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She Left, and They Finally Saw Her Novel Cover

She Left, and They Finally Saw Her

My son held the microphone at his seventh birthday party and said, "I wish Miss Lana could be my real mommy." Sixty guests. My in-laws. My husband's business partners. Everyone staring at me like I was the punchline of a joke I didn't know was being told. Miss Lana. His Pilates instructor. The one who brings him acai bowls after school and teaches him to call her "Mama L." I looked at my husband. He didn't even flinch. "He's just a kid, Wren. Don't make it weird." Don't make it weird. Seven years of 4 AM school lunches, ER runs with a screaming toddler, parent-teacher conferences he never showed up to. And I'm the one making it weird. That night I found the Threads DMs. Not sexts. Worse. Grocery lists. Inside jokes. Photos of my son asleep on her couch. She wasn't just sleeping with my husband. She was rehearsing my entire life. So I signed the papers. Packed one bag. Left the Malibu house, the Tesla, the joint accounts. Took nothing but my name. They thought I'd come crawling back in a week. Instead, I walked into a meeting at the most elite venture capital firm in Austin and pitched the startup I'd been quietly building for three years under a shell company. Seed round closed in eleven minutes. $14 million. My face hit the cover of Forbes Next. My ex-husband saw it first. Then my son's school friends' moms started whispering about it at pickup. Now my son cries into his iPad every night, begging Siri to call me. And my ex-husband? He fired Miss Lana. Moved out of our bedroom. Sits in my empty closet and smells the last hoodie I left behind. "Come home," he texts at 2 AM. Then 3 AM. Then 4. I don't respond. I'm busy. Building an empire. Falling for a man who actually sees me. Living the life they never thought I deserved. The woman they threw away? She was the entire foundation. And now the whole house is collapsing.
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Chapter 3

4:00 A.M. The digital clock on the microwave flashed.

The refrigerator light cut a harsh yellow triangle across the dark tiles. I stood in the doorway, cold air seeping through my thin cotton shirt. My fingers brushed the organic turkey slices. The cheddar block. The heart-shaped cookie cutter.

I set them all on the granite island. My hand hovered over the loaf of whole wheat bread.

*Wren's bento boxes are in the trash again.*

I dropped the bread. I shoved the turkey back into the fridge, slammed the door, and plunged the room back into darkness.

I picked up Emmett's blue dinosaur lunchbox. I turned on the scalding tap and scrubbed the plastic compartments until my knuckles flushed crimson.

I set the empty lunchbox dead center on the kitchen island.

At 6:30 A.M., I sat on the edge of the living room sofa. I wore a tailored navy blazer, a white silk blouse, and pressed slacks. My hair was pulled back into a severe knot. I hadn't worn these clothes in five years.

Diane Park, my attorney, had emailed the divorce papers at 5:47 A.M. Forty-two pages. Tabbed and ready.

Footsteps thumped on the stairs.

Emmett stomped into the room, rubbing his eyes with small fists. He stopped at the edge of the rug, staring at my unfamiliar outfit.

"Come here, Em," I said.

He dragged his feet across the carpet. I crouched down and wrapped my arms around his small shoulders. He smelled like sleep and lavender baby shampoo.

"Mommy loves you more than anything. You know that, right?"

He planted his hands against my chest and pushed. He twisted away from me.

"Mama L said she's taking me for ice cream after school today."

My arms locked in mid-air. The skin at the corner of my mouth cracked open. I tasted copper.

"Go on," I said, voice flat. "Have fun."

He spun around and sprinted toward the kitchen, looking for the TV remote. He didn't look back. He didn't ask why I was dressed up. He didn't ask why a black suitcase sat by the door.

Heavy footsteps on the stairs. Kade descended, adjusting the collar of his pale blue dress shirt. He walked straight past me to grab his coffee.

I picked up the stapled stack of papers and followed him.

I slid them across the polished mahogany. They glided smoothly, stopping inches from his hand.

"What's this?" Kade asked, eyes still on his phone. "Field trip permission slip?"

He picked up the top page. His eyes scanned the bold header. The crease between his brows deepened, then smoothed into flat irritation. He tossed the packet back. It landed with a heavy slap.

"Are you serious?" he scoffed. "Because of a birthday wish? Wren, you're overreacting."

"Sign the last page."

"I'm not playing this game today. I have a nine o'clock. We can talk about your insecurities tonight."

"I don't want the house," I said.

He paused, mug halfway to his lips.

"I don't want the car. I don't want alimony. I'm leaving the joint accounts untouched."

"Stop being dramatic." He set the mug down hard. Coffee sloshed over the rim.

"And I'm not fighting for custody."

The smugness drained from his face. For the first time in three years, he truly looked at me. His gaze anchored on mine, searching for a bluff.

He found nothing.

"What did you say?" His voice dropped an octave. "You don't even want your *son*?"

"He already chose his family." I picked up my purse. "I'm not in that picture."

"Wren, wait—"

I turned my back. I walked to the entryway and grabbed the handle of my suitcase. The telescoping handle snapped into place with a sharp metallic click.

I pushed open the front door and stepped onto the porch.

Above me, the small green light of the Ring camera blinked. Recording every frame.

I turned my head for one final look inside.

Emmett's yellow backpack hung crookedly on the brass hook. Kade stood frozen halfway between the dining room and the foyer, clutching the divorce papers in his right hand, mouth slightly open. He was waiting for me to drop the bag. He was waiting for me to cry. He was waiting for me to say I was just trying to teach him a lesson.

I didn't say a word.

I pulled the heavy oak door toward me. The latch caught the strike plate. Through the wood, the house went unnaturally silent.

A black sedan idled at the curb. I walked down the driveway, the wheels of my suitcase rattling against the concrete.

"Airport?" the driver asked.

"JFK," I answered. "International terminal."

He blinked at me through the mirror. "International? Where to?"

"Just drive. I'll tell you which gate when we get there."

The car pulled away. My phone buzzed in my lap.

*Oak Creek Elementary: Please remember Emmett's lunchbox tomorrow.*

I flipped the device over, pressing the dark glass against my thigh. I stared out at the side mirror. The two-story brick house shrank smaller, fading into the morning fog until it vanished entirely.

My phone vibrated again. The caller ID wasn't the school. It wasn't Kade.

*Marcus Thorne, Thorne Capital.*

"Wren." His voice was crisp. "Diane sent over the papers. He sign yet?"

"He will."

"Good. The board approved the full fourteen million. We're scheduling press in seventy-two hours. Are you ready?"

I looked out the window at the fog. At the disappearing house. At a life that was already smaller than my rearview mirror.

"I've been ready for seven years," I said.

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