He Burned Her Hand Over Dinner, Then His Board Saw Everything-congtien

The smell reached me before the pain did.

It was sharp and wrong, the smell of meat left too long on hot iron, butter gone bitter in the pan, smoke curling under the bright kitchen lights.

For one impossible second, my brain tried to save me from understanding.

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The steak, I thought.

The steak must have fallen back onto the burner.

Then Daniel’s fingers tightened around my wrist.

I looked down and saw my palm pressed flat against the cast-iron stove.

“Medium rare,” he hissed beside my ear.

His breath smelled like red wine and anger.

“How many times do I have to explain simple things to you?”

The pain came all at once.

It shot up my arm so fast my knees forgot how to hold me.

My scream tore through the kitchen, through the clatter of the vent fan, through the soft expensive music Patricia had turned on before dinner, through the whole polished room Daniel loved showing off to people who thought he was a good man.

The plate slipped from my other hand.

It hit the marble tile and shattered.

Steak slid across broken white porcelain, juice spreading between the pieces like a stain nobody could pretend not to see.

Daniel released me only after I collapsed.

I folded beside the kitchen island, clutching my burned hand to my chest, my breath coming in short broken pulls.

The floor was cold against my hip.

The air smelled like smoke, garlic, and the wine my mother-in-law had already opened for herself.

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