Except There Were Two

Drama Fiction Suspense

This story contains themes or mentions of physical violence, gore, or abuse.

Written in response to: "Write a story that goes against your reader’s expectations." as part of Tension, Twists, and Turns with WOW!.

I am not the one holding the knife.

That is the first thing you need to understand.

My hand is wrapped around the handle. My knuckles are white. There is blood on my sleeve, bright and theatrical, as though staged for a crime show. The kitchen smells metallic and sour. Something is dripping. The sound is steady. Patient.

But I am not the one holding the knife.

“Put it down.”

The voice comes from behind me. Male. Careful. Trained to sound calm.

He thinks he is speaking to me.

He isn’t.

You want a monster.

You want fractured mirrors and childhood trauma, a girl who snapped and doesn’t remember. You want to sort me into a folder labeled unstable, close it, and sleep better tonight.

Let’s try this again.

My name is Mara.

I am sitting at the kitchen table.

There is no knife in my hand.

The table used to be white. Cheap laminate, scratched near the edge where someone once pressed down too hard with a fork. I keep tracing that groove with my thumb. The indentation feels like proof that something sharp once lived here.

Across from me sits Dr. Levin.

He says, “You told the police you weren’t there.”

“I wasn’t.”

He nods as though this is expected.

On the counter behind him is a drying rack. One plate. One glass. One fork. The domestic stillness of a single person.

Except there were two of us.

His name is Daniel.

He says I am weak.

He says I step aside when things get hard. That I float. That I smile politely when I should scream. That I apologize for breathing too loudly.

He says someone has to take care of it.

He says someone has to do what I won’t.

You want to know when Daniel first appeared.

You expect a childhood basement. A father with a belt. A mother who looked away.

You expect a scene you can point to and say: There. That’s where she broke.

I could give you one.

I could invent a locked bathroom door and small fists pounding on it. I could give you bruises shaped like fingerprints. I could give you a reason.

But the truth is less cinematic.

Daniel showed up the night I didn’t leave.

“You’re overreacting.”

That’s what Thomas said.

The first time he grabbed my wrist too hard, I laughed.

The second time he called me dramatic.

The third time he pushed me against the fridge, he cried afterward. He pressed his forehead to mine and said, “You know I would never hurt you.”

And I believed him.

Not because I am stupid.

Because it is easier to believe in a softer version of the man in your kitchen.

Daniel says that is my flaw.

“Tell me about Thomas,” Dr. Levin says.

“He’s dead.”

He doesn’t flinch. “Tell me anyway.”

The air between us thickens.

You want me to tremble now. To whisper that I don’t remember. To say I lost time.

I won’t.

I remember everything.

I remember the plate shattering.

I remember the way he said my name, drawn out and irritated.

“Mara.”

As if I were a stain he could wipe away.

I remember my back hitting the counter.

I remember thinking: This is it. This is the moment people talk about later. This is the moment that changes you.

And I remember the quiet.

The way the room went silent inside my head.

That’s when Daniel stepped forward.

I am Daniel.

She always makes it sound poetic.

It wasn’t.

It was practical.

He had her pinned.

His breath smelled like beer and toothpaste.

She was calculating whether it would be worse tomorrow if she fought back tonight.

I don’t calculate.

I act.

The knife was already on the counter.

He didn’t see it.

I did.

You want me to say I blacked out.

You want her to be innocent.

You want a split so clean you can separate good from bad.

There isn’t one.

When I wrapped my fingers around the handle, she was watching.

When I pushed, she felt it.

When he made that small, confused sound — not anger, not yet — she heard it too.

Don’t look away now.

You wanted raw.

“Mara,” Dr. Levin says gently, “when you say ‘he,’ who do you mean?”

I meet his eyes.

“Daniel.”

“And where is Daniel now?”

I look down at my hands.

They are steady.

“He’s here.”

“Can I speak to him?”

A small smile curls at the edge of my mouth.

You expect a dramatic shift. A change in posture. A deepening of voice.

Something theatrical.

I disappoint you.

“He doesn’t like you,” I say.

I do not like him.

He smells like sympathy.

He looks at her as though she is fragile glass.

She is not glass.

She is bone and nerve and teeth.

He says, “Daniel, do you believe you protected Mara?”

“Yes.”

“From what?”

“From becoming nothing.”

He writes that down.

He thinks this is about safety.

It isn’t.

It’s about erasure.

You think this is a story about violence.

It isn’t.

It’s about disappearing.

For years, Mara perfected the art of it.

Soft voice. Smaller laugh. Shoulders angled inward.

She could shrink inside a room without anyone noticing.

Thomas liked that.

He liked that she folded.

I do not fold.

The night he died, the neighbors said they heard shouting.

They didn’t mention the weeks before.

They didn’t mention the way his hand tightened around her throat.

They didn’t mention the sound of the fridge door slamming so hard magnets fell off.

Violence is only interesting when it ends in blood.

The rest is background noise.

“Mara,” Dr. Levin says, “you understand that regardless of how you frame it, you held the knife.”

