
My Husband Brings Side Bitch on Family Trip
Chapter 1
Lena's POV
The suitcase lay open on our bed like a patient awaiting surgery. I methodically folded Liam’s bright blue swim trunks, his favorite dinosaur t-shirt, the soft hoodie he’d need for the evening breeze at the beach house. My husband David’s neatly pressed chinos and polo shirts were stacked beside them. My own clothes—a simple sundress, a pair of linen trousers—were a smaller, quieter pile.
The act of packing was a ritual of care, of anticipation. I was the one who had proposed this Hawaiian getaway, booking a sprawling beachfront house that David believed I’d somehow managed to afford by aggressively clipping coupons and scrimping on our household grocery budget. He didn't know the truth. Years ago, David had explicitly forbidden me from working, insisting his pride demanded a wife whose sole focus was him and our son. But he had no idea about the online consulting firm I’d built from scratch in the quiet, stolen hours of the night. It was my secret rebellion, and last quarter, my hidden business had broken six figures in pure profit. This luxury trip was supposed to be my silent victory lap. One more family trip. One more chance for us to be just us, before I finally confessed my success.
The scent of the ginger chicken I’d cooked for dinner still lingered in the air, clinging to my clothes. Liam had wrinkled his nose at it earlier. “Mom, you smell like the kitchen,” he’d said, not unkindly, just factually. I’d just smiled and kept stirring.
The bedroom door swung open without a knock. David walked in, his usual confident stride filling the space.
And right behind him, like a shadow he’d chosen to bring along, was Serena.
My fingers froze on the hem of David’s shirt.
Serena smiled, a perfect crescent of polished warmth. “Hey, Lena! Just catching up with David about the old days.”
David clapped a hand on my shoulder, his touch familiar but suddenly heavy. “Great news, honey. Serena’s coming with us tomorrow. She’s got some time off, and Liam’s been begging for her to join us on a trip forever.”
Begging? I hadn’t heard any begging. And a trip I paid for? A sanctuary I had meticulously planned with the money he refused to let me earn? I turned, my gaze searching David’s face. He was already looking at Serena, his expression fond, relaxed.
Before I could form a question, a small figure burst into the room. Liam, our ten-year-old, his face lit up with a joy I hadn’t seen aimed at me in weeks. “Serena’s coming?! Really?” He launched himself not at me, not at his father, but at Serena’s waist, hugging her. “Yes! You’re so fun! You tell the best jokes and you know all the cool games!”
Serena ruffled his hair, laughing. “Of course, buddy! We’re gonna build the biggest sandcastle and I’ll teach you that card trick I promised.”
Liam beamed up at her, then his glance flickered to me, still kneeling by the suitcase. His expression didn’t dim, but it shifted. “Mom’s good at packing and making food, though.” It was a concession, not a compliment. Then, the words tumbled out, innocent and devastating: “But Serena doesn’t smell like oil and cleaning stuff. She smells like flowers and sunshine.”
The air in the room thickened. David chuckled, an awkward sound. “Kids say the honest thing, right?”
Serena’s smile softened, aimed at me now. Sympathetic. Patronizing. “Lena, you work so hard. It’s a lovely smell, really. A homey smell.”
It was the smell of my physical labor, yes, but they didn't know it was also the scent of my exhaustion from managing both a household and a booming secret empire while they slept. It was being reduced to a problem by my own child, with his father’s silent endorsement. I felt my cheeks burn, but I kept folding the shirt. One smooth motion. Another.
“It’ll be nice to have another adult around,” David said, leaning against the dresser, closer to Serena than to me. “Serena and I have been talking about how we always have the best conversations. She gets my sense of humor, you know? Reminds me of when we were kids.”
When we were kids. The phrase hung between them, a shared history I was never part of. Serena’s eyes met David’s, and there was a glint there, a private understanding. She turned to Liam. “Your dad is the funniest guy I know. We used to spend hours just talking and laughing. He still makes me laugh harder than anyone.”
Liam looked up at his father with adoration. “Dad’s hilarious!”
I was the silent audience to their reunion. The curator of the suitcase. The source of the inconvenient scent. The invisible financier of the very vacation they were hijacking.
David announced he was going to grab a beer and check the car’s tire pressure. Liam, attached to Serena’s side, followed them out, chattering about what games they could play in the car. The room emptied, leaving me with the half-packed suitcase, a hollow ache in my chest, and the bitter irony that I had bought the tickets for my own displacement.
I finished the packing, my movements robotic. Zipping the suitcase felt like sealing away a version of the trip I’d imagined—the one where I revealed my financial independence and we celebrated. When I carried it to the living room, David was outside. Liam was on the couch, already deep into a video game on Serena’s phone.
