He Ordered His Wife To Hide Her Bruises, Then Lost The House At Lunch-olweny - Chainityai

He Ordered His Wife To Hide Her Bruises, Then Lost The House At Lunch-olweny

The makeup bag landed on the bathroom counter with the softest sound, and somehow that made it feel crueler than if Jasper had thrown it.

Josephine stared at it through one good eye.

The bag was pink, quilted, expensive, and still wrapped in a curl of tissue from the boutique where Jasper bought gifts when he wanted witnesses.

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He had not bought it because he was sorry.

He had bought it because his mother was coming to lunch.

“Use the concealer first,” he said, standing behind her in the mirror.

He wore a pressed shirt and a silver watch, already dressed for the office, already washed clean of the night before.

Josephine held a damp towel against her split lip.

Her left cheek had swollen until her face looked like it belonged to a stranger.

There were fingerprints along her upper arm, darkening into purple.

She had not screamed when he grabbed her.

She had not begged when he shoved her backward into the bathroom door.

She had only said no.

That was the word Jasper could not forgive.

No, his mother could not move into the downstairs guest suite.

No, Tabitha could not take the lake-facing room with the brass bed and the blue curtains Josephine’s grandmother had sewn by hand.

No, the house Josephine inherited from her father would not become a place where Jasper and Tabitha ruled while she apologized for breathing too loudly.

Jasper had looked at her as if a chair had spoken.

Then he taught her what he thought disobedience should cost.

Now he touched the makeup bag with two fingers and smiled at his own reflection.

“My mother is coming for lunch,” he said. “Cover those marks and put on a smile.”

Josephine lifted her eyes to him in the mirror.

For three years, Jasper had been practicing that tone.

Soft enough for other people.

Sharp enough for her.

“And if I don’t?” she asked.

His smile thinned.

He bent close until his breath warmed her ear.

“Then everyone will see how unstable you really are,” he said. “Fragile little Josephine. Always crying. Always dramatic. I will make you look crazy.”

She looked down before he could see what changed in her eyes.

He thought it was fear.

It was calculation.

The phone was under the towel beside the sink, recording every word.

The hallway camera was still working.

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