He Tried to Prove I Was Losing My Mind — Then a Pharmacy Label Gave Him Away-thuyhien

The kitchen narrowed to the bright square of his screen.

Rain kept tapping the skylight. The dishwasher throbbed under the counter. Dominic’s thumb hovered near the photo as if he could close it before I looked harder. I lifted my eyes from the mirrored wall in the image to his face. His jaw had gone tight at the corners.

I didn’t ask what the bottle was. I didn’t throw the phone. My hand slid off the quartz, reached for the mug beside the stove, and tipped the last inch of cold coffee across his shirt cuff and the edge of the counter.

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He hissed and jerked back.

“God, Eleanor.”

While he grabbed a dish towel, I lifted my own phone from the fruit bowl, held it low, and took three fast photos of his screen: the image, the message thread, the reflected bottle. Then I sent them to one person he had spent eleven years trying to edge out of my life.

Melissa Greene.

Dominic and I had met on a rooftop, which made the photo on his phone cruel in a way that had a shape to it. Our first date had been in late September, wind pushing at the strings of café lights, the city below us soft and gold. He had laughed with his whole mouth back then. He brought me a wool coat when the temperature dropped without making a show of it. He remembered how I took my coffee. He folded theater tickets into the pages of books I hadn’t opened yet so I would find them on bad days.

When my father died, Dominic drove every hour between the hospital and the probate office with a navy thermos between his knees and legal pads on the passenger seat. When my mother’s silver had to be sorted, he wrapped each piece in tissue paper. When the townhouse on Bellmore Street needed repairs, he found contractors, compared estimates, stood in the dust with his sleeves rolled up and a pencil behind one ear. Everybody said the same thing.

You’re lucky.

For a while, that word sat neatly on top of our life.

Then the seams started showing in places nobody else could see. He liked passwords on everything, even drawers that held nothing but batteries and old manuals. He hated when I met friends without telling him exactly where. After my miscarriage, he stopped touching my stomach and started touching my schedule. He asked what I spent, who I met, how long lunch lasted, why a cab home from Midtown cost $38.40 instead of $31.00. The questions came in a soft voice, which made them harder to point at.

The year I turned thirty-four, my aunt Lillian’s estate finally cleared after a court fight that had dragged on for twenty months. Her share of the family property in Connecticut had sold for $1.2 million. My portion, after taxes and liens, was set to hit my account the following Monday: $612,000. Melissa had handled the trust since my father’s funeral. Dominic knew the date. He knew the number. He knew the distribution required one clean thing above all else: a competent beneficiary signing in person.

By then, the blackouts had already started.

Or what he wanted everyone to call blackouts.

A bitter film on my tongue when I woke. Whole stretches of sleep that sat on my chest like wet wool. One afternoon I found my running shoes by the front door with mud on the soles, though the rain had started after midnight and I had gone to bed before ten. Another morning there was a lipstick glass in the sink, not my shade, and Dominic held it up with two fingers and smiled that thin smile.

“You were up later than you thought.”

My body kept the record my mind couldn’t. Heavy calves. Dry mouth. The back of my neck hot under cold water. I would stand in the shower until steam glazed the mirror and try to pull one clean memory out of the fog. Nothing came. Dominic kept handing me the same heavy ceramic mug at night, chamomile and honey, watching until I drank. The mug warmed my palms. Ten minutes later, the room always seemed to soften around the edges.

At 7:21 a.m., my phone buzzed on the counter.

Melissa.

One line.

Call me where he can’t hear you.

Dominic changed his shirt upstairs. I could hear drawers opening, hangers hitting wood, his footsteps crossing the bedroom rug. I took my handbag, walked to the powder room off the foyer, shut the door, and pressed the phone so hard to my ear the earring back dug into my neck.

Melissa did not waste breath.

“Do not drink anything he gives you. Do not sign anything. Come to me.”

Her office was nine blocks away. By 8:04 a.m., I was in the back seat of a cab with the window cracked. Wet air came in smelling of diesel, rain on concrete, and the bakery on Madison that always set cinnamon into the street before eight. My hands kept opening and closing in my lap. At every light, I checked the three photos again. The bottle label was too blurred to read in the kitchen shot, but the pharmacy logo sat in the upper left corner like a signature.

Melissa had known my father since they were both young enough to borrow court shoes from friends. Her office still smelled the same as it had when I was twelve and came there after school—paper, lemon polish, old radiator heat. She wore a dark green suit, no jewelry except her watch, and when she looked at the images on my phone, her face did something small and hard.

“Mercer Legal sent Dominic three draft petitions last week,” she said. “Their assistant copied the wrong address on a courier envelope. It came to Bellmore Street.”

My stomach turned over once.

Melissa slid the papers across the desk. Petition for emergency guardianship. Petition to delay trust distribution pending mental health evaluation. Supporting affidavit from spouse. Two incidents of disorientation. One financial event suggesting impaired judgment. One attached photograph from a rooftop bar.

The room went silent except for the hiss of the radiator.

“He wanted me declared incompetent before Monday.”

Melissa nodded once. “And if you signed voluntary observation papers today, he’d walk into court with a ribbon on the package.”

She had already called the pharmacy logo she recognized from the photo. The amber bottle had been filled eighteen days earlier under my insurance, prescribed by a concierge doctor I had never met. Thirty tablets of zolpidem. Pick-up time: 6:41 p.m. Payment method: Dominic’s corporate American Express for $86.24 after insurance denial. The pharmacist had printed the transaction because the account sat in my name.

Then Melissa called the rooftop bar.

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