HE SAID HE’D NEVER SEEN YOUR SCARS. ON YOUR WEDDING NIGHT, HE ADMITTED HE KNEW YOUR FACE BEFORE YOU EVER SPOKE.

HE SAID HE’D NEVER SEEN YOUR SCARS. ON YOUR WEDDING NIGHT, HE ADMITTED HE KNEW YOUR FACE BEFORE YOU EVER SPOKE.

“You’re lying,” you say now, but your voice has shrunk. “You’re saying this to make it sound smaller. To make it sound like fate instead of betrayal.”

“No,” he says. “I’m telling you because if I don’t tell you everything tonight, I’ll lose you anyway.”

You almost tell him that he’s already lost you.

But a terrible curiosity has opened inside you, one of those trapdoors the mind steps onto even while screaming not to. It is curiosity, not forgiveness, that makes you say, “Then tell me everything.”

He draws in a long breath.

“Three years ago,” he begins, “before the surgery, before the school, before you knew my name… I heard about a fire.”

Your stomach drops.

You had spent years making the explosion into a short story because short stories are easier to survive. There had been a defective gas line in the bakery kitchen where you worked weekends while studying nursing. There had been the smell, then the spark, then the wall of heat. There had been pain so total it erased language. When people asked later, you gave them the clean version. A gas leak. An accident. I was unlucky. God spared me.

But he is not telling the clean version. You hear it in his voice.

“My cousin Chika worked at the newspaper,” he says. “She was doing a piece on hospital negligence and kitchen safety violations in low-income districts. She came to visit me one evening with notes she wanted read aloud because her eyes were exhausted. I was still blind then, but I listened while she talked. She mentioned a young woman burned in an explosion at San Judas Bakery. She said the owner had paid the inspector to ignore repeated complaints.”

You swallow hard.

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