.”
Earlier that evening, I’d begun recording after noticing how nervous Sophie seemed.
The phone had captured nearly everything.
The insults.
The intimidation.
The moment he grabbed her.
The reactions around the table.
Daniel’s smile disappeared.
“Delete it.”
“No.”
“I’m serious.”
“So am I.”
I looked at Sophie.
“Honey.”
She slowly met my eyes.
“You don’t have to go home tonight.”
Tears immediately filled her eyes.
“I…”
“You never did.”
For several seconds, she couldn’t speak.
Then something changed.
Her shoulders relaxed.
As though she had been carrying an invisible weight for years.
Very quietly she said,
“I’m tired.”