
The Invisible Wife
The Invisible Wife Chapter 1
The house was silent except for the hum of three monitors casting blue light across my face. I sat in our home office—Daniel's office, really, though I was the one who spent most nights here—watching the live stream of the annual charity gala from multiple angles.
Daniel stood on the red carpet, resplendent in the navy suit I'd laid out for him this morning. Sophie's hand rested on his arm, her fingers curled possessively around the fabric. She wore emerald green, a color that photographed beautifully under the flash of cameras. I knew because I'd helped him pick it out last week when he casually mentioned needing advice for "a colleague's formal event."
A reporter thrust a microphone toward them. "Mr. Chen, where's your wife tonight?"
Daniel's smile never wavered. "She prefers to support me from behind the scenes."
The reporter laughed knowingly, and the camera moved on.
I looked down at my hands, still poised over the keyboard. The investor presentation I'd been drafting for his meeting next week stared back at me, half-finished. My fingers had stopped moving somewhere between "market penetration strategy" and "projected quarterly growth."
I closed my eyes. Breathed in. Breathed out.
Then I kept typing.
The words flowed automatically—they always did. I'd written so many of these presentations I could do them in my sleep. Revenue projections. Competitive advantages. Risk mitigation strategies. All the phrases that made Daniel sound brilliant in boardrooms while I remained invisible at home.
On the center monitor, Daniel and Sophie moved through the crowd. Her laugh carried over the audio feed, bright and performative. She leaned into him while speaking with donors, playing the role of the perfect companion. The role I was supposed to play.
The role I'd refused.
My phone buzzed. A text from Daniel: "Raising a lot tonight. Sophie's been incredible with the donors."
I typed back: "That's wonderful. Drive safely."
Three dots appeared, then disappeared. No response.
I returned to the presentation, adding a slide about market expansion opportunities. Daniel would present this to the board in seventy-two hours, and they would marvel at his vision. They would approve the budget I'd calculated. They would praise his leadership.
And I would sit here, in this empty house, writing his next success.
The clock in the corner of the screen read 11:47 PM. I saved the document, backed it up to the cloud, and sent it to Daniel's email with the subject line: "Ready for Monday's board meeting." No greeting. No signature. Just the work.
I should have gone to bed. Instead, I watched the live stream until the event ended, until the last guests filtered out, until the feed cut to black.
The front door opened at 2:13 AM.
I was in the kitchen, making chamomile tea I wouldn't drink. Daniel's footsteps echoed through the foyer, unsteady. The scent of Sophie's perfume—something expensive and floral—entered the room before he did.
"You're still up," he said, loosening his tie.
I set down the kettle. "How was it?"
"Exhausting. But successful." He held out his wrists toward me, the cufflinks—platinum, inherited from his grandfather—catching the overhead light. "Sophie was incredibly helpful with the donors tonight. She has a real gift for reading people."
I unfastened the first cufflink, then the second, dropping them into his palm. "That's good."
"We should have her at more events. She knows how to work a room." He pocketed the cufflinks and started toward the stairs, then paused. "Oh, the presentation for Monday. Did you—"
"In your inbox."
"Perfect. You're always so reliable." He yawned. "I'm going to bed."
I watched him climb the stairs, his hand trailing along the bannister we'd chosen together eight years ago. When he reached the landing, I spoke.
"Daniel?"
He turned, impatient. "Yeah?"
"I was thinking I might come to the next event. It's been a while since—"
He laughed. Not cruel, exactly. Just dismissive. "You know those events trigger your anxiety. Besides, Sophie's already confirmed for the Spring Gala." He softened his tone, the way you'd speak to a child. "You're much more comfortable here, handling things from home. It's what you do best."
The tea kettle began to whistle behind me, a rising shriek that filled the kitchen.
"Right," I said quietly. "What I do best."
He disappeared into our bedroom, and I turned off the stove. The sudden silence pressed against my ears. I poured the tea into a mug I wouldn't drink from and stood there, watching steam rise and dissolve into nothing.
My phone lit up on the counter. A notification from the business news site I monitored: "Chen Industries IPO Expected to Break Records."
I set down the mug and pulled up my laptop. There was work to do. There was always work to do.
In the darkness of our home office, I opened the file containing Daniel's schedule for the next three months. Event after event, meeting after meeting. Sophie's name appeared beside his for twelve different occasions.
My name appeared nowhere.
I created a new folder on my desktop. Named it "Archive." And began transferring documents—slowly, methodically, one file at a time.
Just in case.
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