He Said I Slipped—Then My Brother Saw Every Bruise-Teptep

The last thing I heard before the kitchen floor struck my face was the kettle clicking off behind me.

It was such an ordinary sound, small and domestic, the sort of sound that belonged with tea bags, wet coats, and someone asking whether the bins had gone out.

But that night, in our narrow kitchen, it sounded like a full stop.

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Daniel stood between me and the back door, his shirt sleeves still neatly buttoned, his voice low enough that any neighbour passing outside would have heard nothing alarming.

“You should have learnt when to stay quiet,” he whispered.

I remember the cold tiles against my palm.

I remember the tea mug near the sink, untouched, the steam vanishing into the damp air.

I remember thinking, absurdly, that I had left the audit papers in the wrong folder.

Then the room went black.

When I woke again, the ceiling above me was moving.

White panels slid past in hard strips of light, and the wheels beneath me rattled along a hospital corridor.

Someone was asking questions.

Someone else was cutting through fabric.

Daniel’s hand hovered near my shoulder, not touching me unless somebody looked.

“She slipped in the shower,” he said.

He sounded worried.

He sounded tired.

He sounded exactly like the husband people believed him to be.

That was Daniel’s particular talent.

In public, he was polished almost to a shine.

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