A Forged Army Death Notice, A Burning Iron, And One Husband At The Door-ruby - Chainityai

A Forged Army Death Notice, A Burning Iron, And One Husband At The Door-ruby

The first thing I remember was the smell.

Not fear, although fear was in the room so thick I could taste it.

It was scorched cotton from the damp dish towel my mother-in-law had thrown under the iron.

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It was old coffee in the mug beside the sink.

It was the sharp metal heat rising from the iron plate as Victoria held it inches from my stomach and smiled like she had already won.

I was eight months pregnant.

Both of my hands were locked around my belly.

The baby had been kicking all morning, but in that kitchen, the movement felt different.

Harder.

Like my child knew danger before I had found the strength to stand.

Victoria set the forged custody transfer papers in front of me with the neatness of a woman laying out napkins for Sunday dinner.

She had always been tidy that way.

Her purse was organized.

Her receipts were clipped together.

Her church shoes were polished before they ever touched the porch.

Even her cruelty came arranged in stacks.

“Sign,” she said.

I stared at the papers, but the words blurred together.

Temporary custody.

Medical instability.

Emergency guardianship.

Unfit without supervision.

My name was printed on line after line as if someone had been building a version of me I had never met.

“Victoria,” I whispered, “Michael would never let you do this.”

That was when she laughed.

It was not loud.

It was worse than loud.

It was soft, certain, and almost bored.

Then she pulled the folded Army casualty notice from the side pocket of her purse and tossed it onto the kitchen table.

The paper slid across the wood and stopped near my wrist.

I knew that document.

I had held it three months earlier while my knees gave out on the bathroom floor.

I had slept with it under my pillow for two nights because grief makes you do strange things with paper.

I had read every line until the words stopped looking like English and started looking like a door closing forever.

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