His jaw tightened. “Because my mother asked one simple thing.”
One simple thing.
Move into our house permanently. Give up the master bedroom because “older women deserved comfort.” Let her control the kitchen, criticize my clothes, inspect my spending, and whisper poisonous little comments into Ethan’s ear every night until I disappeared inside my own marriage.
I had refused at dinner.
Ethan smiled through dessert, drove us home in silence, then turned violent the moment the front door closed.
Now he adjusted his wedding ring and looked down at me like I was the problem.
“You’ll apologize tomorrow,” he said.
I stared at him from the floor.
He waited for tears. Begging. Fear.
I gave him nothing.
That angered him more than screaming ever could.
“You think you’re strong?” he asked softly. “You live in my house. Use my name. Spend my money.”
His money.
I almost laughed.
Instead, I lowered my eyes because men like Ethan confused silence with surrender. His mother, Evelyn Whitmore, had raised him that way. Evelyn believed wives existed to obey gracefully and suffer quietly.
Ethan stepped over me, changed into pajamas, and climbed into bed.
Within minutes, he was asleep.
I stayed on the floor until the room stopped spinning. Then I dragged myself into the bathroom and locked the door behind me.