She Asked About His Paycheck—Then The Bathroom Mirror Cracked-Teptep

The bathroom mirror cracked before I did.

For a second, I heard that sound more clearly than I felt anything else.

It was a thin, ugly snap, glass splitting under the back of my head while Derek Miller’s hand stayed twisted in my hair.

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The bathroom was too small for four people, but somehow all of them were there.

Me on the tile.

Derek over me in his work boots.

Linda in the doorway with her smooth gray-blond hair and the pinched little mouth she used when something embarrassed her.

Carl behind her, wide and red-faced, holding two beers like this was halftime and his son had just played too rough.

The room smelled like old shaving cream, beer, damp towels, and copper.

Mine.

All I had asked was where his paycheck was.

That was the part I kept circling back to, even as my knees went weak and the tile bit into my skin.

I had not screamed.

I had not accused him of cheating, lying, gambling, hiding money, or whatever other truth was living inside that missing deposit.

I had stood in the doorway of our bathroom in a cotton robe, with the hallway light yellow behind me and unpaid bills downstairs beside the coffee maker, and asked, “Derek, where is your paycheck?”

The question had been sitting in our house for three days.

It sat in the mail basket with the mortgage notice.

It sat in the kitchen drawer where I kept the grocery receipts I had started smoothing flat and stacking by date.

It sat in the quiet space between us at dinner when Derek pushed food around his plate and checked his phone every time it buzzed.

It sat in the way he had stopped leaving his work pants in the hamper, as if a receipt or folded slip might fall out while I was doing laundry.

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