“I have spent forty years hunting men who do bad things,” my father whispered. His voice was like grinding stones—low, rough, and terrifying. “I have extracted intelligence from terrorists who would make you wet your pants just by looking at them. I have dismantled regimes.”
He twisted the cane slightly. Mark cried out in pain.
“What do you think,” my father continued, his voice dropping an octave, “that I am going to do to a soft, cowardly little man who draws my daughter’s blood?”
“You can’t threaten him!” Agnes shrieked from the table. She was trembling, clutching her purse. “The police are right here! Officer, arrest him!”
My father turned his head slowly to look at Agnes. He looked at her like she was a cockroach on the sole of his boot.
“Shut up,” he said. “You’re next.”
Agnes snapped her mouth shut, shrinking back into her chair.
My father turned back to Mark. “You are going to sign whatever papers she puts in front of you. You are going to disappear. Because if I ever see you near my daughter again… the police won’t be able to find enough of you to bury.”
Mark nodded frantically, tears streaming down his face. “Yes. Yes, sir. I promise.”
My father stepped back, removing the cane. He turned to the Sergeant.
“Sergeant, proceed with the arrest. Battery. Domestic assault.”
“Yes, Sir,” the Sergeant said.
“But,” my father added, checking his watch. “Before you put him in the car… I believe the suspect needs to be secured. Perhaps you could give me five minutes with him in the garage? I need to… verify he isn’t carrying any concealed weapons. And educate him on the proper treatment of a lady.”
The room went silent. The rookie cop looked nervous. The Sergeant looked at the blood running down my face. He looked at Mark, the man who had done it.
The Sergeant looked at the ceiling. “I have to file some paperwork in the cruiser. My partner needs to check the perimeter. Take five, General. We didn’t see anything.”
“No!” Mark screamed. “Officer! No!”
My father grabbed Mark by the collar of his expensive shirt and dragged him toward the door leading to the garage. Mark’s heels skidded uselessly on the floor.
“Elena,” my father said over his shoulder. “Put some ice on that. I’ll be right back.”
Chapter 5: The Lesson