Before everything fell apart, I used to think marriages eroded slowly like a shoreline worn down by waves you hardly notice at first. But with us, the change wasn’t subtle. It arrived like a shift in the wind that cut straight through my sweater.
My husband, Julian, had once been the man who warmed my hands in grocery store parking lots and left notes in my lunch bag reminding me to eat something more than toast. After our daughters were born, he changed. Not overnight, but steadily enough that I couldn’t pretend I didn’t see it.
His eyes no longer lingered on mine when he came home from work. His “hello” turned into a distracted grunt. His affection, once casual and effortless, tightened into something transactional.
He became distant, like I’d transformed from his wife into just another piece of furniture he walked past without noticing. And then the snapping started. If I forgot to take the trash out, he’d say, “You had all day, Olivia.
What exactly were you doing?”
If the girls made a mess while playing, it was, “You let them walk all over you. No discipline.”
If dinner wasn’t hot enough, or I used the wrong brand of laundry detergent, it somehow always circled back to being my fault. Soon, our arguments felt like walking through a minefield.
One wrong step, one wrong word, and boom, another explosion that left me picking up pieces for days. On the day everything changed, we were driving back from his mother’s house. A tense visit, as usual.
She had a way of looking at me like I was a substitute hired at the last minute for a role someone better should be playing. The girls had finally fallen asleep in the backseat, their little heads resting together. I thought maybe just maybe we’d make it home without another scene.
Maybe we could have one peaceful evening. Thirty miles from home, we stopped at a gas station so Julian could fuel up. “Grab me one of those burgers from inside,” he said.
“And make sure they add mustard.”
Inside, the warm air smelled like reheated pastries and floor cleaner. I found the burgers, but the cashier apologized with an exhausted smile. “Sorry, ma’am.
We’re out of mustard packets.”
I returned to the car and told Julian. They were out of mustard. That was all.
But he looked at me like I had personally ruined his entire day, like my words were an insult he needed to retaliate against. A muscle pulsed in his jaw. I braced myself.
He didn’t yell at first. He only muttered a few cutting remarks as he pulled back onto the highway. But the comments grew louder, sharper.
Careless. Lazy. Useless.
The insults piled up like stones on my chest. The road hummed beneath us, the girls snored softly behind us, and I sat there, small and shrinking, wondering when he had started hating me. Around the outskirts of town, he slammed on the brakes so hard my seatbelt locked.
I gasped, grabbing the dashboard. We were in the lot of a Target I didn’t recognize. Before I could process what was happening, Julian leaned across me and shoved my door open so fast the wind slapped my hair against my face.
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