She stared at him, waiting for the smile to fade, for him to say he was kidding. It didn’t happen. The air in the room shifted; the warmth from her shower vanished under the weight of his words. A joke about her body, her worth, delivered by the one person who was supposed to make her feel safe.
He tried to brush it off, to nudge her, to laugh it away. But something small and fragile had cracked. Later, he would wonder why she turned off the light more often, why she dressed quicker, why she flinched at her reflection. He never meant to hurt her, yet he did. And in that quiet, awkward silence after the joke, they both learned how a single sentence can stay echoing in a marriage long after the laughter dies.
