The second slap landed so hard my wedding ring cut the inside of my cheek. The third came before I could even taste the blood Thief.
All because I had bought the wrong brand of coffee.
My husband, Ethan Caldwell, stood over me in our polished, magazine-perfect kitchen like he’d just won something. His mother, Diane Caldwell, lounged at the marble island in a silk robe, stirring tea she hadn’t bothered to make herself.
“Look at her,” Diane murmured. “Still staring like she doesn’t understand her place.”
Ethan grabbed my chin, forcing my face up. “When I talk to you, you answer.”
I met his eyes.
Calm.
Too calm.
“It was coffee,” I said.
His jaw tightened. “It was disrespect.”
The fourth slap echoed across the room.
Rain hammered against the tall windows. The chandelier sparkled overhead like nothing ugly could possibly exist beneath it.
Diane smiled into her cup. “A wife needs to be corrected early. Your father knew that.”
Ethan leaned in, his breath heavy with whiskey. “Tomorrow morning, I want a proper breakfast. No attitude. No cold looks. And stop acting like you’re better than this family.”
Better than this family.
I almost laughed.
For three years, I had let them believe I was exactly what they wanted—a quiet, grateful wife with no one behind her. No loud friends. No powerful connections. Just a small job, simple clothes, and a habit of locking documents away in my study.
They never asked what those documents were.
They never questioned why the bank always called me, not him.
They never noticed that the deed to the house had my maiden name printed above his.
That night, I cleaned the blood from my mouth and stared at my reflection. My cheek was already darkening beneath the skin. My hands were steady.
From the bedroom, Ethan’s voice drifted out—laughing.
“Yeah, she got the message. By morning, she’ll be begging.”
I opened the cabinet beneath the sink and took out the small recorder I’d hidden there months ago—after the first slap he swore would never happen again.
The red light blinked steadily.
I touched my cheek once.
Then I made three calls.
One to my lawyer.
One to the bank.
And one that would become Ethan’s biggest mistake.