Yours Truly 2017 / Cascadia College / Bothell, WA 2017 YT Online Book | Page 63

The Crow Rhea Abbott Thomas Brighton had been sulking in this jail cell for fourteen-and-a-half years and never once had a visitor, so he was amazed and confused equally when he looked up one day and saw Yvette standing on the other side of the bars. Adding to his surprise was the fact that though she was the one person he wanted most to see, she was also the last person on earth who should have wanted to come here. At best, he had been an absent father, and at worst: a sadistic husband who had inflicted emotional tortures upon his wife that did damage more permanent than what he’d ever done with his fists. When last he saw Yvette, his hands had been around her neck and he’d been crushing her, squeezing her to within an inch of her life. Since then, he’d had almost fifteen years in this place to replay that scene — his last act as a free man — and though he hated the therapy sessions he was required by law to attend, they had brought him to an important realization: in her last moments, his wife had been leaning into his grasp, had been trying to help him choke her, and he had spent many a tearful and sleepless night contemplating just what he had done to make her choose death over another day of living. What made the therapists’ jobs more difficult was that Thomas had loved his wife — loved her dearly. They’d been all but twitterpated over each other for the first five years of their marriage. Then, just before their daughter Sarah was born, Yvette had started acting strange: staying out late with her girlfriends, taking phone calls in the other room, running errands that had never needed running before. Hell, it wasn’t just strange, it was downright suspicious and Thomas began to wonder if there wasn’t something he ought to be suspicious about. They’d started arguing then, loud enough to wake the neighbors sometimes. When Sarah was born, the arguments went underground but they were still raging on, oh yes they were, brooding and festering like a roiling pain in your belly you try to ignore and wait out until it cripples you. Finally you find yourself right where you knew you’d end up and the poison at last comes spewing out in violent rushes and no matter how it hurts, there’s just no stopping it. The poison, in this case, was a “fuck you” from her and a backhand from him. The first time he hit his wife — the very second it happened — he knew it changed everything. It changed him and it changed her and he set some very big things in motion that could never be undone. After that first time, letting his hand fly felt like a reflex; it was just too easy to shut her evermore acid mouth with a slap — much easier than the battle strategies and apologies and accusations. God, how he hated that game, how really sick he was of the verbal facade. But he’d found the shortcut, hadn’t he? And even though the preluding thought and the tightening muscles and the sharp sound and the stinging palm all felt like some awful dream, he did it anyway because it was cleansing — truncating the dance of words to the quick and snapping reality back into harsh focus. 61