
The Wife He Forgot to Hide
Chapter 2
The earbud lay on the hardwood, the faintest whisper of voices leaking out, so thin and distant it could’ve been a breeze from the window. But I could still hear Harper—my daughter’s voice, bright and unguarded.
My hand hovered above the floor. Every instinct screamed not to pick it up. But the compulsion was larger than fear or dignity or even pain. It was like pressing a bruise or worrying a loose tooth—a need to know, even if knowing meant destruction.
I grabbed the earbud, hands shaking, and jammed it back in.
Harper’s voice was close now, high and matter-of-fact. “She doesn’t even try. She just always looks tired, and she never does her hair, and she never wears anything fun. Ella auntie, you always look so pretty. Can you show me how to do that blue stuff on your eyes?”
My mouth filled with an acidic taste. The edge of the dresser dug into my back as I slid down, knees giving out, until I was sitting on the bedroom carpet. Ocean waves from the meditation app still rolled beneath everything, a mockery of peace. Outside, a car drove by, its tires hissing over wet pavement. Inside, my daughter’s voice was a scalpel, clean and merciless.
Sienna’s laugh—Sienna, my old tormentor, now my husband’s confidante—came through, smooth as honey. “Of course, baby. You want the sparkly kind or the shimmer?”
Harper shrieked with delight, the sound so pure it made my chest ache. “Shimmer! And can you paint my nails again? Mommy says nail polish is for special days, but you said every day can be special.”
Six years old. Six, and already knowing how to compare, how to measure me and find me lacking. I pressed my palm to my sternum, trying to anchor myself, but the feeling was like falling through ice. I wanted to shout, to tear the earbud out and smash it, but I couldn’t. I had to hear it. I had to know the shape of the wound.
Sienna’s voice dropped, conspiratorial. “You know, pretty girls always take care of themselves. That’s our little secret, right?”
A giggle. “I wish Mommy would let me wear dresses like you.”
Sienna sighed, soft and performative. “Your mom just doesn’t get it. But that’s okay—some people are like that. You and me, we’re different.”
They were painting her nails now. I heard the clink of glass, the faint pop of a bottle opening. