
My Husband and My Son Fed My Birthday Cake to the Maid
Chapter 1
"Rosa, throw it in the trash. Mommy Vivian says cheap sugar makes you slow."
I stopped in the doorway of the formal dining room. My heels sank into the thick Persian rug. Rosa, our maid, stood completely frozen at the end of the long mahogany table. She held a lemon chiffon cake in her trembling hands.
I baked that cake at six o'clock this morning. I whisked the batter while the rest of the house slept. I iced it at lunch. I wrote the name "Lena" across the top in bright yellow buttercream. I did it because I knew my husband wouldn't remember. I did it because no one else was going to do it.
Today was my thirty-fourth birthday.
Noah, my seven-year-old son, sat in the high-backed chair at the head of the table. He swung his legs, kicking the table leg in a steady rhythm. Vivian Ashford sat directly to his right, in the seat that belonged to me.
Vivian leaned over. She placed her perfectly manicured hand lightly on my husband’s wrist. She looked up at Rosa with a soft, deeply apologetic smile.
"Noah, sweetie, be polite," Vivian said. Her voice was like warm honey. "I'm sure Lena tried her absolute best. It’s the thought that counts, even if home-baking is a bit unrefined for a Saturday night dinner. We shouldn't waste her effort."
Adrian didn't even look up from his iPad. "Just toss it, Rosa. I don't want him eating that garbage before the main course."
I stepped fully into the room. "Put it down, Rosa."
Rosa practically dropped the heavy crystal cake stand onto the edge of the table and scurried back against the wall, her head bowed.
Noah scowled at me. He crossed his arms over his chest. He was wearing the little navy blazer I bought him last week. "I don't want to eat your cake. Mommy Vivian brought macarons from Ladurée. They are from Paris. She said people with good taste eat French pastries. Your cake looks sad."
I looked at Vivian. She wore a tailored white silk blouse. The top three buttons were undone. Resting right against her collarbone was a heavy blue sapphire necklace.
I recognized the chain. I recognized the cut of the stone. Three weeks ago, I pointed out that exact vintage piece in a Sotheby’s catalog left on the living room coffee table. Adrian’s assistant had it delivered to the house yesterday afternoon. I saw the velvet box resting on the foyer console.
I thought it was my birthday present. I thought, for the first time in eleven years of marriage, my husband had actually paid attention to something I liked.
He didn't. He bought it for his college ex-girlfriend. The woman who married a French baron eleven years ago and came back to New York last month with divorce papers.
Vivian caught me staring at her chest. Her fingers drifted up to touch the sapphire.
"Oh, do you like it, Lena?" Vivian asked. Her eyes widened with innocent surprise. "Adrian gave it to me this afternoon to celebrate my return to the city. He said the blue matched my eyes." She smiled at Adrian, then looked back at me. "I told him it was far too expensive, but he insisted. You don't mind, do you? I know you're not the jealous type."
"It's just jewelry, Vivian," Adrian said. He swiped his finger across his screen, reviewing a quarterly report. "Lena doesn't wear things like that anyway. She rarely leaves the house except to go to the grocery store. It would be a waste of a good stone."
"Adrian, don't say that," Vivian scolded him gently. Every word she spoke was designed to sound like a defense, but hit like a hammer. "Lena works very hard. Running a large house like this is a big job. Someone has to do the laundry and manage the cleaners."
She turned her gaze to me, looking me up and down. I was wearing a fitted navy dress I had bought years ago.
"And she keeps herself so well," Vivian continued. "Honestly, Lena, maintaining your figure after having a child is a miracle. Most women just let themselves go completely. It's so brave of you to wear such a tight dress. I admire your confidence."
My hand twitched at my side.
Beneath the dark fabric of my dress, right across my lower abdomen, was a thick, jagged white line. A C-section scar.
I carried Noah for nine months. In my sixth month, I almost lost him. I spent three weeks flat on my back in a hospital bed, terrified to breathe too heavily. On the day he was born, I hemorrhaged. I spent two days in the ICU.
Adrian was in Dubai closing a real estate deal.
He hadn't looked at my stomach in three years. He turned the lights off when he touched me. And now, Vivian was using the very body that tore itself open for this family to mock my fashion choices.
"I'm wearing it because it is my birthday," I said. My voice was completely flat. "And this is my house."
Noah picked up a bright pink macaron from a delicate china plate. He took a bite, chewed loudly, and pointed his small finger at me.
"You chew too loud," Noah said. "Mommy Vivian eats quietly. Grandma Margaret says you only married Daddy because you were poor and needed a place to live." He licked the pink sugar off his fingers. "She says Daddy is a saint for putting up with a boring housewife. You don't even have a real job."
I stared at my biological son. The boy who shared my blood. "Noah. Do not point at me."
