
From Lies to Divorce
Chapter 1
The plastic bag crinkled against my palm as Cameron thrust it toward me, his smile stretched wide across his face like he'd just presented me with the crown jewels. "Happy birthday, Em. I picked these out myself."
I stared at the wrinkled grocery bag, the kind we used for trash, and felt something cold settle in my stomach. This was it? After three years of marriage, this was how my twenty-eighth birthday began?
"Go on, open it," Cameron urged, settling onto our threadbare couch with the satisfied air of a man who'd just solved world hunger. "I think you'll really like what I found."
My fingers trembled as I reached inside, pulling out a floral sundress. The fabric felt soft enough, a cheerful yellow pattern that might have been pretty once. Might have been, if it hadn't reeked of someone else's perfume – something floral and expensive that made my nose wrinkle.
"There's more," Cameron said, watching my face intently. "I got you a whole wardrobe update."
A blouse came next, silk-like material in pale blue, followed by a cardigan that still held the shape of someone else's shoulders. Each piece carried that same cloying fragrance, that same sense of being worn and discarded. My hands moved mechanically, laying each item across my lap like evidence in a trial I didn't want to be part of.
"Try the dress on," Cameron commanded, his voice taking on that edge it got when he expected immediate gratitude. "I want to see how it looks."
I retreated to our bedroom, my reflection catching in the cracked mirror as I pulled the dress over my head. The fabric settled against my skin like a lie, and when I lifted the collar to my nose, the perfume hit me full force. Underneath it, I caught something else – the faint trace of makeup, a foundation shade three shades darker than my pale complexion.
When I emerged, Cameron's eyes lit up with an approval I hadn't seen in months. "See? Much better. You look actually feminine for once."
The words hit like a slap. "Cameron, this dress... it smells like—"
"Like what? Like I actually put thought into getting you something nice?" His expression darkened, the pleased mask slipping away. "Do you have any idea how hard it is to find decent clothes on our budget? I spent hours picking these out, thinking about what would look good on you, what might help you look more... put together."
I touched the collar again, feeling the stiff residue of concealer against the fabric. "There's makeup on it."
"So what? It's from the store. People try things on." Cameron's voice grew sharp, defensive. "You're being ridiculous, Emma. Ungrateful. Do you know what most husbands would do for their wives' birthdays? Nothing. At least I'm trying to help you."
Help me. The words echoed in the small space between us, and I felt something crack inside my chest. When had I become a project that needed fixing? When had my appearance become something that required his intervention?
"I appreciate the thought," I whispered, because three years of marriage had taught me that disagreeing only made things worse. "Thank you."
But even as I said the words, I couldn't shake the image of some other woman wearing this dress, living her life in these clothes before they somehow found their way into a plastic grocery bag meant for me.
Three days later, I stood in the produce section of our local grocery store, my fingers hovering over a container of strawberries. Ten dollars. Just ten dollars for something that would make my mother smile on her birthday, something that would let me bake the cake she'd taught me to make when I was seven years old.
"Please," I said when Cameron picked up the phone. "It's for Mom's cake. Just this once."
The silence stretched so long I thought the call had dropped. Then came the explosion.
"Are you out of your goddamn mind, Emma? Ten dollars? For fruit?" His voice carried across the produce section, making other shoppers turn and stare. I pressed the phone closer to my ear, my cheeks burning. "We're barely scraping by as it is, and you want to waste money on luxury items?"
"It's not luxury, it's just—"
"It's ten dollars we don't have for something we don't need." Cameron's voice grew louder, more forceful. "Do you know what ten dollars could buy us? Real food. Necessities. But instead, you want to throw it away on berries that'll go bad in three days."
I closed my eyes, feeling the weight of every shopper's stare. "Cameron, please. It's Mom's birthday."
"Your mother will understand. She knows we're struggling. She knows we have to make sacrifices." The word 'sacrifices' came out like a weapon. "Unlike some people, she doesn't expect us to live beyond our means just to satisfy some childish craving."
