Warning: Description of domestic abuse.
It was the same song and dance.
Usually.
Easing from the tattered mattress with a quiet whimper, she pressed her bruised hand to her ribcage and winced when she felt the bones crack beneath her touch. She knew she wouldn’t be able to endure much more of his violent streak, yet she found herself curling her fingers around the chipped brass knob, her arm carefully pulling back to allow the door to creak open. It wasn’t hard to follow the trail of shattered glass and scattered papers that littered the hall, and as she stepped outside of the safety of her room, she knew that something about tonight was different. He usually met her at the door, his lips twisted with a wry smirk. Yet, tonight, the hall was empty, and instead, she was left to follow the scattered trail of pieces of her life.
With her heart in her throat, she stepped around bits of glass and made her way towards the living room, each step feeling as though it was leading her closer to the guillotine. In a way, it was. Every second she spent in his presence was another second she prayed for a quick demise, just to escape the rough treatment of his wrath. Reaching out a trembling hand, she warily curled her fingers around the corner of the wall and cleared her throat, her lips parting on a quiet greeting that she never had the chance to voice. It had been the only warning he needed to alert him of her presence, and before she had a chance to brace herself, she found herself sprawled on the floor as a fresh coat of blood stained her already cracked lips.
“Did you honestly think I wouldn’t find out about this? You’re a goddamned disgrace.”
Placing her palms on the ground, she attempted to pull herself to her knees, but another blow sent her flying, her back slamming into the wall with a sickening crunch. “How long did you think you could play me for a fool, Raegan? How many were there? How many?!” His voice rose with each word, until the walls began to tremble with the impact of his rage. Unable to utter a word, she found herself once again on her feet, his thick hands tangled in her hair. Her scalp screamed in agony as he jerked her head back, his face inches from hers, green eyes blazing with fury. She could tell by the fire dancing in the emerald glare that it wouldn’t matter what she had to say – she wasn’t going to escape his fury with her life intact.
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Hours passed before she was finally able to open her swollen eyes, her arms trembling with the exertion that it took to lift her battered body from the floor. Darkness dimmed the edge of her vision, and with each breath she took, pain splintered through her entire form. There wasn’t a single inch of her slender, once flawless frame that had been left untouched. Curling her fingers against the blood-soaked hardwood, she eased herself hesitantly to her feet. The second she was upright, agony had her doubling over again as her vision clouded, and she caught herself with a hand against the broken entertainment center. It was when her fingers touched the splintered wood and felt the broken pieces of the television embed in her palm that she finally allowed herself a dizzying and nauseating examination of the aftermath.
It looked as if a goddamned war had taken place.
The furniture was overturned, and glass blanketed the floor, causing the expensive hardwood to shimmer in the pale moonlight that trickled in through the torn curtains. What parts had been left unscathed from his volatile rage, had become stained crimson from her blood as she had feebly attempted to escape his heavy fists. How she managed to survive, let alone bring herself to her feet, astounded her. With careful consideration of her state, she began to stumble towards the front door and out into the dimly lit street, where she found herself met with an eerie silence.
It wasn’t unusual for the neighbors to disappear the moment they saw her headlights pull into the drive, nor was it abnormal for each yard to be plunged into darkness, giving the surrounding homes the appearance of being uninhabited for the night. Within the first week of unpacking her suitcase and enduring their first fight, she had come to the realization that no one cared for her safety. They would rather bury their heads in the sand and pretend that everything was fine than to lose the donations that allowed them to live their exuberant lifestyles. Even in her current state, she found herself unable to put her trust in those that were so uncaring of her predicament and instead, she began to stagger her way further into the city.
Unsteady feet carried her through silence, through darkness, and what felt like the waiting arms of Death itself as the world around her, what little bit of it that she could make out as her vision swam before her, seemed to plunge into an icy shell of the city street she had known so intimately for so long. A sharp, wet cough sent a bright splash of crimson across the sidewalk, the agony of that quick movement through her torso sent a wracking pain through her entire body, sending her crashing to her knees, leaving her trembling as she held her weight with her arms, before she collapsed, curled about the puddle of blood that had poured from her gaping lips. Shivering and alone, she watched the darkness and waited for Death as it closed around her.