
My Husband Saved Her Cat While My Father Bled to Death
Chapter 2
I asked him three times that morning.
The first time was over coffee. I kept my voice steady, my hands wrapped around the mug so he wouldn't see them shake. "He needs a real defense attorney, Clyde. Someone who can file a motion to reopen the witness search. There are legal avenues—"
"No." He didn't look up from his phone.
"He's your father-in-law. He's been in Rikers for two weeks—"
"I said no, Callie."
The second time was in the hallway, when he was pulling on his jacket. I stepped in front of him. I made him look at me. "Then let me find someone. Let me call an attorney myself. I have contacts from my father's firm—"
Clyde's eyes dropped to my face. Slow. Deliberate. Like he was deciding something.
"You won't." He adjusted his cuffs. "I've already spoken to every firm in Manhattan that handles criminal defense. They won't take the case."
The air left my lungs.
"You called them." My voice came out smaller than I wanted. "You called them before I could."
He said nothing. Which was its own kind of answer.
The third time, I didn't ask. I just stood in the middle of our living room and looked at him — really looked at him — and tried to find the man I married somewhere behind that face. The man who used to bring me coffee before I woke up. Who used to say my name like it was something precious.
He picked up his briefcase and walked out.
I stood there for a long time after the door closed.
---
Estelle arrived at two.
She always called ahead now. Little courtesy. Like she was a guest and not a wrecking ball.
She came through the door with Snowball tucked under one arm — that white Persian cat with the flat, bored face — and she was wearing cream cashmere and soft pink lipstick, and she looked so delicate, so harmless, that I wanted to put my fist through the wall.
"Callie." She said my name warmly. Like we were friends. "I hope I'm not interrupting."
"You are," I said.
She smiled anyway and set Snowball down on my sofa. The cat stretched out across the cushion like it owned the room.
Clyde came in from his office. Something in his posture shifted when he saw her — a small softening, barely visible, but I saw it. I always saw it now.
"Estelle." He crossed the room. "How are you holding up?"
"Barely." Her voice dropped to that soft, trembling register she kept ready, like a weapon she'd already loaded. "I keep thinking I hear Julien's voice. In the morning, especially." She pressed her fingers to her lips. Her eyes went glassy. "I'm sorry. I don't mean to — I just needed to see a friendly face."
Clyde put a hand on her shoulder.
I watched that hand. I watched him not look at me.
"Callie's been under a lot of stress," Estelle said then, turning to me with those luminous, sorrowful eyes. "It must be so hard. All this uncertainty. Not knowing what's coming next." A pause. Just long enough. "I hope you're being careful, Callie. Staying close to home. It's safer that way."
She wasn't talking to me. She was talking to Clyde.
And Clyde heard her.
That evening, he told me I was no longer to leave the penthouse without his approval. No exceptions. No outside calls without his knowledge. His voice was calm. Reasonable. The voice of a man who believed he was protecting something.
I nodded. I said, "Okay."
I had learned, by then, when to fight and when to go still.
---
I didn't know about Rikers until much later.
What I know now is this: she went on a Tuesday. She wore a dark coat and carried a visitor's pass that shouldn't have existed, and she walked through a checkpoint that should have stopped her, and she sat across from my father in a room that smelled like bleach and fluorescent light.
She didn't say much. She never needed to.
She just set a tablet on the table and pressed play.
The video was forty seconds long. It showed a woman with my face, my hair, my voice — screaming. Men I didn't recognize. Sounds I can't write down.
It wasn't real. Not one frame of it was real.
But my father didn't know that.
He watched all forty seconds. Then he sat very still for a long time.
Estelle picked up the tablet, smoothed her coat, and walked back out through the checkpoint.
My father was returned to his cell.
I was in the penthouse, thirty blocks away, nodding at everything Clyde said, learning how to disappear inside my own face.
I didn't know.
I didn't know what was already over.
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