
His Stinginess, Her Heartbreak
Chapter 2
The apartment smelled of lemon polish and indifference. I sat on the edge of the sofa, the stitches in my abdomen pulling tight with every shallow breath. The discharge nurse had told me to take it easy, to let myself be cared for. She evidently didn’t know my husband.
The front door clicked open. Damien walked in, bringing a gust of humid city air and the scent of expensive cologne. He carried a brown paper bag in one hand and a white pharmacy sack in the other.
“You’re upright,” he observed, setting the bags on the granite kitchen island. There was no kiss on the forehead, no hand checking for a fever.
“Barely,” I murmured, shifting my weight. The pain was a dull, throbbing heat low in my belly. “Did you get the soup?”
“Tomato bisque from Panera. And the Percocet.” He reached into his pocket and pulled out two slips of thermal paper, smoothing them flat on the counter next to the food. “I put the receipts right here. The pharmacy co-pay was twenty, and the lunch order came to eighteen-fifty with the delivery fee. Just add it to the spreadsheet when you’re feeling up to it.”
I stared at the receipts. They fluttered slightly under the vent of the air conditioner. “Thanks, Damien.”
“Efficiency is key to recovery,” he said, already turning toward the bedroom, loosening his tie. “I’m jumping in the shower. Don’t let the soup get cold.”
I dragged myself to the island, not for the food, but to stare at the tally of my existence. Thirty-eight dollars and fifty cents. That was the price of his care.
Trying to distract myself from the burning in my side, I unlocked my phone. Instagram refreshed automatically. The first image was a high-resolution shot of two crystal flutes clinking against a blurry backdrop of the Manhattan skyline.
*Cheers to new beginnings!* the caption read. *To my angel investor and best friend D, for making dreams come true without asking for a thing in return. #Blessed #NewVenture.*
Julianna.
My thumb hovered over the screen. *Without asking for a thing in return.* The words tasted like bile. He had just asked me to reimburse him for soup.
The pipes groaned in the walls; the shower was running. Adrenaline, sharp and cold, flooded my system, momentarily numbing the surgical pain. I moved toward Damien’s home office.
The room was a shrine to his control—minimalist, organized, sterile. I pulled open the bottom drawer of his mahogany file cabinet. I knew where he kept the 'external investments' folders.
There it was. *Richards, J.*
I flipped it open. I expected a contract, a repayment schedule, an interest rate calculation—the same rigorous documentation he demanded for our household expenses. There was nothing. Just the wire transfer confirmation for eighty thousand dollars. No promissory note. No signature. It wasn’t a loan; it was a tribute.
My hands shook as I shoved the file back, but my fingers snagged on a thinner, dustier folder tucked in the very back.
*Brooks, N.*
Niko. My brother.
I opened it. Three years ago, Niko had asked for a five-thousand-dollar loan to finish his final semester after his grant fell through. Inside was the application form Damien had made him fill out. Across the top, in Damien’s jagged, architectural handwriting, two words were circled in red ink: *High Risk.*
Denied.
I closed the drawer, the metallic *click* sounding like a gunshot in the quiet room.
***
Two weeks later, the physical stitches had dissolved, but the wound in my marriage was festering.
It was the first Sunday of the month—the “Household Audit.” We sat at the dining table, laptops open, facing each other like opposing counsel. The air was thick with the hum of hard drives.
“Electric is up four percent,” Damien noted, his eyes scanning his screen. “You’ve been running the AC during the day while you recover. We’ll need to adjust your contribution ratio for this cycle.”
“Fine,” I said, my voice flat. I wasn’t looking at the electric bill. I was looking at the joint account transaction history on my screen. “Damien, what is ‘St. Jude’s Academy’?”
The typing stopped. For a second, the only sound was the refrigerator compressor kicking on.
“It’s a recurring payment,” I pressed, turning my laptop around. “Three thousand, five hundred dollars. Every month. For the last two years.”
Damien didn’t flinch. He adjusted his glasses, his expression maddeningly calm. “It’s tuition. For Isabella.”
Julianna’s daughter.
The room seemed to tilt. “You pay for her child’s private school? That’s forty-two thousand dollars a year, Damien.”
“Julianna is a single mother, Amaia. The public schools in her district are failing. She needs support to ensure the girl has a future.”
“Support?” I stood up, my chair scraping violently against the hardwood. “When my father needed two thousand dollars to build a wheelchair ramp so he wouldn’t be a prisoner in his own living room, you told me it wasn't a ‘sound allocation of assets.’ You let my brother drop out for a semester over five grand.”
“That’s different,” Damien said, his voice dropping an octave, a warning tone. “Your father’s situation was… static. A sinkhole. Isabella has potential. It’s an investment in human capital.”
“She’s not your child,” I whispered, the realization settling over me like a shroud.
“She’s family,” he snapped, the mask slipping just enough to reveal the defensive anger beneath. “In the ways that matter.”
He looked at me then, really looked at me, and I saw it. The calculation wasn’t about money. It never had been. He was stingy with me because he was saving it all for them. I wasn’t his partner; I was just the one paying half the rent.
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