Serena stood by the kitchen island, sipping a glass of water I’d poured for myself earlier. She watched me set the suitcase down.
“All done?” she asked, her voice a melodic chirp.
“Yes.”
She came closer. The floral perfume was indeed strong. “Lena, I hope this isn’t… awkward for you. David just thought it would be a great surprise for Liam. He’s such a devoted father.”
He’s such a devoted father. The implication was clear: his devotion was to Liam, and to the shared joy Liam found with her. My role was administrative.
“It’s fine,” I said, my voice flat.
“He talks about you a lot, you know,” she continued, leaning against the island, her posture languid. “About how much you do for the family. He’s so grateful.” She paused, letting the word ‘grateful’ hang, a pale substitute for ‘admiring’ or ‘desiring’. “But with me… it’s different. We connect on a… just a friend level. It’s so easy. Like breathing. He says it’s the only time he feels completely understood.”
Each word was a delicate needle. She wasn’t claiming him; she was simply illustrating my lack of claim. She was the breath he needed; I was the chore he appreciated.
I turned to face her fully. “Serena, I know you’ve been friends for a long time. But this is a family trip. A trip I planned.”
Her eyes widened, innocent. “Of course! That’s why I’m so excited. To be part of the family vibe.” She took another sip, then placed the glass down on the counter, right on the edge. As she did, she stepped slightly towards me, her movement fluid.
Then, it happened.
Her foot seemed to catch on nothing. Her body swayed. With a gasp, she stumbled backwards, her hands flailing. The glass tipped, splashing water across the floor. She fell, not heavily, but dramatically, onto the tiled floor, a soft cry escaping her lips.
I hadn’t moved. I hadn’t touched her. I stood rooted, my hands at my sides.
The front door opened. David’s footsteps were quick. “What happened?”
Serena was on the floor, one hand pressed to her lower back, her face a mask of pained surprise. She looked up at David, her eyes shimmering. “I… I tripped. It was so sudden.”
David’s gaze snapped to me. I was the only other person in the room. “Lena? What did you do?”
The accusation was instant, absolute.
“I didn’t do anything,” I said, my voice cold, clear. “She just fell.”
Serena made a small, hurt sound. “David, it’s okay. I just lost my balance. Lena was just… standing there. Maybe she didn’t realize…” She left it dangling. Maybe she didn’t realize she was crowding me. Maybe her presence was oppressive.
David’s face hardened. He walked over to help Serena up, his hands gentle on her arms. “This isn’t the first time, Lena.” The words hit me like a slap. “Liam mentioned last week that you grabbed his arm too hard when he wouldn’t turn off the game. He said it scared him. He said you have… a bit of a violent streak when you’re stressed.”
Liam said that? My own son? The memory flashed—he’d been ignoring me for an hour, I’d finally put a firm hand on his shoulder to get his attention. He’d jerked away, annoyed. That was his “violent streak”?
My heart plummeted. I looked past David and Serena, to the couch where Liam had been playing. He was sitting there, frozen, his game forgotten. His eyes were on the scene—his father helping the graceful, hurt Serena; his mother standing accused.
“Liam,” I said, my voice pleading, breaking. “Tell Dad what you saw. Tell him I didn’t touch Serena.”
Liam’s face contorted. He looked at Serena, who gave him a tiny, reassuring smile despite her ‘pain’. He looked at his father, whose expression was stern, expectant.
Then, Liam moved. He didn’t speak. He slid off the couch and hurried to Serena’s side, ducking behind her, using her as a shield. He pressed himself against her back, hiding his face from me. His small hands clutched the fabric of her blouse.
He didn’t say a word. He didn’t defend me. He just… hid.
His eyes, when they finally flickered towards me, were wide, fearful, and full of a confusion that mirrored my own. Then they darted away, ashamed, choosing the safety of the flower-scented sunshine over the oil-and-cleaning-smell truth of his mother.
David’s jaw tightened. Seeing his son seek refuge behind Serena sealed the narrative for him. “See?” he said, his voice low, disappointed. “Even Liam is afraid of your temper right now. Why would you do this to Serena? She’s just trying to be part of our family.”
Serena, now upright, placed a protective hand on Liam’s shoulder behind her. “It’s okay, David. Let’s not fight. I’m fine.” She leaned into him slightly, for support. “We should just focus on the fun trip tomorrow.”
David’s arm stayed around her, helping her ‘recover’. Liam remained glued to her side, a silent, devastating witness against me. I stood alone, the suitcase at my feet, the spilled water seeping slowly across the floor towards me, the smell of my own kitchen clinging to my skin, now a verdict.
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