When His Family Attacked His Wife, The Mudroom Door Changed Everything-hihehu

The first thing I remember about the hospital was the bracelet.

White plastic, black letters, my name printed slightly crooked, cinched around my wrist by a nurse who kept telling me to stay awake.

My name is Maya, and at 2:16 a.m. on a Wednesday, that bracelet became the only proof that someone in the world knew where I was.

Image

Not my mother-in-law.

Not my sister-in-law.

Not even my husband at first, because Leo was across the world in Tokyo, sleeping badly between meetings and trusting the wrong people with my life.

I had collapsed on our kitchen floor just after midnight.

One minute I was rinsing a mug Agnes had left in the sink, and the next I was on the tile with a pain so sharp it felt like my body had split open from the inside.

The floor was cold against my cheek.

The dishwasher hummed beside me.

Somewhere above me, Agnes sighed like I had dropped something she would have to clean.

“Maya?” she said, but not with fear.

With irritation.

I tried to answer, but the only sound that came out of me was a breath.

She stepped closer, looked down, then lifted one foot over my legs so she could reach the kettle.

I watched her make tea while I lay on the floor.

That is not an image a person forgets.

The kettle clicked.

The sink dripped.

My palms were pressed flat to the tile because I was afraid that if I moved, something inside me would tear the rest of the way open.

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