I couldn't see through Bryant.
All I could do was instinctively step back. "What do you mean?"
"Can we not get a divorce? Please?" Bryant clutched my wrist, his fingers tracing my pulse, "From now on, it's only you that I want. No one else matters."
I asked, "Including Teresa and Margaret?"
He said firmly, "Yes."
"Bryant," I sneered, full of disbelief. "Can you even convince yourself of that?"
If it was a sudden epiphany, it was far too late. I hadn't expected him to believe me, but it wasn't enough to make up for the past between us.
His voice was low. "So, you still don't want to remain my wife?"
I looked at him squarely, saying firmly, "Yes, I don't."
If we could go back to before we lost the baby and he made this decision, I might have agreed in a heartbeat. But right then, I couldn't find any reason to say yes.
Was it when he rushed past me to help someone else when I was knocked down? Or was it when the slap he gave me as I miscarried wasn't harsh enough? Our marriage was beyond saving.
Bryant was silent for a long while, his grip on my hand tightening until, finally, his eyes cleared, filled with bitter irony. "I could even pretend I never saw these photos. Isn't that enough?"
His words felt like a bucket of ice water poured over me in the dead of winter, chilling me from head to toe, freezing my blood.
I smiled, but tears welled up first, breaking free from his grasp, "So, you never believed me? Bryant, is that what you think of me?"
That night, after I had finished washing up and was half-lying in bed reading, I suddenly heard a flurry of anxious voices downstairs.
Instinctively preparing to check, I barely opened the door when I heard Gary nearly pleading, "Even if you don't care about your health, think about Mr. Timothy. What will happen to the Ferguson family if you collapse?"
Only Bryant and I warranted such respect from Gary in the vast Ferguson Mansion.
I paused, feeling a tug at my heart, which quickly settled, thinking Bryant was nearly thirty and should know better than to neglect his health.
Right. With that thought, I closed the door again.
Just before it shut, I heard Bryant's hoarse voice. "It's nothing serious. Call the doctor over, will you?"
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