He Came Home From Deployment And Found His Family Hurting His Wife-hihehu

The slap came so fast I never saw Sandra’s hand move.

One second I was standing between our thrift-store dining table and the kitchen counter, one palm spread over my stomach, trying not to breathe in the burnt coffee smell from the stove.

The next, heat exploded across my cheek.

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My shoulder hit the drywall.

The framed courthouse photo of Marcus and me jumped crooked on its nail.

For one heartbeat, the apartment narrowed to sound.

The refrigerator hummed.

Rain tapped the window.

My breath scraped in my throat like I had swallowed glass.

Then Sandra said, “Your service means nothing here. You’re still the trash who trapped my son with a pregnancy.”

She said it calmly.

That was always the worst part about Marcus’s mother.

Sandra never sounded wild.

She sounded rehearsed.

Every insult landed like something she had practiced in the car.

Monica stood by the dining table with my wallet open in her hands, her pink nails flashing through the card slots like she expected to find proof that I had never deserved anything in that apartment.

Brett leaned against the counter with a look on his face that made my skin crawl.

He was enjoying it.

I was twenty-eight weeks pregnant with twins, on bed rest, and holding myself together with a grocery list, two doctor’s notes, and a white envelope of cash Marcus had helped me plan over a video call three nights earlier.

Every dollar already had a name.

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