He Slapped His Mother Over A Video Game. Then The Kitchen Went Silent-yumihong

The slap cracked across my face so hard the game controller shook in my son’s other hand.

For one second, the living room end of the hallway went quiet except for the thin digital screaming coming from his monitor.

A soldier on the screen fell backward.

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Another one kept firing.

The sound was cheap and tinny, but the silence in the room felt expensive, like something had broken that could not be replaced.

I stood in the doorway with a laundry basket pressed against my hip and flour dusting the front of my apron.

The breakfast rolls I had made that morning were still on the counter.

He had not touched them.

“Evan,” I whispered.

My voice sounded small, and I hated that more than the sting spreading across my face.

My son turned his head just enough to look at me.

He was not ashamed.

He looked annoyed.

“You walked in front of the screen,” he snapped.

His headset was pushed crooked over one ear.

The controller was still in his other hand.

“I lost because of you.”

My cheek burned so hot it felt separate from the rest of my face.

My left ear rang.

The laundry basket suddenly felt heavier, full of towels and socks and the ordinary weight of a house I had kept running while my son sat in a room I had painted blue when he was eight.

Back then, Evan had wanted stars on the ceiling.

He had wanted a night-light shaped like a moon.

He used to call for me at two in the morning because the closet door looked different in the dark.

I would sit on the edge of his bed, smooth his hair, and tell him there was nothing in the room that could hurt him.

Now I was standing in that same doorway, and the thing that hurt me was him.

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