Breakfast collapsed into chaos the moment I refused to hand my credit card to his sister—my husband hurled scalding coffee at my face and shouted, “Later, she’ll come to the house. Give her your things or get out!” Ashamed, stinging, and enraged, I gathered every possession that was mine and left. When he returned with his sister, the sight inside the house left him completely speechless.
My husband, Ryan, flung the coffee before I even realized we were arguing.
A moment earlier I had been at the kitchen counter in our townhouse just outside Columbus, sliding scrambled eggs onto two plates.
The next instant, a surge of burning liquid struck my cheek, chin, and neck so suddenly it felt like flames had hands. The spatula slipped from my grip as I cried out. The mug smashed near the sink, dark coffee running down the cabinet fronts.
Ryan didn’t appear shocked by his own action.
If anything, he seemed annoyed, as though I had inconvenienced him.
“All this because I asked for one simple thing?” he snapped.
Across the table, his sister Nicole sat rigid, a designer purse resting in her lap. Her mouth hung slightly open, but she said nothing to me. Not a single word.
She had shown up unexpectedly at seven-thirty that morning, acting uneasy and asking Ryan if he had “talked to me yet.” Ten minutes later I understood why.
Ryan jabbed a finger in my direction with the same hand that had thrown the mug. “Later, she’ll come to the house. Give her your things or get out!”
“My things?” My voice trembled.
“You mean my credit card. My laptop. My jewelry.
The watch my mother left me. Are you out of your mind?”
Nicole finally spoke, her voice quiet and unpleasant. “It’s temporary.
I just need help.”
“You already ‘needed help’ last year,” I replied, pressing a dish towel against my burning skin. “And your help turned into six thousand dollars I never got back.”
Ryan brought his palm down hard on the table. “She’s family.”
“So am I.”
“No,” he said.
“You live here. That’s different.”
I studied him carefully. The man I had been married to for four years.
The same man who once cried in a hospital waiting room when my father died. The same man now standing in our kitchen with coffee still burning my skin, demanding I hand over my money and my late mother’s jewelry to his sister as if I were some storage unit with a heartbeat.
The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
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