He Told Me To Hide The Bruises Before Lunch — Then Saw His Bags Outside-heuh

The makeup bag landed beside my bleeding lip with the soft little thud of something harmless.

That was the worst part.

It looked harmless.

Image

Pastel pink, gold zip, neat as a present.

Jasper stood in the bathroom doorway with his sleeves rolled down and his hair combed back, watching me through the mirror as though I were an inconvenience he needed sorted before guests arrived.

“Start with the concealer,” he said.

His voice was almost bored.

“My mother will be here for lunch. Hide all of that and smile.”

The morning light was cruel in that bathroom.

It fell across the mirror, across the sink, across the cold tiles where I had spent most of the night with a towel pressed against my mouth.

One eye had swollen until the lid felt too heavy to lift properly.

My cheek had darkened overnight, the bruise spreading in a cloud of purple and yellow at the edges.

On my upper arm, four fingerprints had surfaced where he had grabbed me by the bedroom door.

I could still hear myself saying the sentence that had done it.

“I’m not living with your mother.”

That was all.

No shouting.

No insult.

No slammed door.

Just one quiet refusal in the narrow hallway of a house he liked to call ours whenever anyone was listening.

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