The Makeup Bag, The Lunch Table, And The Evidence He Never Saw-congtien

The first thing I tasted was blood.

The second was betrayal.

It sat warm and metallic at the back of my throat while the bedroom carpet burned along my arm and the ceiling light hummed above me like the house itself had decided not to care.

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Adrian stood over me with his sleeves rolled up.

His breathing was steady.

That was the part I could not stop noticing.

He did not look shocked by what he had done.

He did not look afraid.

He looked annoyed, the way he looked when a delivery came late or when I parked too close to the garage wall.

Moonlight came through the curtains and cut his face in half.

One side silver.

One side black.

“You embarrassed me,” he said.

I pressed my palm to my cheek.

The swelling had already started beneath my fingers, hot and firm, like my own skin was trying to warn me before my mind caught up.

“Because I said no?” I asked.

His jaw tightened.

“Because my mother asked for one simple thing.”

One simple thing.

That was what Adrian called it when Marjorie Vale decided she should move into our home.

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