"Don't yell at him," Adrian snapped. He slammed his iPad face-down on the table. He finally looked at me. His eyes were full of exhaustion and disgust. "He's just repeating the truth. You've been stomping around all day with a terrible look on your face. We are trying to have a nice dinner to welcome Vivian back. She's been through a tough divorce. We don't need your sour attitude tonight."
"My sour attitude," I repeated. I didn't raise my voice. "Adrian, it is my birthday."
Adrian frowned. He looked genuinely confused for a half-second. Then his face cleared. "Is it? Fine. Happy birthday, Lena. Buy yourself a new purse on the platinum card tomorrow. Just let us eat in peace tonight."
Noah tugged at Vivian's silk sleeve. "Mommy Vivian, make her go away. She's ruining our dinner party. Grandma Margaret says she always ruins everything."
Vivian stroked Noah's hair. "Noah, sweetie, she is your mother. We must be kind to people less fortunate." She looked at Adrian, her eyes pleading. "Adrian, please don't be angry with her. I feel terrible. Lena is just tired from all the cooking. Lena, why don't you take your cake to the kitchen?"
She gestured toward the swinging door. "You can eat at the island. It's much more comfortable there anyway. You won't have to worry about table manners. I'll make sure Rosa serves you a hot plate of food."
"The kitchen," I said.
"Yes," Noah agreed brightly. "Eat with Rosa. You act like a maid anyway. You just clean things."
A profound, freezing silence settled over the center of my chest.
For eleven years, I made one meal a day for this man. When I was twenty-three, I won the Eleanor Voss Legacy Award at Parsons. It was a ticket to any design house in the world. My mentor looked me in the eye and said, 'I hope he's worth it.' I gave it up because Adrian wanted a wife who was always home. I threw away my future because he promised me a family.
I looked at Adrian. He had already picked his iPad back up. He didn't see a wife. He saw a utility.
I walked forward. Vivian shrank back slightly in her chair, perfectly playing the intimidated guest. I didn't look at her. I reached the table and picked up the heavy silver cake knife.
"Lena, put the knife down," Adrian warned, his voice suddenly sharp.
I didn't answer. I drove the knife into the lemon cake. I sliced right through the "L" and the "e" in my name. I didn't use a plate. I reached out and picked the slice up with my bare hand. The yellow icing smeared across my knuckles.
"Ew," Noah said, recoiling. "Gross. You're dirty."
I lifted the cake to my mouth and took a bite. The lemon was sharp. The sugar was overwhelming. I chewed it slowly, maintaining direct eye contact with my seven-year-old son.
"I gave birth to you," I told him. My voice didn't shake. It was terrifyingly calm. "You stayed inside my body for nine months. I bled for you. I was cut open for you."
Noah blinked. The absolute certainty in my voice scared him. He looked up at Adrian. "Daddy?"
"Lena, what the hell is wrong with you?" Adrian stood up, his chair scraping loudly against the floor. "Stop talking to him like that. You are scaring the boy."
"I'm stating a medical fact," I said. I swallowed the cake. I turned my gaze to Vivian. Her hand was clutching the sapphire necklace tight.
"Vibrancy is a choice, Vivian," I said. "You choose it. I chose not to. But choices can be unmade."
I reached out with both hands and picked up the heavy crystal cake stand. The remaining cake slid slightly against the glass.
"What are you doing?" Adrian demanded. "Put that down right now."
"I'm going to the kitchen," I said.
I turned my back on my husband, my son, and the woman sitting in my chair. I walked toward the swinging door.
Behind me, I heard Vivian whisper, "Adrian, I'm so sorry. I shouldn't have come. She clearly hates me."
"She's just being hysterical," Adrian replied, his voice full of tired contempt. "She'll get over it. She always does."
I pushed through the door into the kitchen. Rosa was standing by the stainless steel sink. She looked at me with wide, terrified eyes.
"Ma'am?" she whispered.
I walked over to the large trash can. I stepped on the metal pedal. The lid popped open.
I tilted the crystal stand. The lemon cake, the bright yellow icing, and the remaining letters of my name slid off the glass and fell into the garbage with a wet thud.
Then, I let go of the crystal stand.
It hit the bottom of the empty trash can with a loud, violent crash. It shattered into dozens of jagged pieces.
Rosa jumped, clutching her chest.
I stood there for a moment. I wiped my sticky fingers on a paper towel.
I am thirty-four years old. My son just called another woman Mommy on my birthday. My husband gave my sapphire necklace to his ex-girlfriend. They told me to eat with the help.
They think I will cry. They think I will throw a tantrum, lock myself in the guest room, and wake up tomorrow morning to make them eggs.
I threw the paper towel into the trash, right on top of the broken glass.
I walked out the back door into the cool, dark evening air.
I am not making eggs tomorrow. I am never making them anything ever again.
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