He Threw Coffee at His Wife—Then Police Showed Him Whose Home It Really Was-yumihong

The officer’s voice stayed even.

“Mr. Lozano, step outside with me.”

Sergio looked at him, then at me, then at the paper in the second officer’s hand. The deed. My deed. His mouth opened, but the salesman smile had already slid off his face and left something smaller behind.

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Marisol’s fingers were still locked around the collar of my white coat.

“That’s mine,” I said quietly.

She looked down like she had forgotten she was wearing it.

The officer near the kitchen turned his head toward her. “Ma’am, remove the coat and place it on the chair.”

Marisol gave a dry little laugh, the kind she used whenever she wanted people to think she was above embarrassment.

“This is ridiculous,” she said. “It’s just a coat.”

My cheek pulsed under the ice pack. The room smelled like cardboard, old coffee, packing tape, and the peppermint gum one officer had been chewing since we arrived. The bare shelves made every sound sharper.

Sergio took one step toward me.

The officer moved first.

“Outside,” he repeated.

That was when Sergio’s eyes finally went to the wedding ring on the medical report. It sat there like a small piece of metal could weigh more than the couch, the bed, and every lie he had brought into my home.

“You called the police on me?” he said.

His voice cracked on the last word.

I kept the towel against my face.

“You burned me.”

For once, he had no fast answer.

The hallway swallowed them both, Sergio first, the officer behind him. Marisol stood in my living room with my coat halfway down her arms, one sleeve turned inside out. The second officer watched her until she dropped it over the back of the chair.

The white fabric carried her perfume.

Sweet. Expensive. Mine.

She looked at the boxes stacked by the door. “You’re really doing all this over coffee?”

The officer’s pen stopped moving.

I turned my head just enough for her to see the angry red patch trailing from my cheek to my neck.

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