
Heard Through the Walls
Heard Through the Walls Chapter 1
The alarm pierced through my dreams at 5:30 AM, just like every other morning for the past eight years. I rolled over, my hand instinctively reaching for Derek's side of the bed, but found only cool sheets and the faint indent where his body had been.
He must have left early again for another investor meeting.
I padded downstairs in my silk robe, the marble floors cold against my bare feet. The kitchen gleamed under the pendant lights—all stainless steel and white quartz, featured in last month's Architectural Digest spread about "Silicon Valley Power Couples." I'd smiled for those photos, Derek's arm around my waist, both kids perfectly positioned between us like we were selling the American dream itself.
The lunch prep ritual began: organic turkey and avocado for Emma, gluten-free PB&J for Jake because he'd decided last week that regular bread was "gross." I sliced the crusts off with surgical precision, arranged everything in their monogrammed lunch boxes, and added handwritten notes on recycled paper. "Have an amazing day, sweetheart! Love, Mom."
By 7:15, both kids were buckled into the back of my Range Rover, backpacks loaded with homework I'd helped complete and permission slips I'd already signed. Emma chattered about her upcoming science fair project while Jake practiced his violin scales under his breath, both of them blissfully unaware that Mommy had once had her own dreams beyond driving them to Montessori school.
"Mrs. Peterson!" Jake's teacher, Ms. Rodriguez, waved as I walked him to his classroom. "Don't forget about the PTA meeting this afternoon. We're discussing the new playground equipment funding."
I smiled and nodded, already mentally rearranging my schedule. SoulCycle at 11, grocery shopping for tonight's dinner, then the meeting. Derek had texted that morning—another late night, something about due diligence calls with investors in Singapore. I'd learned not to ask too many questions about his work. The tech world moved fast, and my MBA from ten years ago felt ancient now.
The PTA meeting dragged on for two hours. Heated debates about organic versus conventional mulch for the playground. I found myself zoning out, thinking about the marketing campaigns I used to run, the thrill of closing deals and seeing my strategies come to life. Now my biggest decision was whether to serve salmon or chicken for dinner.
"Nora?" Janet Morrison, the PTA president, was staring at me expectantly. "What do you think about the fundraiser theme?"
"Oh, um—" I scrambled to catch up. "Whatever the committee decides is fine with me."
Janet's smile was tight. "Well, since you're volunteering to chair the decorations committee, I'll put you down for that."
I opened my mouth to protest, then closed it. What else was I going to do with my time?
After picking up the kids and getting them settled with homework and snacks, I finally had a moment to breathe. The house felt too quiet, too perfect. Every throw pillow in its place, every surface gleaming. I walked through our living room, past the family photos that told the story of our blessed life: Derek and me at our wedding in Napa, family vacations in Tuscany, the kids' first steps, birthday parties with elaborate themes I'd spent weeks planning.
My phone buzzed. A text from Derek: "Running late again tonight. Don't wait up. Love you."
I stared at the message, that familiar knot forming in my stomach. When had "running late" become his default? When had "don't wait up" replaced "can't wait to see you"?
I shook off the thought and headed to the kitchen to start dinner prep. Derek would be hungry when he got home, even if it was past midnight. I seasoned the salmon, roasted vegetables, opened a bottle of the Pinot Noir he liked. The routine was comforting, purposeful.
Around nine, I heard his key in the door. Footsteps in the hallway, then he appeared in the kitchen doorway holding a bouquet of white roses—my favorites.
"Hey, beautiful." His smile was tired but genuine as he crossed to me, pressing a kiss to my temple. "Sorry I've been so absent lately. Once this funding closes, I promise—I'm all yours."
I accepted the flowers, breathing in their sweet fragrance. "They're beautiful, Derek. Thank you."
He loosened his tie, running a hand through his dark hair. "Series B is always the hardest round. But we're so close, Nora. This could change everything for us."
"Everything's already pretty good," I said, arranging the roses in a crystal vase. "The kids are happy, we're healthy—"
"I mean really change everything. Generational wealth. Emma and Jake will never have to worry about anything."
I nodded, forcing enthusiasm into my voice. "That sounds amazing."
He pulled me close, and for a moment, it felt like the early days of our marriage. When he looked at me like I was his whole world, not just the woman who managed his domestic life.
"I'm going to grab a quick shower," he said, already heading toward the stairs. "Don't clean up—I'll help when I get out."
But I knew he wouldn't. He'd fall asleep the moment his head hit the pillow, and I'd be left loading the dishwasher alone, like always.
I watched him disappear upstairs, and that's when I noticed it—the slight bulge in his pants pocket. His phone, which he usually left on the kitchen counter during dinner. When had he started taking it everywhere?
The next afternoon, with both kids at after-school activities and Derek at another investor meeting, I found myself alone in our too-quiet house. The roses from last night sat on the counter, already beginning to droop despite the fresh water I'd given them this morning.
I needed music to fill the silence, something to drown out the thoughts that had been circling my mind like vultures.
"Alexa, play music," I called out to the smart speaker on the kitchen island.
But instead of the soft jazz I expected, a different sound filled the air. Voices. Familiar voices.
"—can't keep doing this, Derek. She's going to find out."
My blood turned to ice. That was a woman's voice. Young, breathless.
"She won't. Nora doesn't pay attention to anything beyond her perfect little world."
Derek's voice. My husband's voice.
"But what if she does? What if she finds the hotel receipts, or—"
"She won't look. She trusts me completely. Sometimes I think she's happier not knowing."
The woman laughed, a sound like breaking glass. "God, you're terrible. I love it."
There were other sounds then. Rustling. A soft moan. The unmistakable sounds of intimacy.
I stood frozen in my perfect kitchen, white roses mocking me from their crystal vase, as my entire world crumbled around me. The Alexa device had somehow accessed an old recording—probably from Derek's phone, synced to our shared account.
How long? How long had this been going on while I packed organic lunches and attended PTA meetings and played the perfect wife?
The recording continued, and I heard Derek's voice again: "I should get home. Nora's making dinner."
"When are you going to tell her?"
"Tell her what?"
"That you don't love her anymore. That this—" another sound, skin against skin "—this is what you actually want."
A long pause. Then Derek's voice, quieter now: "I don't know if I ever really loved her. Or if I just loved the idea of her. The perfect wife, perfect mother. She made everything so easy."
"Alexa, stop," I whispered, but my voice came out as barely a breath.
The recording kept playing.
And I kept listening, even as my heart shattered into a thousand perfect pieces.
Heard Through the Walls of Contents
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