My Husband Offered My Apartment Like A Family Hotel, Until I Showed The Deed-ruby - Chainityai

My Husband Offered My Apartment Like A Family Hotel, Until I Showed The Deed-ruby

Marcus reached for his phone because that was what he always did.

When a problem got too close to our kitchen table, he reached for the family. He reached for Galina’s voice. He reached for the familiar chorus that could turn one woman’s boundary into a group problem, then turn the group problem into proof that the woman should soften.

But this time, Galina’s spare key was on the table.

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So was the deed.

So was the record of every evening I had come home and found strangers inside my peace.

He looked at the key first. It was a small thing, silver and ordinary, with the blue rubber cap I had put on it when I still believed spare keys were about emergencies.

“Why do you have that?” he asked.

“Because your mother should not have it.”

His face tightened. “She only used it twice.”

That sentence told me more than he meant it to. I had not known she had used it twice. I had known only once, the afternoon I came home and found a loaf of bread on my counter that I had not bought, wrapped in a towel I did not keep in that drawer.

Once had been enough.

Twice made the room colder.

I opened the second envelope.

Marcus watched my hands. I think he expected divorce papers. I think some part of him had already built an argument for divorce papers. He could call me dramatic. He could say I was throwing away a marriage over dinner guests. He could say I had let resentment build instead of communicating. He could make himself sound like the surprised husband of an unreasonable woman.

But the second envelope did not hold divorce papers.

It held a copy of the building’s lock-change request.

Scheduled for Monday.

Paid in full.

Authorized by the owner.

Me.

Marcus stared at it, and the color moved out of his face slowly, like water leaving a sink.

“You changed the locks?”

“Not yet.”

“Clara.”

“Monday,” I said. “I wanted to tell you before it happened.”

He laughed once. Not because anything was funny. It was the short, sharp sound of a man who had found a wall where he expected a cushion.

“So this is punishment.”

“No.”

“What else would you call it?”

“A boundary with a locksmith.”

His eyes flicked up at me then. There he was, the Marcus I had married for one second. Hurt. Frightened. Almost honest.

“You could have just told me.”

I almost smiled.

Not because I was amused.

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