He h.it me every day over the tiniest things—burnt toast, a late reply, a wrong look. “You made me do this,” he’d hiss. One night, panic swallowed me whole and I collapsed. At the hospital, he said to them, “She slipped in the shower.”

He hurt me every single day over the tiniest things—burnt toast, a slow text back, even the way I looked at him. “You made me do this,” he would sneer. One night, panic completely took over and I collapsed. At the hospital, he calmly told the staff, “She slipped in the shower.” I didn’t say a word—until the doctor glanced up and said softly, “These injuries aren’t consistent with a fall.” That was the moment my husband began to tremble.

My name is Emily Carter, and for three years I learned to measure my life by bruises. Not from dramatic moments—but from small ones. Burnt toast. Asking the same question twice. A look he didn’t like. Jason, my husband, always found an excuse.

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