
Heard Through the Walls
Chapter 2
I couldn't move. My legs felt like they'd been filled with concrete, rooting me to the kitchen floor as Derek's voice continued to pour from the Alexa speaker like poison.
"She's a great mom, but God, she's so boring now. She used to have fire, you know?"
The woman—whoever she was—laughed softly. "What happened to it?"
"Marriage. Kids. She just... settled into this perfect little routine. Sometimes I look at her and wonder where the woman I married went."
My hand flew to my mouth, bile rising in my throat. I stumbled to the sink, gripping the granite countertop so hard my knuckles went white. The white roses Derek had brought me last night seemed to mock me from their crystal vase, their pristine petals already beginning to brown at the edges.
"I love my kids," Derek's voice continued, "but sometimes I feel like they're the only reason I'm still in that house."
"What do you mean?"
A long pause. The sound of sheets rustling. "I mean, what if I wasn't? What if I just... left?"
"You'd really do that?"
"Once the company goes public, I'll figure out a way. I promise."
The recording timestamp showed forty-seven minutes. Forty-seven minutes of my husband's betrayal, playing out in explicit detail in the kitchen where I'd made him breakfast just this morning. I forced myself to listen to every second, even as nausea rolled through me in waves.
There were sounds I recognized—the creak of hotel room furniture, the particular way Derek groaned when he was close. Sounds that had once been mine, now shared with someone whose voice was younger, breathier, more alive than mine had been in years.
"Tell me again," the woman whispered.
"Tell you what?"
"That you're going to leave her."
Another pause. Then: "I'm going to leave her."
I doubled over the sink, retching, but nothing came up. My body was rejecting this reality as violently as my mind was.
When the recording finally ended, the kitchen fell into a silence so complete I could hear my own heartbeat thundering in my ears. I stood there for several minutes, staring at the Alexa device like it was a bomb that had just detonated my life.
With shaking fingers, I pulled out my phone and opened the Alexa app. The recording was there in the history—uploaded two weeks ago from Derek's phone. Two weeks ago, when I'd taken Emma and Jake to my mother's house for the weekend. When Derek had said he needed to stay home to "handle work stuff."
I downloaded the file, my hands trembling so badly I almost dropped the phone twice. I saved it to my private cloud account, the one Derek didn't know about. Then I went back and deleted the recording from our shared Alexa history, erasing any evidence that I'd heard it.
The front door slammed, and I heard Emma's voice calling out. "Mom! I'm home!"
I splashed cold water on my face at the kitchen sink, pinched my cheeks to bring back some color, and smoothed my hair. In the reflection of the window above the sink, I looked exactly the same as I had an hour ago. Perfect wife. Perfect mother. Perfect fool.
"Hi, sweetheart," I said as Emma bounded into the kitchen, her backpack sliding off her shoulder. "How was school?"
"Good! Mrs. Patterson said my essay about marine biology was the best in the class." She beamed at me, her face so open and trusting it made my chest ache.
"That's wonderful, honey. I'm so proud of you."
Jake arrived ten minutes later, violin case in hand, complaining about his music teacher's impossible expectations. I listened to both of them chatter about their days while I prepared their afternoon snacks, slicing apples and arranging crackers on their favorite plates. My hands moved automatically through the familiar motions, but my mind was somewhere else entirely.
My phone buzzed. A text from Derek: "Another late night tonight. Investors from Singapore want to do calls at midnight their time. Don't wait up. Love you."
I stared at the message for a long moment. Love you. Did he type those words while thinking about her? While planning his escape from our "boring" life?
I typed back: "No problem. We'll miss you at dinner, but we understand. Love you too."
The lie came so easily it frightened me.
After I got the kids settled with homework, I retreated to my home office—the small room off the kitchen that I'd optimistically called my "creative space" when we'd moved in eight years ago. It had become a glorified storage room for school forms and household receipts.
I closed the door and opened my laptop. My fingers hovered over the keyboard for a moment before I typed: "Austin divorce attorney."
The search results filled my screen. Dozens of law firms, all promising to protect my interests, to fight for my rights, to help me start over. I scrolled through them slowly, reading reviews and credentials with the same careful attention I'd once given to choosing the right preschool for Emma and Jake.
One firm caught my attention: Morrison & Associates. "Specializing in high-asset divorce cases. Protecting your future when your marriage ends." The lead attorney, Sarah Morrison, had graduated from UT Law, same as me. Her bio mentioned she'd left corporate law to focus on helping women navigate complex divorces.
I bookmarked the page.
Then I opened a new browser window and logged into our joint bank accounts, investment portfolios, and credit card statements. I'd always handled our finances—Derek was too busy building his empire to worry about mundane things like mortgage payments and college savings accounts.
Now I was grateful for that responsibility. I could see everything: his spending patterns, the hotel charges I'd never questioned, the restaurant bills for meals I hadn't shared. Two weeks ago, the same day as that recording, there was a charge for $347 at the Four Seasons downtown.
I screenshot everything, organizing the evidence with the same methodical precision I'd once used for marketing campaigns. If Derek wanted to play games, I'd show him exactly who he was dealing with.
My phone buzzed again. This time it was a text from my mother: "Haven't heard from you in a few days. Everything okay?"
I started to type my usual response—everything's fine, just busy with the kids—then stopped. Instead, I wrote: "Can I call you later tonight? After the kids are in bed?"
"Of course, sweetheart. I'll be up."
As I closed the laptop, I caught my reflection in the dark window. For the first time in years, I saw something other than the perfect suburban wife staring back at me.
I saw fire.
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