His Bride Was Bleeding Upstairs. Then His Mother Heard The Closet - VD - Neyney - Chainityai

His Bride Was Bleeding Upstairs. Then His Mother Heard The Closet – VD – Neyney

Teresa Miller had never believed in sleeping late.

Not after a wedding.

Not after a funeral.

Not after any night when the house woke up messy and somebody had to be the adult.

By four in the morning, she was already downstairs with her gray hair pinned back, her slippers dragging across the kitchen tile, and her swollen hands deep in a sink full of rented plates.

The house smelled like old coffee, buttercream frosting, fried chicken grease, and flowers that had been beautiful twelve hours earlier but were now going soft in their vases.

Outside, the backyard looked like a storm had moved through wearing dress shoes.

White folding chairs leaned against the fence.

A paper lantern had fallen into the wet grass.

Empty beer bottles stood in a row on the porch rail where Carlos’s friends had left them, laughing too loud long after the bride disappeared upstairs.

Teresa had noticed that.

She noticed everything.

She had noticed Mariana smiling carefully through the reception.

She had noticed Carlos gripping Mariana’s waist a little too hard during the last dance.

She had noticed Mariana’s mother leaving early with red eyes, saying she had a headache, though Teresa could tell the woman was not sick.

She had noticed Carlos drinking bourbon from a paper cup behind the garage with his cousin Tyler.

She had noticed the way Mariana kept looking toward the stairs after nine o’clock, as if she was asking the house for permission to leave the party.

But Teresa had trained herself for years not to see certain things in her son.

Carlos had been difficult since he was a boy.

That was what she called it.

Difficult.

Not cruel.

Not controlling.

Not the kind of man who could scare a woman quiet.

Just difficult.

A strong personality.

A temper when pushed.

A man who needed the right woman to calm him down.

That was what Teresa had told herself when he slammed doors as a teenager.

That was what she had told herself when his first serious girlfriend stopped coming around.

That was what she had told herself when Mariana began visiting the house and apologized for things that were not her fault.

By six in the morning, Teresa had cleaned the kitchen.

By seven, she had carried trash bags to the garage.

By eight, she had stripped the rented tablecloths and set them in a laundry pile.

By nine, she had called upstairs twice.

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