
I Designed His Dream House, He Built a Secret Family
I was in a high-end mall, browsing a toy store for my friend's daughter's birthday, when my world tilted on its axis. Through the polished glass storefront, I saw him. My husband, Julian. He was in the café opposite, seated beside the sprawling indoor children's play area. He wasn't alone.
A woman, Seraphina Vance—a social media influencer whose perfectly curated life I’d occasionally scrolled past—was laughing, her head tilted just so. And between them, a little boy of about four, gleefully mashing a piece of cake into his own dark hair. Julian’s hair.
They looked like a family. A perfect, happy family.
An icy dread washed over me. I remembered Julian refusing to have a baby with me, citing the immense pressure of his work. All his business trips, the late nights… were they spent with them? I recalled a night six months ago when Noah had supposedly been sick. Julian had stayed out all night, his voice strained over the phone, telling me a "critical client had a medical emergency." The lie was so easy for him.
I must have stared too long. The little boy, Noah, noticed me. He picked up a toy water pistol from their table, aimed it directly at me through the café’s open front, and squeezed the trigger. A jet of cold water hit my silk skirt, leaving a dark, spreading stain.
Seraphina Vance turned, her eyes meeting mine. There was no surprise, only a flicker of amusement. She offered a saccharine smile. "Oh, dear. He's just playing with you," she cooed, her voice dripping with condescension.
My heart hammered against my ribs. I turned and walked away, my legs unsteady. I needed to leave, to breathe, to think. In the underground parking garage, I fumbled for my keys, my hands shaking. As I passed Julian’s sleek sedan, something on the passenger seat caught my eye. A heavy, cream-colored card with embossed lettering.
"You are joyfully invited to the Christening of Noah Thorne."
It was real. More real than a fleeting email. A physical invitation to a life I never knew existed. How could I have been so blind?
My phone felt heavy in my hand. I didn’t call my best friend. I didn’t call a lawyer. I called the director of the Zurich Architectural Fellowship, a prestigious program I had deferred for him, for us.
"I'd like to accept the fellowship," I said, my voice eerily calm. "I can leave immediately."
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Chapter 7
Following a hunch from the kindergarten assignment, a clue about a "special party," I found myself at a rented party house in an amusement park. The windows were decorated with balloons and a large banner that read "Happy Birthday, Noah!"
Through the glass, I saw Julian and Seraphina surrounded by staff, celebrating their son. My stomach churned as I watched the main event: a "whack-a-mole" style game, but instead of moles, the targets that popped up were pictures of my face, printed and pasted onto tin cans. Noah shrieked with laughter as Julian helped him swing a mallet, smashing my likeness over and over.
Seraphina spotted me through the window. Her eyes glittered with victory. She pulled Julian into a deep kiss, then prompted Noah to hold up a large, hand-drawn sign that read, "DADDY LOVES MOMMY." The scene was a grotesque parody of family life, staged entirely for my benefit.
Later, she cornered me in the park's public restroom. She didn't say a word, just pulled the folded divorce agreement from her designer handbag and handed it to me. His signature was scrawled at the bottom, hasty but unmistakable.
"Noah said your life story would make a great paper airplane," she said with a dismissive shrug. "He thinks it would fly the farthest."
I took the papers. A sense of profound relief washed over me. I was finally, truly free.