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My Husband Defended Her and Struck Me Instead Novel Cover

My Husband Defended Her and Struck Me Instead

The kitchen table was still warm from dinner when Calum sat me down. Two plates, half-eaten, sat between us like evidence of a life that had just ended. His hands were folded on the polished mahogany surface, and I noticed — with the strange clarity that comes in moments of absolute devastation — that he was wearing the watch I'd given him for our fifth anniversary. The one engraved with our initials and the coordinates of our first apartment in Brooklyn. He was wearing it while telling me he was leaving. "Haven, I want a divorce." He said it the way someone might announce a change in dinner plans. Flat. Declarative. No tremor in his voice, no flicker of doubt in his gray eyes. Just clean, surgical finality.
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Chapter 3

I found the knife in the kitchen drawer at 11 p.m. on a Wednesday.

Not the big one. The small paring knife with the black handle, the one I used to slice apples on Sunday mornings while Calum read the paper. I stood at the counter for a long time, just holding it. The apartment was so quiet I could hear the refrigerator hum.

I told myself I just wanted him to come home.

The cut was shallow. A thin line across my left forearm, more shock than pain, and I watched the blood bead up with a strange, detached calm. My hands were steady when I took the photo. My hands were steady when I typed the message.

*Come home or I won't stop.*

I hit send and sat down on the kitchen floor and waited.

He was there in forty-five minutes.

I heard his key in the lock and felt something loosen in my chest — he came, he came, he still cares — and then he walked in and I saw his face and the loosening stopped.

He wasn't scared. He wasn't relieved. He was managing a situation.

He crossed the kitchen without a word, crouched in front of me, and took my arm. His fingers were clinical. He turned my forearm toward the light, assessed the cut the way you'd assess a cracked tile, and went to the bathroom for the first aid kit. I heard him open the cabinet, heard the familiar rattle of the kit we'd bought at a CVS in Brooklyn six years ago.

He came back and cleaned the wound with antiseptic. I winced. He didn't react.

"You need stitches," he said. "It's not deep enough, but you should have someone look at it."

"Calum—"

"I'm going to call you a car to the ER."

"I don't need the ER. I need you to sit down. I need you to talk to me."

He pressed a square of gauze to my arm and held it there, his eyes on the bandage, not on me. "This isn't something I can fix, Haven. This is something you need professional help for."

*Professional help.* The words landed like a door closing.

"I'm not crazy," I said. My voice came out smaller than I wanted.

"I didn't say you were." He secured the bandage with two strips of medical tape, neat and precise, and stood up. He hadn't sat down once. "I said you need help. There's a difference."

He set the first aid kit on the counter. He picked up his keys.

"You're leaving," I said.

"I'll call you a car."

"Calum, please. Just stay. Just for tonight. Just—"

"Haven." His voice was quiet and final, the way you speak to someone you've already said goodbye to. "I can't keep doing this. And neither can you."

Then he was gone again, and the door clicked shut behind him, and I sat on the kitchen floor with a bandaged arm and the absolute certainty that I had just humiliated myself in the worst possible way and it hadn't changed a single thing.

---

The ER doctor referred me to a therapist. Dr. Nina Farrell, a calm woman with an office on the Upper West Side and a voice like still water. I went once, the following Thursday, because I didn't know what else to do with myself.

Her office had good light. Plants on the windowsill. A box of tissues on the table between us that I refused to touch.

She asked me what brought me in. I told her my husband was leaving me for another woman. She nodded and asked how that made me feel. I told her it made me feel like the problem wasn't me, it was him, and I needed someone to help me figure out how to make him understand what he was throwing away.

She listened. She didn't argue. She asked careful questions — about my childhood, about how I'd learned to love, about what I thought I deserved. I answered some of them and deflected the rest.

At the end of the hour, she said, gently, that she thought there was a lot worth exploring. That she'd like to see me again next week.

I said I'd think about it.

I didn't go back. What was the point? She couldn't make Calum come home. She couldn't undo thirteen years of him choosing someone else. She could only sit across from me in that quiet room and ask questions I wasn't ready to answer.

---

The sleeping pills were in the medicine cabinet. Prescribed to me two years ago for a stretch of insomnia I'd mostly forgotten about. I'd never finished the bottle.

I counted them out on the bathroom counter on a Friday night. I wasn't thinking clearly. I wasn't thinking at all, really. I was just so tired. Tired of calling and getting voicemail. Tired of waking up and reaching for him and finding cold sheets. Tired of being the only one who still cared about saving us.

I swallowed them with a glass of water and called him.

He picked up on the third ring. I don't remember exactly what I said. Something about being sorry. Something about loving him. My words were already going soft at the edges, the way sound does when you're sinking.

I remember his voice changing. The flatness cracking, just slightly, into something sharper. "Haven. Haven, what did you take? How many?"

I told him.

He hung up.

I lay down on the bathroom floor and looked at the ceiling and thought, distantly, that the grout between the tiles needed cleaning. I thought about the first apartment in Brooklyn, how the bathroom had been so small we had to take turns brushing our teeth. How we'd laughed about it. How everything had been so small and so ours.

I woke up in a hospital bed.

Lexi was in the chair beside me. Her eyes were red and swollen, and when she saw me open mine, something moved across her face — relief, fury, grief, all of it at once — and she pressed her lips together hard.

"Hey," I said. My throat was raw.

"Hey," she said back. Her voice was very controlled.

I looked around the room. White walls. A monitor beeping softly. Morning light through the blinds.

"He didn't come," I said. It wasn't a question.

Lexi's jaw tightened. "No."

I closed my eyes. Somewhere in the back of my mind, I'd known. Some part of me had known even as I dialed his number that he wouldn't come. That he would do the responsible thing — call 911, make sure I didn't die on his conscience — and then go back to whatever he'd been doing before I interrupted his evening.

"He texted," Lexi said, and her voice had an edge to it now that she wasn't trying to hide. She held up her phone so I could read the screen.

*I hope you get the help you need.*

I stared at those seven words for a long time.

Lexi set the phone down. She leaned forward, her elbows on her knees, and looked at me with the kind of directness that only comes from real love.

"Haven," she said quietly. "He called 911 from his hotel room. He didn't even come to the hospital. He sent a text."

I didn't say anything.

"You almost died," she said. "And he sent a text."

The monitor beeped. Outside the window, the city moved through its morning without pausing. And I lay in that hospital bed and felt something shift inside me — not healing, not yet, not even close — but the first hairline crack in the story I'd been telling myself.

That he still cared. That he just needed to be reminded. That if I pushed hard enough, hurt badly enough, he would finally turn around and see me.

Seven words on a screen.

I hope you get the help you need.

Lexi reached over and took my hand. She didn't say anything else. She just held on, and I let her, and outside the window the city kept moving, indifferent and relentless, the way it always did.

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