I tilt my head.

“You’re sure?”

He pauses.

“Physically, yes.”

Physically.

Such a careful word.

“Then tell me,” I say softly, “why do I feel relief?”

He doesn’t answer.

You expect guilt to flood me here. Tears. Regret.

There is grief.

There is shock.

There is the image of Thomas on the floor, staring at the ceiling as though confused by gravity.

But beneath it all, there is something else.

Space.

For the first time in years, the air in the kitchen felt wide.

You want to know if I regret it.

You want redemption or damnation.

Choose one.

It will make you more comfortable.

I can’t give you that.

I can tell you that when the police arrived, I told them I wasn’t there.

And in a way, I wasn’t.

I can tell you that when they asked if I feared for my life, I hesitated.

Not because I didn’t.

Because fear had become ordinary. The steady hum of a refrigerator. You stop noticing it until it stops.

I can tell you that when they asked why I didn’t leave sooner, I had no answer that would satisfy them.

Because “I thought I could handle it” doesn’t sound like a reason.

Because “I didn’t want to be alone” sounds pathetic.

Because “I loved him” — that word you keep waiting for — feels too clean for what it was.

“Mara,” Dr. Levin says, “do you think Daniel will hurt someone else?”

You lean forward now.

You think this is the twist.

You think I’m dangerous.

I lean back.

“I don’t know.”

That’s the truth.

Daniel doesn’t like being cornered.

Daniel doesn’t like when someone tells us who we are.

Daniel does not wake up looking for blood.

He wakes up looking for exits.

I am not a monster.

I am not a hero.

Neither is she.

We are a negotiation.

A truce drawn in the aftermath of a kitchen floor.

You expected shattered glass and insanity.

You expected me to be broken in a way you could pity.

What if this is integration?

What if Daniel isn’t the disease?

What if he is the scar tissue?

The first night alone in the apartment after everything, I stood in the kitchen.

I stared at the counter.

The knife block was still there.

One slot empty.

The air was quiet.

No footsteps behind me.

No breath at my ear.

I waited for panic.

It didn’t come.

Instead, I heard Daniel.

Soft. Almost amused.

“You can stand up straight now.”

I did.

My shoulders felt unfamiliar in that position.

Wider.

Dr. Levin will keep asking questions.

The court will use words such as dissociation and episode.

Experts will debate whether Daniel is a fracture or a coping mechanism.

You will sit there and decide whether to fear me.

Here is the part that goes against what you expected:

I am getting better.

Not quieter.

Not smaller.

Better.

Daniel speaks less now.

Not because he’s gone.

Because I am learning to say the things he used to say for me.

“No.”

“Stop.”

“Leave.”

They taste strange in my mouth.

Sharp.

Necessary.

You thought this would end in chaos.

It doesn’t.

It ends in a kitchen.

Sunlight on a scratched table.

One plate. One glass. One fork.

I trace the old groove in the laminate.

Proof that pressure leaves marks.

Proof that surfaces survive.

I am still here.

And so is he.

But now, when I hold a knife, it is to cut vegetables.

And my hand does not shake.

Posted Feb 21, 2026
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55 likes 62 comments

Chris Dreyfus
00:26 Feb 23, 2026

I have read your bio, but I haven't much in the way of suggestions. There's a lot to like in this story. For a start, a good rendition of what coercive control looks like. I'm interested in a character's psychology, so I have a lot of sympathy for your approach here. Among the lines that stuck out for me: "Daniel does not wake up looking for blood. He wakes up looking for exits," and "What if this is integration? What if Daniel isn’t the disease? What if he is the scar tissue?" There are many others. Thank you for the opportunity to read your story.

Reply

Marjolein Greebe
00:47 Feb 23, 2026

Thank you for such a thoughtful response. I’m especially glad the psychological dimension resonated with you — that was the core I was trying to explore. Those lines you highlighted mean a great deal to me, as they sit at the heart of the story’s tension. I truly appreciate you taking the time to engage with it so carefully.

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Jo Freitag
21:19 Feb 22, 2026

I really appreciate the way you challenge the reader to come to their conclusion about cause and effect and mental state and then firmly assert that this is your story and does not fit neatly into their suppositions.

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Marjolein Greebe
00:53 Feb 23, 2026

Thank you — that tension between interpretation and ownership was very intentional. I’m glad you felt the resistance to easy conclusions. I really appreciate you engaging with it so thoughtfully.

