Pregnant With Twins, Robbed And Cornered—Then Marcus Came Home-heuh

The slap landed before I had even understood Sandra meant to hit me.

One moment I was standing in our narrow kitchen, half turned between the old dining table and the counter, trying to keep my breath slow for the babies.

The next, my cheek burned, my shoulder struck the wall, and the cheap little wedding photo of Marcus and me tipped sideways as if the flat itself had flinched.

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The kettle had clicked off minutes earlier, but the steam still clung faintly to the tiles.

A mug of coffee had gone bitter beside the sink.

The tea towel hung from the oven handle, bunched and damp, and I remember focusing on it because it was easier than looking at Sandra’s face.

She looked calm.

That was always the worst part.

Sandra could say something cruel enough to empty the room of air, then smooth her coat and stand there like she had merely corrected my manners.

“Your service means nothing here,” she said. “You’re still the trash who trapped my son with a pregnancy.”

I pressed one hand against my stomach.

The twins had been restless all morning, tiny rolls beneath my skin, but now they seemed to go still in that strange way babies do when your whole body fills with fear.

Monica stood by the table with my purse open in both hands.

She had tipped my cards out as though she were sorting receipts at her own kitchen table.

Her nails were glossy pink, too bright under the practical light, and the corner of her mouth curled when she saw me watching.

Brett leaned against the hallway wall with his muddy boots on the rug Marcus had bought before deployment.

He did not look angry.

He looked entertained.

That made it worse.

A person can brace against anger.

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