She Turned His Kitchen Camera On Before His Board Could Look Away-myhoa

The smell in that kitchen did not belong with dinner.

It cut through butter, pepper, red wine, and the smoke from the cast-iron pan with a sharpness that made my stomach fold in on itself.

For one impossible second, I thought the steak had fallen back onto the burner.

Image

Then I saw Daniel’s hand wrapped around my wrist.

His fingers were not shaking.

That was the first thing my mind registered, even before the pain fully arrived.

He was steady.

He was deliberate.

He was pressing my palm toward the hot stove because the steak I had cooked for him was not pink enough in the center.

“Medium rare,” he said close to my ear.

His voice was low enough that someone watching from across the room might have mistaken it for a private correction between a husband and wife.

“How many times do I have to explain simple things to you?”

Pain shot through me so fast it felt almost clean at first, like a flash of white light.

Then the real feeling came.

My knees buckled.

The plate slipped out of my hand and shattered against the marble tile.

Steak juice spread between the broken pieces.

I screamed, and my own voice sounded far away, swallowed by the high ceiling, the chandelier, the shining kitchen Daniel loved to show people when they came over.

He let go only when I collapsed.

My hand pulled into my chest on instinct, and I curled around it on the floor while the room kept moving around me as if I had dropped a napkin instead of my body.

Patricia, my mother-in-law, stepped over me.

Not around me.

Over me.

Her gold heel clicked close to my shoulder, and she reached for the bottle of Bordeaux she had brought from the dining room.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.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