Stories: My stomach tightened as I read

The argument had started over something small—dirty dishes, I think. It didn’t matter. The words we threw at each other were bigger than the reason. By the time he slammed the door and left for work, the silence he left behind felt louder than the fight itself.

I paced the kitchen, replaying everything he’d said. You don’t listen. You never see me.

That last sentence stuck.

I knew he kept a diary. He’d never hidden it exactly, just tucked it in the back of his dresser like something private but not forbidden. I’d never touched it before. But anger has a way of convincing you that curiosity is justice.

So I opened it.

At first, the pages were ordinary—work notes, grocery reminders, complaints about traffic. Then I saw my name.

Once. Twice. Dozens of times.

My stomach tightened as I read.

I wish she’d just leave.
Sometimes I think she’d be happier without me.
She deserves someone better.

The words blurred. My hands trembled. Was this what he really thought of me? Was I such a burden that he’d written it again and again?

Then I turned another page.

I hate that I hurt her when we argue.
I wish she knew how much I love her but I never say it right.
If she ever reads this, I hope she understands I don’t want her to leave—I’m scared she will.

I blinked hard, my chest tightening for a different reason now.

Page after page wasn’t hatred.

It was fear.

Not fear of me.

Fear of losing me.

Near the back was the most recent entry, written that morning:

We fought again. I said stupid things. I always do when I feel like I’m failing her. I wish I knew how to show her she’s the best thing in my life. Tonight I’ll apologize. I just hope she still wants me.

My throat burned.

All this time I thought his silence meant indifference. But here, in ink he never meant me to see, was a man terrified he wasn’t good enough for me.

The front door clicked.

I spun around, diary still in my hands. He stepped inside slowly, cautious, like he expected another storm.

“I came back early,” he said. “I didn’t want us to stay mad.”

I swallowed, heart pounding. “I read it.”

His face drained of color. “You… what?”

“I read your diary.” I stepped closer. “And I know.”

He looked like the floor had vanished beneath him. “I’m sorry. I didn’t mean—those things sound awful out of context—”

I cut him off by hugging him.

He froze.

“You idiot,” I whispered, voice shaking. “You really thought I’d leave you because you’re not perfect?”

His arms slowly wrapped around me. “You’re… not mad?”

“I was,” I admitted. “But not anymore.”

He exhaled, relief warm against my shoulder. “I love you,” he said quietly, like it was something fragile.

I smiled. “Next time,” I said, “you can tell me that instead of your diary.”

And for the first time since the fight, he laughed.

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