Chapter Twelve Nora #4
His hand gestures vaguely, dismissively, at the café around us. “And this is what you choose? Mopping floors for strangers?” His eyes cut to Maeve, sharp and ugly. “Hanging around with this crowd?”
This crowd. He is talking about Maeve. About Kieran. About the people who have given me more in a few months than he gave me in five years.
He is using my father—the man who terrorized me, who locked me out, who left bruises on my body and scars on my mind—as a weapon.
Julian always loved my father.
He always praised him.
Your father is a remarkable man, Julian would say, on the drive home from family dinners. The way he carries himself. The way he commands a room. He would shake his head, half-admiring, half-envious. I hope I can be half the man he is someday.
Always called him “a strong, honorable man.”
Honorable.
My father didn’t know the meaning of the word. He knew only power and the pleasure of wielding it.
At the funeral, Julian cried more than I did.
He stood beside me, his arm around my shoulders, his body shaking with sobs. People came up to us afterward, patting his arm, murmuring condolences. Such a devoted son-in-law. Such a caring husband.
I stood there, dry-eyed, watching them comfort him.
He cried for a man who terrorized me.
I didn’t cry for my father at all.
There were no tears. No grief. No sense that something precious had been taken from me.
When they lowered my mother’s casket, a deep, terrifying relief settled into my chest. Quiet. Sharp. Shameful.
I had to hide it. I had to press my lips together and look down at the ground and pretend that I was mourning.
But inside, I was breathing for the first time.
She would never have to flinch at a slamming door again.
She would never have to whisper an apology for breathing too loud.
She would never have to wonder what mood would greet her when he came home.
The guessing was over. The walking on eggshells was done.
The long, slow suffocation of her life had finally ended.
The litany ran through my mind like a prayer. She is free. She is free. She is free.
My parents died together in a car crash. Ice on the road. A curve that came too fast. The police said it was instant. They said neither of them suffered.
The police had never sat at our dinner table.
Even in death, my father didn’t let her go. Her last moment on earth was trapped beside the man who had stolen her life piece by piece.
But after that last breath… she was finally free. It was the only freedom life ever granted her.
I shed one tear that day.
Not for him.
For her freedom.
Julian never knew any of this.
He never wondered why I flinched at slammed doors.
Why I preferred silence. Why my footsteps were always quiet.
Why I apologized for things that weren’t my fault.
Why my idea of a good day was a day where nothing changed.
Why I lived in the margins of the rooms, keeping my presence as thin as a shadow.
The questions were never asked because the answers were never wanted. Julian wanted a wife who was calm and quiet and easy to live with. He didn’t want to know why she had learned to be that way.
He loved my father because my father, in his presence, was charming. He was a man who told good stories and gave firm handshakes. A man who provided. A man who knew how to perform for an audience.
Julian never saw the other version. The version that existed behind closed doors. The version that emerged when the guests left and the silence settled and the mask came off.
The truth was impossible to tell him. To say that the man he admired terrorized us. That the strength he respected was violence. That the provider he praised kept us prisoners in a house of fear.
Those words spun in my mind for years, a carousel I could not step off of.
I couldn’t hand him the weight of my past and trust him to hold it gently.
To tell him would be to shatter the glass silence of our lives, this fragile peace I had built.
It would have made me a problem. A woman with a messy, complicated past, instead of the clean, simple wife he wanted.
Some truths are too heavy to hand to someone who isn’t looking to carry them. He wasn’t looking. He was comfortable. And my survival depended on keeping him that way.
I never dared correct him while living under his roof.
The roof was his. The food was his. The safety—such as it was—was his to give and his to take away. I could not risk it.
But I’m not under his roof anymore.
I am not under his roof. I am in a café that I have cleaned with my own hands, wearing clothes that I bought with my own money, surrounded by people who have seen me at my worst and chosen to stay.
They are here by choice, rooted in the same soil.
And for the first time, the roof over my head doesn’t feel like it’s waiting to fall.
So I say, calm and clear, “I don’t care what my father would think.”
Julian blinks, recoiling slightly. His body moves back, just a fraction, as if I have pushed him. “What?”
“I don’t care about that man.” The words surface from somewhere deep, untouched by the tremor in my hands. “He wasn’t a good person.”
Julian straightens slowly, confusion flickering into wariness.
I look him directly in the eyes while a sharp, old, buried feeling pushes its way up through my chest. “He used to hit me.”
His entire body freezes. His hands, which had been gesturing, fall to the table. His mouth, which had been open, closes. His eyes, which had been searching my face for something to hold onto, go wide and empty.
“My mother too. Whenever he wanted. Because he was cruel. Because he felt powerful. Because he liked it.” I breathe out, a rough, uneven release, my chest easing. My voice falters on the last word, then finds its footing. “He was never good. Never protective. Never a loving father. He was abusive.”
My voice goes flat. “He was a man who enjoyed hurting the people he was supposed to love.”
Julian’s mouth opens. Nothing comes out. He swallows, tries again. Still nothing.
I keep going, my words sharp and unmistakable:
“You admired a monster.”