He Thought His New Wife Was Helpless Until The Belt Hit The Floor-Quieen - Chainityai

He Thought His New Wife Was Helpless Until The Belt Hit The Floor-Quieen

The first thing Derek did when we got home from our honeymoon was not kiss me in the doorway.

It was not offer to carry my suitcase.

It was not say he was happy to be home, or tired, or excited to start the life we had just promised in front of everyone we knew.

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He took off his belt.

The buckle tapped the bedside lamp with a hard metallic click, and the sound cut through the bedroom sharper than it should have.

The lamp shade trembled.

My travel dress still smelled like airplane air, sunscreen, and the faint damp sweetness of hotel towels that had never fully dried before I packed them.

On the bed were our boarding passes, the paper hotel wristbands we had forgotten to throw away, and a stack of honeymoon photos where we looked sunburned, smiling, and almost believable.

Derek stood between me and the door with the belt in his hand.

Then he smiled.

Not the smile he gave the wedding photographer.

Not the soft one he used when he wanted people to think he was gentle.

This one was satisfied.

It looked rehearsed.

“Now that the honeymoon is over,” he said, wrapping the leather around his hand, “it’s time you learned the rules of being a wife.”

For a moment, my brain tried to reject what my eyes were seeing.

We had landed from Hawaii three hours earlier.

My suitcase was open beside the closet, still packed with light dresses, sandals, sunscreen, and souvenirs I had bought because I thought I was coming home married, not hunted.

But grief had already taught me that terrible things often arrive in ordinary rooms.

They do not always kick the door down.

Sometimes they stand beside the bed and smile.

The signs had been there before that night.

Derek criticized what I wore, but he called it honesty.

He corrected how I talked to servers, but he called it wanting people to respect me.

He asked for my bank passwords and said marriage meant there should be no secrets.

When my father died and left me several properties, Derek suddenly became very interested in responsibility.

He said I should not carry all that alone.

He said a husband should protect his wife from people who might take advantage of her.

He said we should think like a married couple now.

At the time, I was too exhausted to see how fast his concern had appeared after money entered the room.

My father had been gone only a few months.

There were still mornings when I reached for my phone to call him before remembering there would be no answer.

Derek stepped into that empty space with flowers, dinner reservations, soft words, and the kind of urgent tenderness that can feel like rescue when you are grieving.

I told him too much.

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