
My Husband Couldn't Forget His First Love
My Husband Couldn't Forget His First Love Chapter 1
The crystal chandelier above the Whitman family's dining table cast harsh shadows across the mahogany surface, making the elaborate Sunday dinner feel more like an interrogation than a family meal.
I sat rigidly in my designated chair—always the same one, always positioned where I could serve but never quite belong—watching David's mother, Michelle, cut her prime rib with surgical precision.
"Ava, dear," Michelle's voice sliced through the air with the same sharpness as her knife, "I was just telling Mrs. Pemberton at the club yesterday about your... background. She found it so quaint that you're from Michigan."
The word 'quaint' dripped from her lips like poison honey. I forced my hands to remain steady as I reached for my water glass, the ice clinking against the crystal in the sudden silence.
"Michigan has its charms," I managed, my voice barely above a whisper.
Michelle's laugh was as cold as the marble floors beneath our feet. "Oh, I'm sure it does. Simple pleasures for simple people. But you understand, don't you, that our family operates on rather different standards?"
My chest tightened.
Across the table, David's sister Chloe smirked, her fork poised mid-air like she was watching a particularly entertaining show.
David himself remained absorbed in his phone, his thumb scrolling endlessly through messages, completely oblivious to the verbal daggers being thrown at his wife.
"Mother," I heard myself say, the word feeling foreign and bitter on my tongue, "I've been trying my best to—"
"Oh, darling, I know you have." Michelle's interruption was swift and merciless. "But trying and succeeding are two very different things, aren't they? Some people just don't understand our family's standards. It's not your fault, really. You simply weren't raised with the proper... foundation."
The room felt like it was shrinking around me.
-
The ornate wallpaper—hand-selected by Michelle's interior designer—seemed to press closer with each passing second. I could feel my pulse hammering in my throat, but I kept my expression neutral. Five years of practice had taught me that showing weakness only invited more cruelty.
Chloe finally swallowed her bite of food and leaned forward with obvious delight. "Remember when Ava tried to suggest we use paper napkins at the charity luncheon?" She giggled, the sound sharp and grating. "I mean, it was adorable, really. Like watching a child try to help with grown-up things."
My fingers gripped my napkin—linen, of course, monogrammed with the Whitman crest—until my knuckles went white. The memory stung. I had only suggested it because the event was outdoors and the wind kept blowing the expensive cloth napkins away. But in the Whitman household, practicality was a sin, and I was guilty of committing it regularly.
"David," I said quietly, hoping he might finally look up, might finally say something in my defense. "Could you pass the salt?"
He glanced up briefly, his eyes glazed and distant. "Hmm? Oh, sure." He slid the silver salt cellar across the table without really seeing me, then immediately returned to his phone. The device seemed to hold more of his attention than his wife ever did.
Michelle watched this exchange with the satisfaction of a cat who'd cornered a mouse. "You know, Ava, I was thinking you might be more comfortable eating in the kitchen with Maria. She's always so grateful for company, and I'm sure you two would have so much more in common."
The suggestion hit me like a physical blow. Maria was the housekeeper—a kind woman who'd shown me more warmth in five years than my own mother-in-law ever had. But Michelle's implication was crystal clear: I belonged with the help, not with the family.
Chloe clapped her hands together in mock excitement. "Oh, that's perfect! You could swap recipes or something. I bet you know all sorts of... rustic dishes."
I set down my fork carefully, afraid that if I held it any longer, I might do something I'd regret. The expensive food on my plate—prepared by a chef who cost more per month than my father made in a year—suddenly tasted like ash.
"I think I'll finish eating in my room," I said, starting to rise.
"Nonsense," Michelle's voice cracked like a whip. "We're having a family dinner. Surely you can manage to sit through one meal without running away?"
The word 'family' stung the most. I wasn't family—I was a guest who'd overstayed her welcome, a charity case they'd taken in out of some misguided sense of obligation. David's continued silence only confirmed what I'd suspected for months: he agreed with them.
I sank back into my chair, defeated. The chandelier's light seemed to dim, casting longer shadows across the table. In the distance, I could hear the faint sounds of city life through the thick windows—car horns, sirens, the hum of people living their own lives. People who weren't trapped in this gilded cage of cruelty and indifference.
Michelle resumed eating with the satisfaction of someone who'd won a decisive victory. "You know, David, I ran into Sabrina at Bergdorf's yesterday. She looked absolutely radiant. Such a shame things didn't work out between you two. She would have fit in so seamlessly."
At the mention of his ex-girlfriend's name, David finally looked up from his phone. His eyes brightened in a way they never did when he looked at me. "How is she?"
"Wonderful, as always. She asked about you, actually. Said she missed our conversations."
I felt something crack inside my chest. Here I was, being systematically torn apart by his family, and David's only response was to perk up at news of another woman. The woman who'd never left our marriage, not really. She haunted every family gathering, every casual mention, every comparison that left me wanting.
Chloe leaned back in her chair with obvious satisfaction. "Sabrina always understood the importance of presentation. Remember how she organized that fundraiser for the children's hospital? Raised over two million dollars. Now that's what I call making a difference."
The implication hung in the air like smoke. I'd tried to volunteer for various charities, but Michelle had always found reasons why my help wasn't needed, wasn't suitable, wasn't quite right for their social circle.
I stared down at my untouched plate, wondering how much longer I could endure this. How much more of myself I could lose before there was nothing left to save. The woman I'd been before David—the artist who painted with wild abandon, who laughed freely, who believed in her own worth—felt like a stranger now.
David's phone buzzed again, and he immediately returned his attention to it, leaving me alone at a table full of people who wished I'd disappear.
My Husband Couldn't Forget His First Love of Contents
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