She Pressed The Panic Fob As Her Husband Laughed Over The Blood-Teptep

The mirror cracked before I felt the blood.

For a second, I could only stare at the silver line running through my own face.

Dean still had his hand twisted in my hair, holding me close enough to the broken glass that I could smell the bitter cleaner I had sprayed on it that morning.

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I had cleaned that bathroom before his parents arrived.

I had scrubbed the sink, folded the towel, wiped the taps, and told myself that if everything looked calm, perhaps the weekend would be calm too.

That was how I had survived my marriage for three years.

I arranged ordinary things around frightening ones.

Fresh towels.

Full fridge.

Smile ready.

Apology prepared.

All I had asked was where his pay cheque had gone.

The question had come out softly, almost politely, because I had learnt to make every sentence small before it reached him.

Dean had come home with his jaw tight and his pockets empty.

The direct deposit that usually landed that morning had not appeared in the account.

A folded letter sat downstairs by his phone, the sort of letter that makes your stomach drop before you have even opened it properly.

I had not accused him.

I had not shouted.

I had simply stood in the bathroom doorway while he washed his hands and said, “Dean, where did your pay cheque go?”

He turned so slowly that I knew before he touched me.

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