He Told His Bruised Wife To Smile, But Her Hidden Phone Ruined Him-congtien

“Cover the bruise and smile, Brooke. My mother doesn’t need to see what happens when you forget your place.”

Camden Whitaker said it at 6:12 on a gray Saturday morning, standing in the doorway of their marble bathroom like he was asking her to fix a crooked picture frame.

His hair was still damp from the shower.

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His cufflinks were already fastened.

The bathroom mirror was fogged at the edges, and the air smelled like steam, expensive soap, and the wet towel full of melting ice Brooke had been pressing against her cheek since before sunrise.

She sat on the closed toilet lid with one hand braced against the sink.

Every deep breath sent a hard pain blooming beneath her ribs.

Her lower lip was split at the corner.

A purple shadow had started beneath her left eye, spreading toward her cheekbone in a shape no amount of foundation could honestly explain.

Camden looked at it with irritation.

Not regret.

Not shock.

Irritation.

Like her face had become inconvenient.

Then he tossed a small leather makeup case into her lap.

It struck her knee, bounced once, and fell open across the white tile.

Concealer rolled beneath the vanity.

A tube of lipstick spun toward the bath mat.

Foundation landed near her bare foot, the glass bottle clicking softly against the floor.

“My mother is arriving at noon,” Camden said. “She wants lunch in the garden room. Wear the cream dress. The one she approves of. And don’t make this harder than it has to be.”

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