He Slapped His Mother Over Her House. Breakfast Changed Everything-QuynhTranJP

My son struck me across the face last night, and I never raised my voice.

By the time the sun came up, the mark on my cheek had gone stiff under a thin layer of powder.

It was not hidden well.

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Nothing important ever is.

I stood in my kitchen before dawn with my hand on the edge of the counter, listening to the house settle around me.

The refrigerator hummed.

The old wall clock ticked above the pantry door.

Outside, the gravel driveway held the blue-gray color that comes before sunrise in the South, when the world looks washed and undecided.

Inside, I had already made my decision.

I spread my lace tablecloth across the dining room table first.

It had belonged to my mother, then to me, and for years I only used it on Christmas, Easter, and the Sunday after Tyler graduated college.

After my husband died, I folded it into tissue paper and put it away.

Some things feel too alive to touch after the person who loved them is gone.

That morning, I took it out anyway.

The linen still smelled faintly of cedar from the chest.

I shook it once, watched it float over the table, and smoothed it flat with both palms.

My right hand trembled a little.

I did not allow it more than that.

Then I cooked.

Biscuits first, because Tyler had loved them since he was old enough to stand on a stool and steal scraps of dough from the counter.

Grits next, thick and salted the way his father used to make them on cold mornings.

Bacon in the cast-iron skillet, because the sound of grease popping was better than the sound of my own thoughts.

By seven, the house smelled like biscuits, bacon grease, coffee, and something colder than anger.

That sentence is the one I remember most clearly because it was the first time I understood anger had a temperature.

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