He Slapped Her Over Coffee. The Breakfast Table Changed Everything-Tep

The fourth slap was not loud the way movies make violence sound loud.

It was sharper than that.

Cleaner.

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A flat crack that cut through the rain, the chandelier light, and the warm smell of dinner still trapped in the walls of my own kitchen.

For one second, I heard nothing but the refrigerator humming.

Then I tasted blood.

Daniel stood in front of me with his jaw tight and his chest rising hard, as if I had forced him into some awful act of duty.

His mother, Evelyn, sat at the breakfast nook with her tea between both hands.

She had not made that tea.

I had.

She had not cleared the dinner plates.

I had.

She had not driven through the rain to buy groceries after Daniel texted me the brand of coffee he wanted.

I had.

And because the store was out of that exact brand, because I had brought home a different bag with a different label, Daniel had decided my face needed to answer for it.

“Look at her,” Evelyn murmured.

Her voice was soft enough to pass for manners if you did not know her.

“She still thinks she’s some poor little animal we’re supposed to pity.”

Daniel caught my chin between his fingers.

His thumb pressed into the tender place beneath my cheekbone.

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