For thirty minutes, he lectured me. Thirty minutes of how irresponsible I was being, how selfish, how completely out of touch with our financial reality. Thirty minutes of my voice getting smaller and smaller until it disappeared entirely.
"I'm sorry," I finally whispered into the phone. "You're right. I wasn't thinking."
"Exactly. You weren't thinking." Cameron's voice softened slightly, taking on that patronizing tone that somehow felt worse than his anger. "That's why you need me, Em. To keep us grounded. To make the hard decisions."
I put the strawberries back, my hand shaking as I placed the container exactly where I'd found it. The store-bought cake I purchased instead cost eight dollars – two dollars less than the strawberries would have been. But as I carried it to my car, it felt like I was carrying my own defeat.
Three days later, I came home from my part-time job at the local bookstore to find our tiny kitchen transformed into something from a cooking show. Fresh lobster tails sprawled across the counter next to a pile of sea scallops, their shells still glistening with ice. A bottle of wine – the kind with actual weight to it, not the five-dollar grocery store variety we usually bought – sat next to a bundle of asparagus so green it looked like it had been painted.
I stood in the doorway, my mind struggling to process what I was seeing. The price tags were gone, but I knew enough about seafood to recognize that what lay before me cost more than we usually spent on groceries in a month.
"Cameron?" My voice came out smaller than I intended.
He emerged from our bedroom, his hair still damp from a shower, wearing the good shirt he usually saved for job interviews. His face lit up when he saw me, but there was something nervous in his expression, something that didn't quite reach his eyes.
"Hey, babe. Good day at work?"
"What's all this?" I gestured weakly at the kitchen counter.
Cameron's smile widened, but I caught the slight tightening around his eyes. "Found an amazing sale at the market. Everything was marked down – practically giving it away. I couldn't pass it up."
I moved closer to the counter, my fingers hovering over the lobster tails. The meat looked fresh, expensive. Nothing like the sale items I'd seen at our usual grocery store. "How much was marked down?"
"Does it matter? We're getting a great meal out of it." Cameron moved past me, already reaching for the wine opener. "Besides, Scarlet's coming over for dinner. She's been having such a rough time at work lately, and I thought... well, everyone deserves something special once in a while."
Scarlet. Cameron's coworker, the one who'd been mentioned more and more frequently in our dinner conversations. The one who was having trouble with her landlord, who was stressed about her car payments, who seemed to need Cameron's advice on everything from her work projects to her dating life.
"She's coming here? Tonight?"
"Is that a problem?" Cameron's tone sharpened slightly. "She's going through a lot right now, Emma. The least we can do is offer her a decent meal and some company."
I watched him pull out our good plates – the wedding china we'd received three years ago and used exactly twice. He moved with an efficiency that suggested this wasn't spontaneous, that he'd been planning this afternoon while I was shelving romance novels and helping customers find the latest bestsellers.
"What should I make for myself?" I asked quietly.
Cameron paused, his hand halfway to the wine glasses. "What do you mean?"
"Well, there's enough for two people here. What should I eat while you and Scarlet have dinner?"
For a moment, something flickered across Cameron's face – surprise, maybe even embarrassment. But it passed so quickly I might have imagined it.
"There's leftover pasta in the fridge," he said, not quite meeting my eyes. "From yesterday. It's perfectly fine."
I stood there in our kitchen, surrounded by the lingering scent of that expensive wine and the sight of my husband arranging lobster tails like he was preparing for a magazine shoot, and felt something inside me finally, irrevocably shift. Ten dollars for strawberries was wasteful. But two hundred dollars for seafood to impress his coworker was just being practical.
The plastic grocery bag from my birthday crinkled somewhere in my memory, mixing with the image of those perfect lobster tails, and for the first time in three years, I truly saw the shape of my marriage.
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