He Threw His Wife Out, Then Found Her Name on Every Deed-eirian

The slap came before I had time to decide whether I was still the kind of wife who swallowed humiliation to keep a room comfortable.

One second, I was standing in the marble foyer of the house Evelyn loved calling hers.

The next, my cheek was burning, my ears were ringing, and my wedding ring had dug a thin red crescent into my palm.

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The sound was not huge.

That was what made it worse.

It was clean and sharp, like a crystal glass tapped too hard against stone.

For three seconds, every person in that foyer forgot how to move.

Daniel stood in front of me, breathing hard.

His mother stood near the staircase, one hand on her pearls, the faintest smile pulling at the corner of her mouth.

Six relatives had gathered near the dining room with wineglasses paused in the air, as if somebody had stopped a movie at the worst possible frame.

Then Evelyn smiled fully.

That smile hurt more than the slap.

“Get out,” Daniel said.

His voice was low and shaking.

I had heard that voice before.

He used it on employees who asked for raises, on contractors who challenged a bill, on waiters who brought Evelyn the wrong dressing.

I had never heard him aim it at me in front of his family.

“You do not speak to my mother like that in her own house,” he said.

Her own house.

I looked past him at the foyer.

The chandelier above us had taken two installers half a day to hang.

The marble under my feet had been imported after Evelyn rejected three domestic samples as too plain.

The staircase had been rebuilt because she said the original curve lacked elegance.

The oil painting over the fireplace showed Daniel and Evelyn standing together, both of them proud and polished, while I stood half a step behind them in a pale dress, smiling like I had been lucky to be included.

I had paid for the painting.

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