
After My Lover Saved Her, He Let Me Burn
Chapter 3
Tiffany put the next photograph face-down on the table.
She did not turn it over. She just rested her hand on the back of it and looked at me.
"This one," she said, "you don't have to do today."
I reached across and turned it over myself.
A hotel lobby. Marble floors. The kind of place that had a name people said with a certain weight. I had been there. I knew I had been there because my body knew before my mind did — my shoulders pulled in, my jaw tightened, and the air in the room suddenly felt thinner.
"I got a message," I said.
Tiffany nodded slowly.
"From someone I thought was a friend." I stared at the photograph. The marble in the lobby was white with gray veins. I remembered the sound my heels made on it. "She said it was urgent. She said she needed to talk to me about something I had to hear in person."
I remembered checking my phone twice on the cab ride over. No follow-up texts. I had thought that was strange. I had thought a lot of things were strange and talked myself out of every one of them.
The elevator. The hallway. A door that opened before I knocked.
"There were men," I said.
My voice came out flat. I was grateful for the flatness. It was the only thing holding the memory at a distance I could survive.
"More than one. I didn't understand what was happening at first. I think that's the part that stays with me. How long it took me to understand. I kept thinking there had been a mistake. I kept thinking if I just explained —"
I stopped.
The bathroom door. I had gotten to the bathroom door. I had shoved a chair under the handle and sat on the cold tile with my back against the tub and my dress torn at the shoulder and my lip split where someone's hand had caught it. I had called Gideon with fingers that would not stop shaking.
*Please come. Please. Room 714. Please.*
He came.
I heard his voice in the hallway. I heard him say my name, sharp and confused. I pulled the chair away from the door and opened it and reached for him.
His face.
I have to say his face.
He looked at the room first. The overturned lamp. The chair. My dress. My lip. He looked at all of it the way a detective looks at a scene, assembling a story. And the story he assembled was not mine.
I saw it happen. I watched his face close.
"Gideon," I said. "Listen to me. I got a message, someone told me to come here, I didn't know —"
The slap came so fast I did not see it.
I felt it. The flat of his palm, hard across my left cheek. The sound it made. The way my head turned with it and my shoulder hit the doorframe and I slid down to the tile.
I sat on the floor and looked up at him.
"Disgusting," he said.
Just that word. Like I was something he had stepped in.
"Armani told me," he said. "She told me you'd do something like this. I didn't want to believe her. I defended you." His voice cracked on the last word, but not with grief. With something that sounded like relief. Like he had been waiting for permission to feel this way about me and I had finally given it to him. "I defended you to everyone."
"Gideon, please —"
"Don't." He stepped back. He straightened his jacket. He looked at me one more time, on the floor, and his expression did not change. "Don't call me again tonight."
The door closed.
I sat on the cold tile and listened to his footsteps go down the hall. I listened until I could not hear them anymore. I listened to the ice machine down the corridor. I listened to a television through the wall. I listened to my own breathing, which was very loud and very strange, like it belonged to someone else.
I did not move for a long time.
I told Tiffany all of this in the same flat voice. I watched my own hands on the table while I talked. When I finished, the room was very quiet.
Then I stopped eating.
I did not decide to stop. It was not a choice I made. Food simply stopped being a thing that made sense. Tiffany put plates in front of me and I looked at them and could not find the part of myself that knew what to do next. She did not argue. She did not coax. She sat across from me and drank her coffee and was there, the way a wall is there — not asking anything, just solid.
The second day, she moved her chair next to mine and read a book. She did not read out loud. She did not check on me every ten minutes. She just turned pages.
On the third morning I drank half a glass of water and she did not react, which was the kindest thing she could have done.
That afternoon I spoke.
"Did I ever tell anyone," I said. My voice had changed. I could hear it. Something had been sanded out of it, some layer that used to soften the edges. "What he did. Did I ever tell anyone."
Tiffany set her book down. She did not look away from me.
"You tried," she said. "No one believed you."
I nodded.
I had known the answer before I asked. I had asked because I needed to hear it said out loud by someone who was not going to apologize for it or wrap it in something softer. No one believed you. Four words. Clean as a cut.
I looked at the window. The light outside was the gray-white of late afternoon, the kind of light that does not commit to anything.
"Okay," I said.
Tiffany waited.
"Okay," I said again, quieter. Not to her. To the thing with teeth that had been moving closer for days. I felt it settle into place behind my sternum, patient and permanent.
I picked up the fork.
I ate.
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