She stepped closer, her lips twisting into a cruel smile. “You can’t wash the rot out of your bloodline,” she spat.
Before I could process the bizarre, venomous words, Kenneth appeared. His face was a mask of cold, detached fury. He stormed past me, ripped our wedding photos from the hallway wall, and with a guttural roar, began tearing them apart. The sound of ripping paper, of shattering glass, was the sound of our life being unmade. He shredded our smiling faces, our embraces, our shared history, until nothing was left but pathetic scraps.
“Kenny, what are you doing?” I whispered, frozen in horror.
He didn’t answer. He grabbed my arm, his fingers digging into my wet skin, and dragged me toward the front door. Catherine stood aside, a look of deep, triumphant satisfaction on her face. He yanked the door open and shoved me out into the courtyard, in full view of our nine-story building. The door slammed shut. The lock clicked.
And there I was. Barefoot, wrapped in a single bath towel, my wet hair dripping cold water down my back. Humiliated. Crushed. Ejected from my own life. I looked up and saw them in the window, two silent figures watching the show. The shame was a physical fire, burning me from the inside out.
And then, I heard the rumble of a familiar engine. A polished black car stopped a few meters away. My brother, Damian, stepped out. His face was stone. He took in the scene—me shivering in a towel, the shredded photos on the ground, the two figures in the window—without a flicker of emotion. He didn’t rush to me. He didn’t shout. With slow, deliberate steps, he walked straight to the entrance of the building and pressed the intercom. The lock buzzed. He disappeared inside.
The silence that followed was the most terrifying part. A minute passed. Two. An eternity.
The door opened. Damian emerged, his expression unchanged. He walked to me, took off his expensive dark grey jacket, and draped it over my shoulders. He didn’t say a word. He simply led me to his car, helped me in, and slid into the driver’s seat. Only then, before starting the engine, did he look at me.
Damian’s apartment was a cool, orderly loft, a sterile world away from the chaos of mine. He made me tea and told me to shower. I found a grey tracksuit in his closet, and its baggy anonymity felt like a shield. The shock was beginning to fade, replaced by a cold, sharp fury and a burning need for answers.
“I have to go back,” I said, my voice firm.
“For what?” Damian asked. “I’ll have people pack your things.”
“I don’t need things,” I replied, my hands steady now. “I need an answer. I want him to look me in the eye and tell me why.”
He studied me for a long moment, then sighed. He understood. “Fine. But I’m waiting in the car. Ten minutes. Then I’m coming up.”
Back in the courtyard, the scene of my humiliation was undisturbed. The apartment door was ajar. Kenneth was slumped on the living room couch, his head in his hands. He looked like he’d aged ten years in an hour. Catherine was gone.