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My Husband and My Son Fed My Birthday Cake to the Maid Novel Cover

My Husband and My Son Fed My Birthday Cake to the Maid

I baked my own birthday cake at six in the morning. I iced it at lunch. I wrote my own name in buttercream because no one else would. When I came home, the maid was carrying it to the trash. My husband's college ex sat in my chair. My son called her Mommy Vivian and said I chew too loud. I carried him for nine months. I almost lost him in my sixth. I have a scar across my abdomen that Adrian has not looked at in three years. My seven-year-old son told me tonight to eat in the kitchen with the help. The next morning, he cut the protection cord I sewed into his shirt the night he was born. He gave the silk to her. She wore it as earrings at breakfast. On Saturday, the Hart family assigned me the servant's table. They will kneel. They will beg. I will not turn back.
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Chapter 4

Adrian called me sixteen times between midnight and six in the morning. I sat on the bare hardwood floor of my empty Brooklyn apartment and watched his name flash on my phone screen. I did not answer.

At seven o'clock, a text message came through.

Adrian: Vivian is making breakfast for Noah. Margaret is coming over. Do not come back to this house until you are ready to be a normal wife.

I locked my phone. I stood up. My legs were stiff from sitting on the floor all night. I walked out of the empty apartment and took a taxi back to Manhattan.

I unlocked the front door of the penthouse. I heard laughter coming from the kitchen.

I walked down the long hallway and stopped at the kitchen entrance.

Vivian stood at the stove. She wore one of Adrian's white button-down shirts. It was too big for her. The sleeves were rolled up. She was flipping a pancake in my stainless steel frying pan.

Noah sat at the kitchen island. He was wearing his navy school uniform. Adrian stood next to him, tying his blue silk tie.

"Mommy Vivian, I want chocolate chips in mine," Noah demanded.

"Of course, sweetie," Vivian said softly. She reached into the pantry and pulled out a bag of chocolate chips. She sprinkled them directly into the batter. "Anything for my favorite boy."

Adrian smiled. He leaned over and kissed the side of Vivian's head. "You spoil him. Lena never let him have chocolate for breakfast. She was always obsessed with rules."

"Rules are for people who don't know how to love," Vivian said. She flipped the pancake perfectly onto a plate. She slid it across the marble island in front of Noah.

I stepped into the kitchen.

Adrian froze. His hands dropped away from Noah's tie. Vivian gasped loudly and grabbed the edge of the counter, dropping her spatula.

"Lena," Adrian said. His voice instantly hardened into a familiar command. "I told you not to come back until you were ready to apologize."

"I'm not here for breakfast," I said. "I am here to pack."

Vivian quickly untied the white apron from around her waist. She stepped away from the stove, her eyes wide. "Lena, please don't be angry. Adrian just asked me to come over to help with Noah's morning routine. He said you needed space. We didn't want Noah to be stressed before school."

"I am not angry," I said. I looked at Vivian. "Keep the apron. It's yours now."

I turned to Noah. He stared at me, a forkful of chocolate chip pancake halfway to his mouth. He looked guilty for exactly one second before his face shifted back into a defiant scowl.

"You look terrible," Noah said. "Mommy Vivian looks pretty in the morning. You look old."

"Noah, that's enough," Adrian said. But he didn't sound angry at his son. He sounded tired of me. He looked at my wrinkled dress from last night. "He's right, Lena. Go upstairs and change. You look like a vagrant. My grandmother is coming over in an hour to discuss the trust."

"Tell Margaret she can keep her money," I said.

Adrian scoffed. "Don't be dramatic. You don't have a dollar to your name. You need the severance payment."

"I don't need anything from this family," I said.

I left the kitchen and walked upstairs.

I walked into the master bedroom. My suitcase was stored on the top shelf of the walk-in closet. I pulled it down. I didn't pack my designer dresses. I didn't pack the expensive diamond earrings Adrian’s assistant bought for me on our anniversaries.

I packed three pairs of jeans, a few plain sweaters, and my running shoes. I went into the master bathroom and took my toothbrush. I left the expensive skin creams Vivian had mocked behind on the marble counter.

I zipped the black suitcase shut.

I walked down the hall to Noah’s bedroom. The door was cracked open. I pushed it wide and stepped inside.

The room smelled like Vivian's expensive French perfume. She had already been in here this morning. Noah's bed was made perfectly. The dinosaur blanket I bought him for his fifth birthday was kicked off the bed and thrown into the corner. A new, thick silk throw was draped perfectly over his pillows.

I walked over to the bed.

Four years ago, I found a receipt in Adrian's suit pocket for a luxury hotel suite. That night, I came into this room. I lifted Noah's heavy mattress. I taped my hospital ID band to the wooden bed frame beneath his pillow.

It was the plastic wristband the nurses clamped on my arm in the ICU after they cut him out of me. It has my name, his exact time of birth, and my blood type. I put it there as proof. Proof that I existed in this house. Proof that my body did the work to bring him into this world.

I didn't reach under the mattress today. I didn't need to check if the wristband was still there. Noah could keep the plastic.

I turned away from the bed and walked over to his large wooden bookshelf. I scanned the rows of colorful spines. I pulled out a worn hardcover copy of The Velveteen Rabbit.

It was his favorite book when he was three years old. I read it to him every single night for a year. I did all the voices. He used to fall asleep with his small, warm hand gripping my thumb.

I opened the front cover.

Four years ago, I wrote a message in blue ink on the title page.

Noah, when you read this book, you were three years old. The person reading this sentence to you is your mother. If you still remember me in seven years, you will know this sentence is true. — Lena, 2019.

I opened my purse. I took out my black fountain pen. I pulled the silver cap off.

I didn't tear the page out. That would be erasing history. I only correct history.

I pressed the metal nib against the thick paper. I drew a harsh, thick black line straight through the word Lena. I crossed out my own name.

I did not write Vivian's name above it. I left the space blank.

I capped my pen. I closed the book. I pushed it back onto the shelf in its exact original spot.

I walked out of the room. I picked up my suitcase from the hallway. I dragged it toward the stairs.

Adrian was standing on the landing. He blocked my path. He looked at the small black suitcase. He looked at my face. For the first time this morning, a flicker of actual panic crossed his eyes.

"Lena, stop playing this game," Adrian said. His voice dropped lower. "You are not leaving. You have nowhere to go. You are my wife. You are Noah's mother."

"I was Noah's mother," I corrected him.

"He's a child!" Adrian yelled. He stepped forward, grabbing my arm tight. "He is seven years old! He doesn't know what he's saying. He just likes Vivian because she gives him candy. You are going to abandon your own son over a piece of cake and a red string?"

I looked down at his hand gripping my arm. I didn't pull away. I just stared at his fingers until he slowly let them go.

"I am not abandoning him," I said. "I am stepping aside. You spent seven years teaching him to despise me. Margaret spent seven years telling him I was a failure. You won, Adrian. He is exactly the son you wanted him to be."

"Lena—"

"Tell Vivian to wash my frying pan," I said. "She burns the edges."

I walked past him. I walked down the stairs.

Rosa was standing by the front door. She held my winter coat in her hands. She looked terrified.

"Ma'am," Rosa whispered. "Are you coming back for dinner?"

"No, Rosa," I said. I took the coat from her. "Thank you for everything."

I opened the heavy oak door. I stepped out of the penthouse for the last time.

From now on, you're not my Noah. Not because you're not mine — you're mine, I made you — but because you've already chosen who gets to call you son. I respect your choice. I even respect the seven-year-old who chose a macaron over a lemon cake. I just won't stay to watch it again.

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