Her Husband Told Her To Cover The Bruises Before Lunch With His Mother-habe

The first thing Victoria tasted was blood.

The second was betrayal.

It should have been a quiet night in the kind of house people admired from the sidewalk.

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Trimmed hedges.

A clean driveway.

A little American flag on the porch that Richard liked to straighten whenever guests were coming over.

Inside, the bedroom smelled like linen spray and cold air from the cracked window.

Outside, the street was still.

Inside, Victoria was on the rug, one hand pressed to her cheek, staring up at the man who had promised to love her.

Richard stood over her with his sleeves rolled to his forearms.

His breathing was steady.

That was what frightened her most.

Not the force.

Not the pain.

The calm.

He looked like a man who had knocked over a chair, not a man who had knocked down his wife.

“You embarrassed me,” he said.

Victoria swallowed, and the taste of copper filled her mouth again.

“Because I said no?”

Richard’s jaw shifted.

“Because my mother asked for one simple thing.”

One simple thing.

That was how Beatrice had put it at dinner, too.

She had sat under the warm light of the dining room chandelier, lifting her water glass like a queen accepting tribute, and explained that it was time she moved in.

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