One afternoon, we sat on the bed talking, though the air between us was charged. I decided to confront him, tired of the imbalance. “Why do you show so much compassion to other women but not to me?” I asked, my voice trembling under the weight of my own vulnerability. “You never say lovely things like that to me.”
Mark looked at me, confused and irritated. “What are you talking about?” he said dismissively, his denial fueling the simmering frustration inside me.
I couldn’t hold it back any longer. “I think the truth is you fancy other women all the time, and you wouldn’t hesitate to cheat on me if you had the chance,” I said, the words spilling.
The moment they left my mouth, I knew I’d crossed an invisible line. His reaction was swift and brutal. He grabbed my neck with his hulk-like hand and shoved me onto the bed, his grip like a vice. His other hand clamped my head against the mattress, his face inches from mine. I could feel the heat of his breath and see the blackness in his eyes as his rage consumed him. My arms and legs flailed uselessly, a silent plea for him not to tighten his grip.
“Don’t you EVER accuse me of shit like that… EVER!” he roared, his spit landing on my face as his words crashed over me like a tidal wave.
I went limp, my body surrendering like a rag doll, signalling my submission. I closed my eyes and retreated into a place where time and reality didn’t exist, a numb void where I couldn’t feel the pain or hear his voice.
“You’re such a fucking letdown, you know that? You’re lucky to have me. You’re a selfish BITCH!” he raged, his voice tearing through the silence. “There are women out there who’d die for a bloke like me. I’ve taken on all your kids, and all you do is give me grief! The guys at work don’t have to put up with this bullshit from their wives. They’re not flirting with the fucking postman while their husbands are working their bollocks off! And don’t think I’ve forgotten about New Year’s Eve when you flirted with the bouncer and kissed him. You ruined everyone’s night, you ungrateful SLAG!”
He didn’t stop. His words scraped the bottom of the barrel, dredging up every argument, every perceived flaw, every mistake I’d ever made. It was a relentless assault, designed to break me down completely.
When he finally let go of my neck and stormed out of the bedroom, I lay there, dazed and disoriented, my thoughts scattered like debris from a storm. The children’s laughter floated in from the garden, a surreal contrast to the chaos inside the house.
Downstairs, Mark punched the wall and roared like a lion, his fury spilling into the air. I cursed the postman under my breath, blaming him for daring to be kind to me, even in the smallest way.
But just as a lioness knows how to bow to her mate’s dominance, she also knows when to protect her cubs. I wiped my tears, stood up, and made my way toward the children, silently vowing to shield them from the storm raging inside their father.
This maneuver required the precision of a military operation. If I miscalculated, it could all go disastrously wrong. Mark was in the bedroom, sulking and stewing in his wounded pride, but his bad mood was another storm waiting to break. He knew my routine well—cook dinner, wash up, bathe the kids, put them to bed. So, I played along, my silence the only thing keeping the peace.
Quietly, I crouched down and whispered to the children, “We’re going for a little walk, okay? Stay quiet.” Taking the car wasn’t an option—he always kept the keys in his pocket, a silent claim to control. My purse was gone too, no doubt stashed somewhere I’d never find. But I remembered the jar of pennies we’d been saving. I scooped up as much change as I could. It wasn’t much, but it might be enough for a phone call. My head was spinning, but one thought cut through the chaos: we had to leave.
The phone box was a five-minute walk away. If we could just get there, I could call Mum and Dad to come and get us.
“Shh…quickly now,” I urged, picking up the youngest and holding him tight. We slipped out through the back gate and started down the street, our pace quickening with every step. My heartbeat thudded in rhythm with our hurried feet. “Nearly there,” I said, trying to mask the rising panic in my voice.
Then I heard it—the car engine. Mark. The roar of the engine revving to extremes shattered the fragile quiet, and my stomach dropped.
“GET IN THE CAR! YOU FUCKING WHORE!” His voice bellowed through the open passenger window, venomous and terrifying.
The children clung to me, their fear now mirroring my own. “Hurry!” I shouted, though I knew there was no safety in the phone box. He’d just drag us out. Still, we ran, driven by sheer instinct.
“DO AS YOU’RE FUCKING TOLD! GET IN THE CAR NOW, OR ELSE!” His rage erupted again, his car crawling alongside us, his words slicing through the night and bouncing off the quiet houses.
Then, salvation. A woman—a stranger—appeared. She pulled up in her car on a side street, throwing the door open.
“Get in!” she shouted, her voice urgent and commanding.
We didn’t hesitate. I herded the children towards her, and we tumbled into the safety of her car.
“Are you okay? Where can I take you?” she asked, her hands gripping the wheel as she sped off.
I glanced back, expecting to see Mark following, but he was gone. Relief washed over me, and I cupped my face, sobbing as I stammered my thanks over and over.