He Told His Bruised Wife To Smile. Then His Mother Walked In-Ginny

The first thing I tasted was blood.

The second was betrayal.

For a few seconds, I did not understand that I was on the bedroom floor.

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I understood the carpet first, rough under my palms, catching at the skin of my fingers.

I understood the copper taste in my mouth next, bright and metallic and wrong.

Then I understood Adrian standing above me with his sleeves rolled up and his breathing so calm that it frightened me more than the blow itself.

He did not look shocked by what he had done.

He looked inconvenienced that I had made him do it.

Moonlight came through the blinds in narrow white bars and landed across his face.

One side of him looked like the man who had once held my hand outside a courthouse when we signed our marriage license.

The other side looked like Marjorie Vale had finally finished raising him.

“You embarrassed me,” he said.

His voice was low, almost conversational.

I pressed one hand to my cheek and felt heat collecting under the skin.

“Because I said no?”

His jaw tightened.

“Because my mother asked one simple thing.”

That was what he called it.

One simple thing.

Marjorie wanted to move into our house.

Not visit.

Not stay for a few weeks after a minor surgery.

Move in, take the master bedroom, rearrange the kitchen, inspect my clothes, comment on my body, and speak to Adrian in the wounded whisper she used whenever she wanted to sound like a saint with a headache.

She had been working on him for months.

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