Ben gets Juliaโs episode up bright and early Monday morning. I listen to it while I run on the treadmill, and apparently, Iโm not the only one tuning in first thing, because I have a bunch of missed calls and several texts on my phone when Iโm done. I read them as I walk across the parking lot to my car, sweat trickling down my back.
Grandma: Hon, can you call me? Or come by. Any time.
Dad: Did you leave already? Your mom and I want to talk to you.
Nathan: Hey, is everything okay down there? Just because we broke up doesnโt mean we canโt still be friends. If you want to talk about anything.
Emmett: Do you want to get lunch soon?
Christ, Iโm so popular suddenly. People find out that your first husband has been slapping around his second wife and everyone makes assumptions. I sit in my car for several minutes with the AC blasting in my face,
thinking about what to do about those assumptions.
On the one hand, theyโre right.
On the other hand, they can all go fuck themselves.
I donโt appreciate them turning me into the victim of this story. Savvyโs the victim. She was buffed and polished after her death and turned into the perfect victim I could never be. Letโs leave it that way.
Another text pops up on my phone.
Hey, itโs Julia. Ben gave me your number.
I told him he could do that. Now I wish I hadnโt.
I hope youโre okay. Iโm happy to talk, whenever youโre ready.
I wonder whether she really never fought back. Did Matt just confuse us, or did she snap like me, and decide to get out ahead of the story?
God, I hope itโs the latter. Sheโs so tiny and cute, no one would ever believe that she hit him. I hope she beat his ass.
I stare at her texts. Iโm never going to give her what she needs. Iโm not a supportive shoulder.
I quickly type out a reply.
Thanks. Good luck with everything.
โIf you stab him in the neck, itโll be quick,โ Savvy whispers in my ear. โDo you want it to be quick?โ
Julia is definitely better off without me.
My phone ringsโGrandmaโbut I ignore it. I have to make a choice. If I tell the truth, and admit that Matt hit me, he willย definitelyย tell everyone that I fought back. It wonโt matter that it was months before I snapped. It wonโt matter that I suffered through countless nights of screaming insults and stinging slaps and being thrown against walls so hard itโs a miracle my head isnโt dented.
I did, eventually, snap, and itโll just be further proof of my evil, violent heart.
Of course she killed Savvy! Instead of leaving her abusive husband she hit him right back! Who does that?
If I lie, I leave Julia out to dry. I should care about that. Woman solidarity and all that.
But thereโs no reason people wonโt believe her. Julia is not me. Sheโs still likable. Still a good victim.
My options are shitty, but I know what Iโm going to do. No one expects the truth from me anyway.
โHe did have a temper when he drank, but my experience with Matt was not exactly the same as Juliaโs.โ I say the words like I practiced them. I already
said them to Ben, in a long interview this afternoon. Both he and Paige looked at me like they thought I was full of shit.
My mom, however, looks relieved. Sheโs standing in the kitchen, leaning on one crutch. Dad is behind her, a spatula in his hand like heโs going to threaten someone with it. Grandma sits at the table. Theyโve all been waiting for me to get home. I spent the entire day avoiding them.
โWhat does that mean,ย not exactly the same?โ Grandma squints.
โLike I said. He had a temper. He threw some glasses at the wall, stomped around a lot.โ
โBut he didnโt hit you?โ Dad asks nervously.
โOf course he didnโt hit her!โ Mom exclaims. โShe lived five miles down the road then. We would have known.โ
I lift an eyebrow. Iโd planned to be a little more straightforward in my denial, but Mom is making this difficult. My sense of self-preservation is really battling it out with my desire to prove my mother wrong.
โI donโt think that anyone knows whatโs going on inside someone elseโs marriage,โ I say. โNo matter how close they live.โ
Everyone freezes.
Dad still has the spatula poised in front of him like a weapon. He has a familiar look in his eyes, one I used to see often as a kid. Like heโs afraid Iโm about to say something that heโll have to deal with, and itโs the absolutely last thing in the world that he wants to do right now.
โBut I will not be making any tearful podcast confessions, if thatโs what youโre worried about,โ I quickly add.
Mom lets out a breath, like that was exactly what she was worried about. Dad sets the spatula on the counter, blessedly free from having to do battle for me today.
โWeโre worried aboutย you!โ Grandma says.
โWell, Iโm happily single now, so it doesnโt really matter anyway.โ I smile. โWhatโs for dinner?โ
โGnocchi!โ Mom says, overly chipper, and points to Dad, who is now struggling to open the package.
Grandma throws her hands up in the air. โWhat the fuck? Are we going to talk about the fact that it was probablyย Mattย who killed Savvy?โ
Dad spills the gnocchi all over the floor.





