He Lied About The Stairs, Then One X-Ray Made Him Tremble In Silence-Teptep

The first thing I remember from that morning is the sound of the kettle clicking off in the kitchen.

Not Julien’s voice.

Not the scrape of my knee on the patio slabs.

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The kettle.

That small, ordinary sound that meant the day should have been beginning like every other day in our semi-detached house, with the girls still in their pyjamas upstairs, toast cooling on a plate, and a tea mug waiting beside the sink.

Outside, the garden was damp from the sprinkler, though the morning itself had only just turned grey.

The slabs were cold through my pyjama bottoms, and the wet edge of the grass brushed my ankle every time Julien pulled me another few inches away from the back door.

He had dressed already.

That was one of the things people never understood about him.

Julien could look entirely respectable while doing something unforgivable.

His shirt was ironed.

His shoes were clean.

His wedding ring flashed whenever his grip shifted on my arm.

He had the face of a man who would hold a door open for a neighbour, apologise when he brushed past someone in a queue, and speak softly enough that people called him decent.

But inside our house, where the walls knew more than they should, his quiet voice could empty the room.

“You married me,” he said, as if he were reminding me of a debt, “and you still can’t give me a son.”

The words were not new.

He had said them in the kitchen while the washing-up bowl filled.

He had said them in the narrow hallway beside the coats.

He had said them after the birth of Manon, when I was still too sore to stand properly and he looked at our first child as if she had arrived carrying an apology.

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