
She Was Never Just a Wife
Chapter 1
The purple crayon smudge on Lily's cheek caught the afternoon light streaming through our kitchen window. She stood in the doorway, clutching a piece of construction paper against her chest like it held all the secrets of the universe.
"Mommy, today is your birthday, isn't it?"
My hands stilled on the dish towel I'd been folding. The simple question hit me with unexpected force—not because I'd forgotten, but because I'd been trying so hard to pretend it didn't matter that everyone else had.
"Yes, sweetheart." I knelt down to her level, and she thrust the paper toward me with the solemnity of a diplomat presenting a peace treaty.
The drawing was unmistakably us: a tall figure with long brown hair standing next to a much smaller one, connected by a wobbly star that blazed purple between them. My throat tightened as I traced the crayon lines with my finger.
"Thank you, baby. This is the most beautiful gift I've ever received."
Lily beamed and carefully tucked the card into my apron pocket, her small fingers patting it flat. "Will Daddy give you a present too?"
My hand paused in her silky hair. This morning, I'd chosen the green dress—the one Silas used to say brought out my eyes. I'd positioned myself in the hallway where he'd have to see me, where he couldn't miss the effort I'd made. He'd glanced up from his phone just long enough to say, "The kitchen faucet is dripping again. Call someone to fix it."
Then he was gone, leaving only the scent of his cologne and the weight of my foolishness.
"Maybe," I told Lily, because hope was something I couldn't quite kill, even when it felt like slow poison.
The green dress now hung in the back of my closet, where it would stay.
By seven-fifteen that evening, I was upstairs reading Lily her bedtime story when I heard Silas's BMW pull into the driveway. But there was something different about the sound—two car doors slamming instead of one, followed by laughter that made my skin prickle with recognition.
Maisie's laugh. Silver and perfectly modulated, like she'd practiced it in front of a mirror until it achieved just the right note of carefree charm.
I moved to the window, Lily still curled against my side with her picture book. Below, Maisie emerged from the passenger seat wearing a white sundress that seemed to glow in the porch light. Her arm was already threaded through Silas's as they walked toward our front door, and in her free hand, she carried a distinctive pink bakery box from Leopold's—the French patisserie downtown that Silas had taken me to exactly once, on our second anniversary.
My chest constricted. She knew. Somehow, Maisie knew it was my birthday.
The front door opened, and their voices drifted up the stairs. I heard Maisie's delighted gasp, as if our modest entryway was the most charming thing she'd ever seen.
"Wren!" she called out, her voice bright with manufactured surprise. "I hope you don't mind me dropping by unannounced."
I carried Lily downstairs, each step feeling like a small act of courage. Maisie stood in our living room like she belonged there, the bakery box balanced in her manicured hands. She was everything I wasn't—polished where I was rumpled, confident where I felt uncertain.
"I was driving past Leopold's today," she continued, her smile never wavering, "and Silas mentioned your birthday was coming up. I couldn't resist picking up one of their tiramisu cakes. You don't mind me crashing the celebration, do you?"
The words hit me like physical blows. She knew exactly what day it was. She'd chosen today—my birthday—to appear at my door with my husband and a cake from the place he'd never taken me back to. And she was presenting it all as spontaneous kindness.
I looked at Silas, searching his face for some sign of awareness, some flicker of guilt or recognition. But his expression was blank, almost bored. He didn't know. In his mind, this was simply Maisie being thoughtful, not Maisie wielding precision cruelty disguised as generosity.
"Of course not," I managed, because what else could I say? "That's very sweet of you."
We gathered around our small dining table, and I watched Maisie light the single candle she'd brought—as if she'd planned this entire performance down to the last detail. The cake was beautiful, layers of coffee-soaked ladyfingers and mascarpone that made my mouth water and my stomach clench in equal measure.
"Make a wish, Mommy!" Lily bounced in her booster seat, clapping her hands.
I closed my eyes and wished for the strength to get through this evening without breaking. When I opened them, Silas was already reaching for the cake server.
"I'll cut it," I said quickly, needing something to do with my hands.
As I sliced through the perfect layers, Maisie tilted her head with studied casualness. "Oh, Wren, I love your apron. Is it from Anthropologie? I saw one just like it on Pinterest the other day."
I glanced down at the apron I'd sewn myself last winter, working late into the night while Silas traveled for business. Lily's name was embroidered across the chest in careful cross-stitch, each letter a meditation in love and patience. Maisie could see the handwork—the slight imperfections that marked it as homemade, the care stitched into every thread. But she chose to reduce it to something purchasable, something without soul or significance.
"No," I said simply, placing a slice of cake in front of her. "I made it."
Her smile flickered for just a moment before returning to full wattage. "How clever of you."
I served Silas next, then cut my own piece, the coffee aroma making my stomach turn. I'd told him about my caffeine sensitivity early in our relationship, back when he still listened to the small details that made up my world. But Maisie wouldn't know that—or maybe she did, and this was another calculated move in whatever game she was playing.
I sat down with my untouchable slice, pushing it around my plate while conversation flowed around me. Lily chattered about her day at preschool, and Maisie responded with the kind of engaged attention that made her seem like the perfect family friend.
Then Lily climbed down from her chair and padded over to me, her small hands pushing something across the table. It was a corner of her own cake—the plain vanilla layer without any coffee flavoring.
"Mommy, eat this one," she said seriously. "This part won't make your tummy hurt."
The table fell silent. Maisie's fork paused halfway to her mouth. Silas looked up from his phone, finally paying attention. And I stared at my three-year-old daughter—the only person in this room who remembered that coffee made me sick, who had noticed my untouched plate and offered me the only part of the cake I could safely eat.
"Thank you, sweetheart," I whispered, my voice barely steady.
Lily beamed and climbed into my lap, sticky fingers patting my cheek. "Happy birthday, Mommy. I love you the most."
Across the table, Maisie's smile had finally cracked, just slightly at the edges. And for the first time all evening, I felt like I could breathe.
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