He moved toward her. She stepped back. He reached for her phone; she pulled away. He caught her wrist. She told him to let go. He said she was spiraling. She said she was leaving.
At that, he tightened his grip.
She tried to get past him. He shoved the study door shut with one hand and pushed her back with the other. She hit the desk, then the built-in shelves. He grabbed for the phone again. She clutched it to her chest. He pinned both wrists long enough to wrench it loose.
That was how the bruises began.
She kicked his shin. He slapped the back of her hand. The phone hit the rug.
She dove for it.
He yanked her up by the arm and shoved her into the hallway wall.
That was the bruise on her jaw.
She scratched his neck trying to get free.
That, of course, was what the officers saw.
Then Adrian found his script.
He stepped back, touched his neck, inhaled sharply as though shocked by violence, picked up her phone, held it out of reach, and said in the careful public voice she recognized instantly, “Natalie, stop. You’re not well.”
She ran for the kitchen landline.
He was faster.
He unplugged it.
Then, still holding her phone, he called Gavin from his own.
That happened before he called the police.