Her Parents Walked Out After The Bruise. Then The Deed Came Back-heuh

The bruise showed before I could hide it.

That was the part I remember most clearly, not the hit itself, not the sound of Grant’s knuckles meeting my cheek, not even the way the room seemed to tilt for one breath afterward.

I remember my mother’s eyes finding the mark.

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I remember my father stopping in the doorway with his keys still in his hand.

I remember believing, for one foolish second, that love would do what it was supposed to do when it saw harm standing in the middle of a living room.

The house smelled like beer and old leather.

The television was on with the sound turned low, just enough blue light flickering across the wall to make everything look unreal.

Grant sat in my grandfather’s leather chair with one ankle resting over his knee and a beer balanced against his thigh.

He had that expression on his face I had learned to fear more than shouting.

Calm. Satisfied. Certain that the world would bend around him if he waited long enough.

My mother’s hand rose to her mouth.

My father, Henry, took one step inside and then stopped.

The floorboard under his shoe gave a small wooden complaint, and for some reason that sound cut through me more sharply than anything else.

My blouse was torn at the shoulder.

My cheek was swelling.

The room had all the evidence it needed.

Still, nobody moved.

My mother looked at me first, then looked away.

My father looked at Grant’s jacket thrown over the armchair, as if cloth were easier to face than his daughter.

Grant did not even bother to stand.

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