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Chapter no 32 – LUCY

Listen for the Lie

Ben gets Juliaโ€™s episode up bright and early Monday morning. I listen to it while I run on the treadmill, and apparently, Iโ€™m not the only one tuning in first thing, because I have a bunch of missed calls and several texts on my phone when Iโ€™m 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 doesnโ€™t mean we canโ€™t still be friends. If you want to talk about anything.

Emmett: Do you want to get lunch soon?

Christ, Iโ€™m 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, theyโ€™re right.

On the other hand, they can all go fuck themselves.

I donโ€™t appreciate them turning me into the victim of this story. Savvyโ€™s the victim. She was buffed and polished after her death and turned into the perfect victim I could never be. Letโ€™s leave it that way.

Another text pops up on my phone.

Hey, itโ€™s Julia. Ben gave me your number.

I told him he could do that. Now I wish I hadnโ€™t.

I hope youโ€™re okay. Iโ€™m happy to talk, whenever youโ€™re 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 itโ€™s the latter. Sheโ€™s so tiny and cute, no one would ever believe that she hit him. I hope she beat his ass.

I stare at her texts. Iโ€™m never going to give her what she needs. Iโ€™m not a supportive shoulder.

I quickly type out a reply.

Thanks. Good luck with everything.

โ€œIf you stab him in the neck, itโ€™ll be quick,โ€ Savvy whispers in my ear. โ€œDo you want it to be quick?โ€

Julia is definitely better off without me.

My phone ringsโ€”Grandmaโ€”but 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 wonโ€™t matter that it was months before I snapped. It wonโ€™t matter that I suffered through countless nights of screaming insults and stinging slaps and being thrown against walls so hard itโ€™s a miracle my head isnโ€™t dented.

I did, eventually, snap, and itโ€™ll 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 thereโ€™s no reason people wonโ€™t believe her. Julia is not me. Sheโ€™s still likable. Still a good victim.

My options are shitty, but I know what Iโ€™m going to do. No one expects the truth from me anyway.

 

 

โ€œHe did have a temper when he drank, but my experience with Matt was not exactly the same as Juliaโ€™s.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. Sheโ€™s standing in the kitchen, leaning on one crutch. Dad is behind her, a spatula in his hand like heโ€™s going to threaten someone with it. Grandma sits at the table. Theyโ€™ve all been waiting for me to get home. I spent the entire day avoiding them.

โ€œWhat does that mean,ย not exactly the same?โ€ Grandma squints.

โ€œLike I said. He had a temper. He threw some glasses at the wall, stomped around a lot.โ€

โ€œBut he didnโ€™t hit you?โ€ Dad asks nervously.

โ€œOf course he didnโ€™t hit her!โ€ Mom exclaims. โ€œShe lived five miles down the road then. We would have known.โ€

I lift an eyebrow. Iโ€™d 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.

โ€œI donโ€™t think that anyone knows whatโ€™s going on inside someone elseโ€™s marriage,โ€ I say. โ€œNo 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 heโ€™s afraid Iโ€™m about to say something that heโ€™ll have to deal with, and itโ€™s the absolutely last thing in the world that he wants to do right now.

โ€œBut I will not be making any tearful podcast confessions, if thatโ€™s what youโ€™re 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.

โ€œWeโ€™re worried aboutย you!โ€ Grandma says.

โ€œWell, Iโ€™m happily single now, so it doesnโ€™t really matter anyway.โ€ I smile. โ€œWhatโ€™s for dinner?โ€

โ€œGnocchi!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. โ€œWhat 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.

Enjoy a fast, distraction-free reading experience. 'Request a Book' and other cool features are coming soon,

Enjoy a fast, distraction-free reading experience. 'Request a Book' and other cool features are coming soon.

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