
She Was Never Just a Wife
Chapter 3
Three days. It took me three days to notice my wife was gone.
I'd assumed she was helping Mrs. Dormer with her garden again—Wren was always doing things like that, disappearing for hours to help neighbors I barely knew existed. Or maybe she was at another one of those volunteer committee meetings at Lily's school. Wren collected responsibilities the way other people collected stamps.
But on the third morning, I found Lily standing in the doorway of our bedroom, staring at the bed where only I had slept. Her small fingers gripped the doorframe, knuckles white.
"Daddy, when is Mommy coming home?"
The question hit me like cold water. I looked around the room—really looked—for the first time in days. Wren's pillow was fluffed and untouched. Her bedside table was empty, the stack of parenting books and water glass that usually cluttered it completely gone.
I walked to the closet. Empty hangers swayed gently, creating soft clicking sounds in the hollow space where her clothes used to hang. The bathroom told the same story—no bottles of that lavender shampoo she used, no contact lens case on the counter, no reading glasses folded neatly beside the sink.
My hands shook as I pulled out my phone. Straight to voicemail. I sent a text: "Where are you?"
Delivered. Read. No response.
I scrolled through my contacts, looking for someone to call—a friend of Wren's, maybe, or a family member. But as I stared at the screen, a cold realization settled over me. I didn't know any of Wren's friends. Not really. There was Sarah from the PTA, but I didn't have her number. Mrs. Chen from down the street, but we'd never exchanged information. All of Wren's connections seemed to exist in a world I'd never bothered to enter.
My finger hovered over Maisie's name.
"Wren's gone," I said when she answered.
A pause. Two seconds of silence that stretched like hours.
"Oh," Maisie said finally. "She finally figured it out?"
Something twisted in my stomach, but I couldn't name it. "What do you mean?"
"Nothing, Silas. I'll be right over."
Maisie arrived that evening carrying a Le Creuset pot and wearing the kind of confident smile that usually made me feel better about everything. She kissed my cheek and ruffled Lily's hair like she'd done it a thousand times before.
"I thought I'd make dinner," she announced, already moving toward our kitchen with the familiarity of someone who belonged. "Lily loves pasta, right?"
I nodded, though something nagged at me. Wren always made Lily that spiral-shaped pasta—what was it called? But pasta was pasta, wasn't it?
Maisie worked efficiently, boiling water and opening a jar of marinara sauce. She served Lily a plate of penne with the sauce ladled generously over the top, the red covering every surface of the pasta.
Lily stared at the plate. Her lower lip began to tremble.
"What's wrong, sweetheart?" I asked, kneeling beside her chair.
The tears came silently, sliding down her cheeks as she pushed the plate away. She wasn't throwing a tantrum—this was something deeper, a sadness that seemed to come from her bones.
"Lily, are you feeling sick?" Maisie's voice carried a note of irritation barely concealed beneath concern.
Lily shook her head, still crying. "The noodles are wrong. Mommy makes them turn in circles."
Circles. Fusilli. The word came back to me suddenly, along with a half-remembered image of Wren holding up a piece of uncooked pasta, spinning it between her fingers while Lily giggled. "Look, baby, the pasta is dancing!"
I'd walked through the kitchen during that moment, checking my phone, not really watching. Just another one of Wren's little rituals that I'd dismissed as unnecessary.
"We can get different pasta tomorrow," I said weakly.
But Lily wouldn't eat. She sat at the table with tears streaming down her face until Maisie finally suggested maybe she wasn't hungry.
Bedtime was worse.
Lily refused to get in her pajamas, refused to brush her teeth, refused everything until I was carrying her upstairs in the clothes she'd worn all day. I tried reading her usual story, but she kept interrupting.
"I want Mommy's song."
"What song, sweetheart?"
"The star song. With the cookies."
I had no idea what she was talking about. I tried singing "Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star," but Lily shook her head violently. "No! Not that one! Mommy's song!"
I called Wren's phone again. Still off.
By two in the morning, Lily had finally cried herself to sleep, but only after I'd agreed to sit on the floor beside her bed with my finger touching hers through the crib bars. My back ached, my eyes burned, and I felt like I was drowning in my own incompetence.
That's when I noticed the folded piece of paper on Lily's nightstand, tucked beneath her rabbit nightlight.
Wren's handwriting, neat and careful: "For bedtime: (1) Hall light on, door cracked 3 inches. (2) Bunny on right side, ears not folded under. (3) After 'Twinkle Twinkle,' trace three circles on her palm and say 'Mommy loves you, moon loves you, stars love you.'"
I followed the instructions exactly. But when I traced the circles on Lily's tiny palm, she murmured in her sleep: "Mommy's hands are softer."
The next morning, I stumbled into the kitchen desperate for coffee and found it waiting for me on the counter. Not the coffee—something else.
A black Moleskine notebook, its edges worn soft from handling. I'd seen Wren writing in it sometimes, usually at the kitchen table while Lily played nearby. I'd assumed it was a grocery list or appointment reminders.
I opened to the first page.
"Everything About Lily—For Someone Who Doesn't Know."
My coffee grew cold as I turned the pages. Allergy charts with symptoms color-coded by severity. A detailed map of Lily's different cries—hunger versus tired versus scared versus hurt—with descriptions so precise they read like medical notes. Lists of which fabric textures she could tolerate and which made her break out in hives. Emergency protocols for fever, complete with dosage charts and pediatrician contact information.
Page after page of information I should have known by heart but had somehow missed entirely. The way Lily needed her sandwich cut into triangles, not squares. How she only drank from the blue cup, never the red one. The specific order of her bedtime routine, down to which stuffed animals went where and how many times to pat her back.
Forty-seven pages of my daughter's life, documented with the thoroughness of someone who knew she might not be there to explain it.
The last page contained only one sentence, written in Wren's careful script:
"If you remember all of this, she won't need me anymore. But you won't."
I closed the notebook with shaking hands. Outside, I could hear Lily waking up, calling for Mommy in that hopeful voice that would break when I appeared in the doorway instead.
Wren was right. I wouldn't remember it all. I couldn't even remember what song my daughter needed to fall asleep.
And for the first time since I'd found that empty closet, I understood that my wife hadn't just left.
She'd been preparing to leave for a very long time.
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