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Rebecca Lewis
20:58 Feb 22, 2026

It works. The voice holds. That’s the first thing. It doesn’t slip into melodrama. It doesn’t beg to be liked. It doesn’t apologize for being intense. It knows what it’s doing. The second-person address - the “You want…” - is deliberate. Accusatory without being hysterical. It forces the reader to admit their expectations before the story dismantles them. That control matters. Daniel works because he isn’t theatrical. He isn’t a demon. He isn’t a twist. He isn’t a spectacle. He’s practical. That’s what makes him unsettling. He doesn’t roar. He assesses. He calculates faster than Mara does. He steps in when she hesitates. There’s no dramatic voice drop, no cinematic possession. Just a shift in posture. A shift in willingness. That restraint keeps it believable. It’s clean. This isn’t about insanity. It isn’t about shock. It isn’t about gore. It’s about erasure. It’s about what happens when someone shrinks long enough that another part of them refuses to. The violence is handled well. You don’t indulge it. You don’t glamorize it. The most disturbing moment isn’t the stabbing - it’s the confused sound he makes. That’s human. That’s uncomfortable. That’s right. The ending works because it refuses extremes. No redemption arc. No descent into madness. No courtroom fireworks. Just integration. Just someone standing up straight for the first time. That line - “What if Daniel isn’t the disease? What if he is the scar tissue?” - is the spine of the piece. Everything bends toward it. As it stands? It’s controlled. It’s coherent. It knows what it is. It doesn’t ask for pity. It doesn’t ask to be forgiven. It just stands there and says- This happened. Sit with it. That’s confidence. And it reads like you meant every word.

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Marjolein Greebe
11:28 Feb 23, 2026

Thank you Rebecca. I value the precision of your reading — especially your attention to restraint and control. That balance was intentional, so it means a great deal that you saw it. I appreciate the care and depth you brought to this.

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Taya Rose
20:20 Feb 22, 2026

Interesting. When she can no longer handle things another personality takes over. Trauma is hard and it's amazing what we do psychologically cope.

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Marjolein Greebe
11:25 Feb 23, 2026

Yes — the mind can be astonishing in the ways it protects itself.

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Shardsof Orbs
09:39 Feb 22, 2026

You had me hooked from the start! I enjoyed hearing Daniel, too. You have a certain rhythm to this. Starting with I and the expectation on Mara, shifting to You and how Mara, with Daniel, pushed through this. It starts and ends in the kitchen. Daniel takes over until she can hold and fully *control* the knife herself.
I love how you crafted this! The more I analyze, the more patterns I see here. Your Mara came back full circle but transformed, or rather, released the weight that was on her, reclaiming her self. "One plate. One glass. One fork", one knife at a time. Awesome job!

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Marjolein Greebe
09:41 Feb 22, 2026

Thank you — I love that you noticed the rhythm and the circular structure. The kitchen framing was very intentional, so it means a lot that it resonated. And yes… one knife at a time. I appreciate your thoughtful reading more than you know.

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Helen A Howard
09:36 Feb 22, 2026

A real gut-puncher. Lines that are somehow quietly visceral making them land with extra force.
I like the way you talk about the “room going silent inside my head.”
Violence is only interesting when it ends in blood. The rest is background noise. The way fear becomes ordinary. The way the Daniel lives on, becomes forever entangled in the psyche, almost an indistinguishable force. The disconnect from trauma, the standing outside the experience as a coping mechanism. Almost as if the whole thing has been decided long before it gets to court.
Excellent.

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Marjolein Greebe
11:21 Feb 23, 2026

Thank you Helen — that means a great deal. I’m especially glad the quieter lines carried the weight for you. The ordinariness of fear, and the way coping can blur into identity, were central to the story. I appreciate how closely you read it.

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Pascale Marie
06:37 Feb 22, 2026

I think this is your best one yet. An excellent depiction of Dissociative Identity Disorder without over explaining. It’s all in the nuances. And you managed to swap between the POVs without making it confusing. Well done!

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Marjolein Greebe
09:38 Feb 22, 2026

Thank you — that means a lot. I was very aware of not wanting to overexplain or sensationalize it. I’m glad the nuance carried and that the POV shifts felt clear rather than chaotic. I really appreciate you taking the time to read it so attentively.

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Hazel Swiger
02:09 Feb 22, 2026

Marjolein- you had me absolutely hooked from the first sentence. The way you sorta wrapped it around again, at the end, with the bit about only holding the knife to cut vegetables, and having your hand not shake. That honestly was executed flawlessly. Beautiful. Another detail I enjoyed was the back-and-forth, which went perfectly with the format you chose for this story (which I thought was intriguing). Even though sometimes it did get a little bit confusing (which is absolutely okay, I'm neurodivergent too, even if that wasn't the case- whatever, I'm rambling, sorry), it was a really nice way to bring me this way and that way with your storytelling. This was overall a very intriguing, thought-provoking, hooking story. You should be proud! Amazing work, Marjolein!

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Marjolein Greebe
03:05 Feb 22, 2026

It’s remarkable, Hazel. You’ve been the first to comment for weeks now, and that means more than you know. Keeping the characters clear, distinct, and consistent wasn’t always easy. I’m truly grateful to have you in my inner circle.

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Hazel Swiger
03:12 Feb 22, 2026

I'm glad that it means a lot to you when I first comment. I always strive to do that! Thank you so much. I'm grateful for you as well.

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Marjolein Greebe
03:18 Feb 22, 2026

Needless to say: I look forward to your next story.

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