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The Kitchen Floor

Author: Januar Storm
last update publish date: 2026-04-18 09:13:18

Derek crawled.

I watched him do it.

I am not going to pretend there was anything complicated in what I felt. I have read books where women in my position talk about the guilt of watching, the shame of enjoying it, the moral weight of bearing witness to cruelty even when cruelty is finally being done on their behalf. I had three years to prepare the appropriate response. I had three years to know what a good woman was supposed to feel.

I did not feel any of those things.

I watched my husband crawl across the rug he had picked out a rug I had not liked, that I had not been allowed to not like and I felt a clean, white, uncomplicated pleasure at the sight of it. His shoulders working. His palms flat on the floor. The wrist the Verdict Killer had turned held awkward against his chest because he could not put weight on it. A six-foot, one-hundred-and-ninety-pound man reduced, in the space of ninety seconds, to the exact posture he had spent three years reducing me to.

He reached the kitchen doorway.

He stopped.

"Go in."

The Verdict Killer had not raised his voice. He had not needed to. He stood in the middle of my living room with his hands at his sides, the silver mask still in profile to me, and he said the two words the way a man says the weather.

Derek went in.

I heard his palms on the kitchen tile. I heard the small, wet sound of him breathing through his nose because his mouth was doing something else. I heard the Verdict Killer’s footsteps unhurried, even, the same rhythm he had used coming in through my broken door follow my husband into the room where, an hour ago, I had been making dinner.

Then the kitchen door swung shut.

Not hard. Not a slam. Just a quiet click of the pressure latch I had been meaning to fix for a year. The Verdict Killer had closed the door on his way in the way a man closes a door when he doesn’t want to be watched doing his work.

And I sitting in my chair, in my living room, in the specific quiet of a Tuesday night in Brooklyn with my husband on the other side of a door with a killer in a silver mask I leaned back in the chair for the first time in three years.

I let my head rest against the cushion.

I closed my eyes.

I listened.

I want to tell you about the sounds. Not in detail. I am not going to do that to you, and I am not going to do that to the memory, because the memory is mine and I get to decide what I give of it and what I keep.

But I will tell you this.

What I heard from the kitchen was not what I had imagined, in the long sleepless nights of the last eight months, that a man like Derek sounded like when he was the one on the floor. I had imagined rage. I had imagined denial. I had imagined the kind of blustering, bargaining, threatening noise a man makes when he still believes he has access to the power that the world has always let him have.

None of that was what I heard.

What I heard was the sound of a man realizing slowly, in real time, the way you realize the ground is no longer under your feet — that the Verdict Killer did not care who he was.

Did not care that he had a job.

Did not care that he had money.

Did not care that his father knew a judge in Queens and his uncle had been on the New York Stock Exchange and his grandfather had, I had been told many times, built the company that paid for the house Derek had grown up in and the school Derek had gone to and the specific, American, inherited certainty that had made Derek into the man he was.

None of it mattered.

I heard Derek try all of it. I heard him list names. I heard him list numbers. I heard him offer, toward the end, things I would not have believed he was capable of offering, things about me, things about what he would let the Verdict Killer do to me if the Verdict Killer would just -

I pressed my hand over my mouth.

Not because I was horrified. I want to say that clearly. I was not horrified. I had lived with Derek for three years and I had always known, somewhere under the weather of my own fear, that he would trade me for his life if the chance came. I had known it the way you know the weight of your own body. The information was not new.

I pressed my hand over my mouth because the sound that was trying to come out of me was a laugh.

A small, astonished, entirely unfamiliar laugh.

It sat in my palm while I listened to my husband finish offering me up in a kitchen where I had made him pasta an hour ago, and I understood with the same quiet, clean clarity that had been arriving in me in waves since 9:47 that the thing Derek was offering was something Derek had never actually had. You cannot trade what does not belong to you. The Verdict Killer, on the other side of that door, would already know that.

The kitchen went quiet.

Not a silence that meant it was over. A different kind of quiet. The kind of quiet that is a pause inside a sentence, not a period.

The door clicked.

He came through it.

The silver caught the hall light and threw it back at me, bright and old, and the Verdict Killer walked back into my living room with the same unhurried ease he had left it with. He had taken his gloves off at some point. I had not seen him do it. His hands were bare now long fingers, one small white scar across the knuckle of his right thumb and clean. The skin of a man who had not hurried through whatever he had just done.

He stopped in the middle of the room.

He looked at me.

And I understood, in the two seconds before he said anything, that the first look was not going to be like the look he had given me when he walked through the door.

This one was different.

This one had arrived.

The first look the one from Chapter One, if I were telling this as a story and not as a life had been the look of a man registering a variable. A noticed thing. Something that did not fit the pattern. Efficient. Catalogued.

This look was the look of a man who had, in the last six minutes, been thinking about me.

In the kitchen. With his hands in my husband’s life. While he worked, unhurried. He had been thinking about the woman in the chair. About the wrist. About the line ‘I know the difference.’ About whatever the almond slits of his mask had shown him of me in the thirty seconds before he turned to close a door on a man who had just tried to trade me for air.

He had been thinking.

And now he was looking at me with whatever the thinking had produced.

"What’s your name."

It was not a question. I understood that immediately. It was a request the way everything he said was a request, the way ‘stay on the floor, Derek’ had been a request, the way ‘crawl’ had been a request offered in a voice that had never needed to raise itself because the world had learned, somewhere along the line, to give him what he asked for the first time.

I thought about lying.

It was a small, quick, instinctive thought. Give him a fake name. Give him Priya’s name. Give him the name of the woman I had been before Derek. Protect the one piece of myself I had kept, whole and uncracked, through three years of a marriage that had taken almost everything else.

I didn’t.

I gave it to him.

"Saoirse."

The mask went still.

Not the stillness inside the stillness something slower than that. Something that moved through the whole of him, through the shoulders, through the set of the silver chin, through the almond dark of the eye slits. Like the syllables had arrived inside him and he was deciding, carefully, what to do with them.

Then, low, through the slit beneath the long silver chin unhurried, level, and perfectly, exactly correct on the first try:

"Saoirse."

He held my eyes.

And I understood, with a clarity that arrived like cold water, that Derek on the kitchen floor was no longer the reason the Verdict Killer was still in my house.

I was.

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