When Her Husband Chose His Mother, the Hospital Chose Justice-congtien

The third crack of the rolling pin did not sound like thunder.

It sounded smaller than that, and somehow worse.

A hard wooden snap against bone, followed by the wet scrape of my own palm sliding through green salsa on the cold kitchen tile.

Image

For one second, I could smell cilantro, lime, broth, and floor cleaner all at once.

Then pain climbed from my shin to my throat so fast I forgot how to make sound.

Linda Carter stood over me with both hands wrapped around the rolling pin she had been using for dinner.

Her pressed blouse had one dot of flour near the cuff.

Her slippers were planted on either side of the spilled salsa.

Her face did not look shocked by what she had done.

It looked satisfied.

“That’s what happens when you disrespect me in front of my son,” she said.

I had not cursed at her.

I had not thrown anything.

I had not even raised my voice.

All I had said was that the broth tasted too salty and that Frank should not eat another bowl because of his blood pressure.

Frank Carter was seventy, stubborn, and proud in the way older men sometimes are when concern feels like criticism.

Linda had taken it as treason.

Their home in San Antonio was the kind of place that looked normal from the curb.

Trimmed shrubs.

A clean driveway.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *