
After His Daughter Targeted Me, I Wanted a Divorce
Chapter 3
I found the toys on a Tuesday morning.
I was heading downstairs for water. The penthouse was dark except for the city glow through the windows. My hand trailed along the banister, my feet moving on autopilot.
Then I saw them.
Small plastic figures. Action heroes, animals, building blocks. Arranged in a neat line across the top step. Right where my foot would land.
I stopped. Stared.
If I hadn't been looking down. If I'd been distracted, half-asleep...
I crouched carefully and picked them up, one by one. My hands were shaking. I counted twelve toys total. Placed with precision.
I carried them to the kitchen and set them on the counter. Then I went back upstairs and knocked on Roman's office door.
'What's wrong?' He didn't look up from his laptop.
'There were toys on the stairs. At the top. I almost tripped.'
Now he looked up. 'Okay. So move them.'
'Roman, they were lined up. Like someone put them there on purpose.'
He closed his laptop slowly. 'Aurora. She's eight. Kids leave toys everywhere.'
'Not like this. Not—'
'Not what?' His voice had an edge now. 'You think she's trying to hurt you? Is that what you're saying?'
'I'm saying it was dangerous. I'm pregnant. If I'd fallen—'
'Then be more careful.' He stood up, rubbing his face. 'She just lost her mother. She's adjusting. You're looking for problems that aren't there.'
'I'm not—'
'You are.' He walked past me toward the door. 'She's a traumatized kid, Aurora. Not some villain in your head.'
He left. I stood there in his office, alone, my throat tight.
That night, I started the notebook.
A small black Moleskine I'd bought for grocery lists. I sat at the kitchen table after everyone was asleep and wrote:
*October 8 — Avocado oil spilled on kitchen floor. Bottle found behind trash.*
*October 12 — Toys arranged on top stair.*
I stared at the words. They looked insane. Paranoid.
I drew a line through each entry. Not hard enough to make them unreadable. Just enough to pretend I didn't believe them.
But I kept writing.
Three days later, I couldn't find my prenatal vitamins.
I'd left them on the bathroom counter that morning. I was sure of it. I checked the medicine cabinet, the drawers, under the sink. Nothing.
I found them in Shiloh's room.
I wasn't snooping. Not really. I'd gone in to put away her laundry — Maria's day off — and saw the orange bottle peeking out from under her bed.
I pulled it out. Half the capsules were missing.
My stomach dropped.
I looked around the room. Checked the trash can beside her desk.
There. Crushed powder. White and chalky, mixed with something that smelled sharp. Chemical. Like bleach or ammonia.
I took the trash can downstairs. Set it on the dining table. Called Roman.
He came home twenty minutes later, Shiloh trailing behind him. She stopped in the doorway when she saw me.
'What's going on?' Roman asked.
'Look.' I pointed to the trash can. 'My vitamins. Crushed. Mixed with cleaning solution.'
He stared at it. Then at me. 'You went through her room?'
'I was putting away laundry. I found—'
'You went through her trash.' His voice was cold. Flat.
'Roman, she took my prenatal vitamins and destroyed them. Why would she do that?'
'Maybe she was curious. Maybe she didn't know what they were.'
'She's eight, not two. She knows.'
'Or maybe,' he said, stepping closer, 'you're so desperate to find something wrong with her that you're making things up.'
I felt like he'd slapped me.
'I'm not making this up.'
'You're snooping through a child's room. A grieving child. Looking for reasons to—what? Kick her out? Is that what you want?'
'I want to understand why—'
'She lost her mother!' His voice cracked. 'She's scared. Confused. And you're treating her like a criminal.'
Shiloh started crying. Soft, hiccupping sobs. Roman turned immediately, crouching beside her. 'Hey, hey. It's okay. You're okay.'
She buried her face in his shoulder. 'I'm sorry,' she whispered. 'I didn't mean to make Aurora mad.'
'You didn't do anything wrong, sweetheart.'
He picked her up and carried her upstairs. I heard the guest room door close.
I stood alone in the dining room, staring at the trash can.
That night, Roman didn't come to bed. I lay in the dark, hand on my belly, and felt the baby move for the first time. A tiny flutter. Like a secret.
I was afraid. Not of falling. Not of toys or spilled oil.
I was afraid of the person sleeping down the hall. And I was afraid no one would believe me.
The next morning, Maria found me in the kitchen. Shiloh had just left for school. Roman was in the shower.
Maria set down her cleaning supplies and looked at me. Really looked.
'Mrs. Evans,' she said quietly. 'I need to tell you something.'
I waited.
'I have worked in many homes. Twenty years. I have seen many children.' She paused. 'That child is not what she seems.'
My throat tightened. 'What do you mean?'
'I see how she watches you. When Mr. Evans is not looking. It is not a child's watching. It is...' She searched for the word. 'Calculating.'
'You've seen it too.'
'The oil. I found the bottle. Hidden.' Maria's voice dropped lower. 'And I see her stand in doorways. Studying you. Your routines. Where you go. When you are alone.' She shook her head. 'This is not normal.'
I felt something loosen in my chest. Relief. Validation.
'Roman doesn't believe me.'
'Men do not see what they do not want to see.' Maria touched my hand briefly. 'I will watch. I will say nothing to him. But you must be careful, Mrs. Evans. Very careful.'
She picked up her supplies and left.
I sat at the kitchen table and opened my notebook. Added a new entry.
*October 15 — Prenatal vitamins destroyed. Maria confirms she sees it too.*
This time, I didn't cross it out.
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