
She Left, and They Finally Saw Her
Chapter 2
I sat on the kitchen floor with my back against the refrigerator, the compressor humming through my skull.
In my hand was a drawing of my own erasure.
I forced myself up. My legs felt heavy, like I was wading through deep water. Kade's iPad sat on the kitchen island, plugged in, glowing.
A notification on the lock screen.
*Lana: He's finally asleep. He's so sweet when he's tired.*
He never locked his iPad. He didn't think I was smart enough to look.
I tapped the app.
The message thread scrolled back six months.
It wasn't filled with *I love you* or *I miss your body*. It was worse.
*Lana: [photo of Emmett eating a sandwich at a small wooden table] Someone was starving after soccer practice.*
*Kade: He looks more relaxed with you than he ever is with Wren. Thank you for taking him.*
*Lana: I love our little routine.*
I scrolled faster.
*Lana: [link to a blue dinosaur backpack] Found this on sale. It's the one he's been begging for.*
*Kade: Buy it. You know what he needs better than she does at this point. Just tell him it's from 'Santa' so she doesn't freak out.*
*Lana: [video file]*
I pressed play. Low sound. The splash of water. Emmett, in a bathtub that wasn't ours, covered in bubbles, laughing as Lana's hand dropped a fizzing pink bath bomb into the water.
"That's my son," I whispered.
I kept scrolling.
*Lana: Wren's bento boxes are in the trash again. He says the seaweed tastes like paper. I made him avocado toast instead. He cleaned the plate.*
*Kade: I don't know why she tries so hard. It's pathetic. Just keep feeding him the good stuff.*
The 4:00 A.M. alarms. The heart-shaped cucumbers. The organic seaweed snacks I'd driven thirty miles to find because Emmett once mentioned he liked the color of the package.
He wasn't eating them. He was dumping them in a trash can and walking into her apartment for avocado toast. And my husband had been *coaching* her on how to replace me.
A wave of nausea hit. I gripped the stainless steel sink and dry-heaved into the drain. Nothing came up but the taste of blood from my bitten cheek.
"Wren?"
I didn't turn around.
"What are you doing?" Kade's voice was closer now. The soft pad of his bare feet on the hardwood.
He reached past me, grabbed a glass from the cabinet. "You look like hell. Did you eat something bad?"
I picked up the iPad. I turned it toward him. The screen was still open on the message about the trash.
"Pathetic?" My voice was a jagged edge.
He didn't flinch. He took a slow sip of water, scanning the screen.
"You're going through my private messages now?"
"He's in her *bathtub*, Kade. She's buying his clothes. She's throwing away the food I make him."
"Lower your voice." He set the glass down hard. "You're being hysterical."
"I'm being a mother."
"Are you?" He stepped into my space, using his height to crowd me against the sink. "Because from where I'm standing, Lana is doing all the heavy lifting. You just provide the stress and the rules."
"She's his *tutor*."
"She's whatever I say she is." He plucked the iPad from my trembling hands. "You've been 'tired' and 'overwhelmed' for three years, Wren. I found a solution. Lana makes Emmett happy. She makes *me* happy. Is that a crime?"
"You're having an affair in front of our son."
He laughed. A short, sharp sound. "It's not an affair. It's a transition. You're just too stubborn to see that you've already been replaced."
He turned and started toward the stairs.
"Stop being paranoid," he called over his shoulder. "It's exhausting. Go to bed."
I stood in the kitchen, listening to the faucet drip. Each drop hit the basin like a nail being driven into a coffin.
I wasn't a wife. I wasn't a mother. I was a ghost.
I walked to the home office. I didn't turn on the light. I sat at the desk in the dark, opened the bottom drawer, and pulled out a thick accordion folder labeled *Tax Docs 2024*.
Buried behind the receipts was a manila envelope.
Three years ago, a venture capital firm in Manhattan offered me $14 million to build out a prototype I'd designed for a maternal mental health app. Kade had told me to decline. *Our family needs you more than the world needs another tech founder.*
I had declined. I had also kept the contact info for the lead partner.
I pulled out my phone. My thumb didn't shake this time.
*Wren: I'm ready to revisit the offer. And I need a recommendation for the most aggressive divorce attorney in Manhattan.*
I hit send.
The "Sent" chime echoed in the dark room. I tore Emmett's drawing into a dozen pieces and dropped them into the shredder.
Kade thought he was transitioning me out of his life.
He had no idea I was about to burn the bridge behind me.
My phone buzzed. A reply, instant.
*Marcus Thorne: Welcome back, Wren. Term sheet in your inbox by morning. Lawyer's name is Diane Park. She's a shark. She'll be at your door at 7 A.M.*
A second buzz. The parent group chat.
*Sarah's Mom: Hey, did anyone else see Lana's car still in Kade's driveway at 11 P.M.? Just wondering...*
I locked the screen and smiled for the first time all day.
Let them all wonder.
By tomorrow, I would be gone.
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