“And you blamed me.” He set the screwdriver down and finally met her eyes. “I blamed myself a lot more.”
Instead of an apology that looped into an old performance, he added, “I’ve been thinking about how I deflect when I’m scared. I want to stop.” The sentence was small, sober; it landed between them like something fragile they both could hold. “And you blamed me
Christina reached across the table and smoothed a fleck of dust from his sleeve. “Then let’s make it harder to run,” she said. “Counseling. One night a week. And no walking out during arguments.” “And you blamed me