Her Parents Walked Away From The Bruise — Then The Door Opened Again-heuh

When my husband hit me, my parents saw the bruise — said nothing, and walked away.

He smirked from his chair, beer in hand: “Polite little family you’ve got.”

But thirty minutes later, the door opened again.

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This time, I stood… and he dropped to his knees.

The mark on my cheek had come up fast.

It started as heat, then pressure, then a deep purple shadow spreading under my skin as if my face had decided to tell the truth before I could.

The sitting room smelt of beer and old leather.

Rain tapped at the front window, soft and steady, the kind of rain that makes pavements shine and neighbours pull their curtains without wanting to know too much.

Grant sat in his usual chair with the television flickering over him, his bottle resting against his knee, his shirt slightly creased, his expression almost bored.

That was what frightened me most in the early days.

Not the shouting.

Not even the first time he slammed his fist into the wall beside my head.

It was how ordinary he looked afterwards.

As if nothing had happened.

As if all the violence lived in me because I was the one left shaking.

My parents arrived ten minutes after it happened.

They had not come because I called for help.

They had come because Mum had left a scarf in our hallway earlier that week and wanted to collect it before the weather turned colder.

I heard their key in the lock and almost cried with relief.

For one absurd, childish second, I was not thirty-two years old.

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