Thinknews
Feb 16, 2026

He hit her and came downstairs asking for breakfast as if nothing had happened

He hit her and came downstairs asking for breakfast as if nothing had happened. He even called his mother to humiliate her—but he never imagined the lesson he was about to receive.

Elena lit the stove and placed a clay pot over the flame. She took eggs, chili peppers, tomatoes, and tortillas from the fridge, then opened the kitchen curtains to let in the pale light of that cool morning in Guadalajara. She wasn’t hungry. A bruise was forming under her right cheek, a sleepless night weighed on her shoulders, and a new certainty—still trembling but absolutely firm—had taken hold: she would no longer protect Matthew from the harm he chose to cause.

As she prepared the sauce for the chilaquiles, Elena was surprised at how steady her breathing felt. It wasn’t a happy calm. It was the cold indifference of someone who had stopped negotiating with lies. For five years, she had managed her husband’s moods, measured her tone carefully, avoided dangerous words, lowered her gaze at just the right moment to extinguish his sparks of anger. She had lived so long waiting for his moods to change that she had almost forgotten how to act on her own will. And that morning, with the sound of simmering sauce and the smell of coffee filling the house, she felt more like herself than she had in a long time.

At 6:42, heavy footsteps were heard on the stairs.

Matthew.

He always dragged his feet slightly, with that air of superiority, as if the whole world owed him five more minutes of sleep. He wore a white T-shirt and black sweatpants. When he appeared in the kitchen doorway, he squinted in the sunlight and looked at her with a mix of surprise and expectation.

“Why are you up so early?” he asked, scratching his neck.

Elena barely turned her head, continuing to stir with a wooden spoon.

“Making breakfast.”

Matthew’s eyes moved to the kitchen counter, which had been carefully set for three: three ceramic plates, placemats, three clay mugs, neatly folded cloth napkins, and three glasses of freshly squeezed orange juice.

He noticed. Of course he did.

“Are you expecting someone?” his tone shifted instantly, becoming defensive.

Elena turned off the stove and served the food onto one of the plates.

“Yes.”

A second of heavy, tense silence passed. Matthew leaned against the doorframe with that fake relaxed posture he used when trying to assess whether to charm, manipulate, or become openly aggressive.

“Who comes this early?”

Elena lifted the coffee pot and poured into all three cups with steady precision.

“My brother. Carlos.”

Matthew’s face barely changed—but she saw it. The muscles around his mouth tightened. His jaw stiffened. The theatrical calm slipped away from him as if it had never been his.

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