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The Wife He Forgot to Hide Novel Cover

The Wife He Forgot to Hide

Wren Caldwell thought she had it all — a loving husband, an adorable daughter, a life she'd built from nothing. Then a baby monitor left on by accident reveals that her husband Kade has been taking their six-year-old to meet his mistress — the same woman who bullied Wren for twelve years. When her daughter's voice sides with the enemy, Wren's world disintegrates. But the ruins of her marriage uncover a secret Kade will destroy anything to keep buried.
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Chapter 1

For five years, Wren Caldwell convinced herself she was lucky. A husband who came home every night. A daughter who drew her crayon hearts at breakfast. A quiet life in their Brooklyn brownstone that felt, finally, safe.

One careless Bluetooth connection shatters everything. Wren overhears her husband Kade whispering to another woman — Sienna Voss, the girl who tormented Wren from elementary through high school. Worse, their six-year-old daughter Harper has been coached to keep the secret. When Wren confronts Kade, he denies everything with terrifying composure. So she plays the recording.

What follows isn't revenge. It's something more devastating: a woman learning to choose herself for the first time, and a man realizing — too late, always too late — that the wife he discarded was the only person who ever truly knew him. By the time Kade begs, Wren has already stopped listening.

******

The pink onesie had a small strawberry embroidered on the collar.

I'd washed it three times already, trying to get a grass stain out from Harper's last trip to the park. It was mostly gone now—just a faint shadow if you knew where to look. I smoothed it flat against my knee, folded the left side over, then the right, the way my mother taught me, the way I'd done a thousand times in this same bedroom with its pale yellow walls and the lavender diffuser humming on the dresser.

The white noise from my meditation app was supposed to help me unwind. Forty-five minutes of ocean waves while I got through the laundry pile. That was the plan.

Then I heard him laugh.

I went still.

It wasn't the laugh I knew. Not the short, distracted exhale he gave when something on his phone was mildly funny. Not the polite chuckle at his coworkers' jokes at dinner parties. This was low. Unhurried. Warm in a way that made my stomach turn before my brain even caught up to why.

I pulled out my phone and stared at it. The screen showed the meditation app, still running. But the sound in my ears was wrong. I tapped the Bluetooth icon out of habit, checking the connection, and that's when I saw it—the car audio had auto-synced. Kade's car. Our shared family account, the one we'd set up two years ago so Harper could listen to audiobooks on road trips without fighting over whose phone to use.

I should have disconnected.

I even thought the word: *disconnect*.

My hand moved toward the earpiece.

Then a woman's voice said, "Babe, you're terrible."

She said it like it was a compliment.

My hand dropped.

I sat there on the floor of my daughter's bedroom, surrounded by tiny folded clothes, and I waited. I don't know what I was waiting for. Some explanation. Some context that would make the warmth in his voice make sense, turn it into something innocent, something I'd misread.

Kade said something I couldn't quite catch, and the woman laughed again, and he laughed with her, and the sound of the two of them together was so easy, so frictionless, that it felt like being shown a door in your own house you'd never noticed before—and realizing it had always been there.

Then his voice shifted. Still relaxed. Almost bored.

"You don't know what it's like," he said. "She has no idea how to carry herself. I took her to the Hargrove event last spring—you remember, I told you—and she just stood there. Didn't talk to anyone. I spent the whole night making excuses."

The strawberry onesie was still in my hands.

I looked down at it.

"Every time I bring her somewhere," he continued, "it's like—I don't know. Like showing up with the wrong thing. You just want to leave it in the car."

The woman made a soft, sympathetic sound.

I pressed the earbud harder against my ear.

I don't know why. The rational part of me—the part that had been quietly, carefully holding this marriage together for twelve years, through the lean years and the miscarriage and the move and all the small surrenders I'd convinced myself were compromises—that part knew I should stop. That every second I kept listening was another second I couldn't unknow.

But I couldn't move. The words were going in like splinters, thin and precise, finding the soft places I'd spent years trying to protect.

*Like showing up with the wrong thing.*

I thought about the Hargrove event. I remembered the black dress I'd bought for it, how I'd stood in the bathroom mirror for twenty minutes trying to decide if the neckline was too much or not enough. I remembered feeling Kade's eyes on me when I came downstairs and thinking—hoping—that the look on his face was approval.

I'd been reading it wrong the whole time.

The woman on the other end of the call said something that made him laugh again, and then—

I froze.

The laugh.

Not hers, this time. The sound underneath the laugh. The particular quality of it, nasal and bright, cutting off mid-breath to pull in air before continuing. A laugh I hadn't heard in over a decade but had never once forgotten, because it had followed me down hallways and across cafeterias and into bathrooms where I'd learned to wait until I heard it fade before I came out.

Sienna Voss.

The name surfaced from somewhere deep and cold.

Sienna Voss, who had made a hobby out of me for four years of high school. Who had perfected the art of the comment delivered just loud enough for me to hear and just quiet enough to deny. Who had known, with the instinct of a born predator, exactly which parts of me were most tender.

My vision blurred at the edges.

I was kneeling on the floor now—I hadn't noticed when my legs had given. The laundry was scattered around me, small soft shapes in the low afternoon light, and I was pressing both hands over my mouth because my chest was heaving and I could not, could not make a sound.

Kade was laughing with Sienna Voss.

Kade had been telling Sienna Voss about me.

Kade had been—

"Ella auntie, you don't even know how much my mom—"

The voice was small and clear and completely familiar, the way only one voice in the entire world was familiar to me down to the cellular level.

Harper.

My daughter's voice, coming through the earpiece like something from a dream.

The floor seemed to tilt.

She was there. She was in that car. She had been there the whole time, listening to her father talk about her mother like a piece of luggage he was embarrassed to be seen with, and she was calling Sienna Voss *Ella auntie*—

Harper's voice snagged on the last word. "How much my mom—"

My hand moved before I decided to move it.

I ripped the earbud out.

Silence hit me like a wall.

The earbud bounced off the hardwood and landed somewhere near the baseboard, and I could still hear it—faintly, tinily—still playing, still transmitting whatever Harper had been about to say about me, the sound so small now it was almost nothing, a trapped insect vibrating against the floor.

I stared at it.

My hands were shaking. My knees were wet from the carpet. Somewhere in the house the lavender diffuser kept humming, indifferent and soft, filling the air with a scent I'd chosen because it was supposed to be calming.

Harper's voice hung in the space where the audio had been.

*You don't even know how much my mom—*

How much my mom what?

The question sat in the center of my chest like a coal, and I couldn't breathe around it, and I couldn't put it down.

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