Page 230 of Beautiful Terror

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I type in the passcode, and instead of movie times, his favorite porn site greets me. Displayed prominently is a video titled"Blonde Being Gang Banged by 6 BBCs."

I tilt the phone toward him, raising an eyebrow. “Um…”

“Oops,” he says casually, glancing at the screen without a hint of embarrassment. “Yeah, I just felt like looking at that earlier.”

I don’t necessarily care if he looks at porn. I do too, sometimes, and I know that what someone watches isn’t always indicative of what they want in real life. But it feels… off.

We’ve been having so much sex that I’m honestly surprised he even feels the need to supplement. He must have been jerking off while claiming to be taking a shit.

To each their own, I guess. But the whole interaction leaves a strange taste in my mouth.

Later that day, while Timmy naps, I decide to take him up on his open-phone policy. I open Instagram to check something and notice three profiles. His personal account, his graphic design account, and a third one I’ve never seen before.

Curiosity gets the better of me. I click on it.

The messages are shocking—a feed full of exchanges with cam girls. Explicit messages.

Transactions.

I feel a sinking sensation in my stomach.

“Timmy!” I gasp, shaking him awake. “What the fuck is this?”

“What do you mean?” He groggily sits up, rubbing his eyes.

I hand him the phone.

He scrolls through the messages, his expression a mix of feigned confusion and sudden realization. “Ohhh,” he says, nodding as though everything has become clear. “I let one of the kids from the tents use my phone. He must have added this profile.”

“You… let someone from the tents use your phone?” I quirk an eyebrow, incredulous.

“Yeah. Look at the messages—it’s not even how I type. You know I don’t use commas like that.”

I glance again. He’s right—the punctuation and spelling are different. It’s plausible.

“Fine. But please stop lending your phone to random people. And stop going to the tents. No good ever comes from there.”

“Yeah, yeah, you’re right,” he mutters, already rolling over to go back to sleep.

The whole exchange leaves me unsettled. Whether it’s true or not, I can’t shake the feeling that there’s more to the story.

Later, I watch in disbelief as Timmy removes the screen from the back window and climbs out.

“What the actual fuck?” I whisper to myself.

How often has he done this while I assumed he was sulking in the back room? And why? We have a perfectly functional front door.

When he returns, I confront him. “You bent the screen. It’s brand new. The landlord is going to kill us. Why would you jump out the window? It’s not normal.”

He smirks, completely unfazed. “I’ll straighten the screen. It’s not a big deal.”

“Itisa big deal. Why didn’t you just use the door?”

“Because I felt like it. Jesus, Margaux, you’re always making a big deal out of nothing.”

Over the next few days, the fights escalate over the smallest things—washing dishes, sweeping the floor, what we’re eating for dinner. Every time, Timmy retreats to the back room and locks the door.

One day, he shows me how to unlock it.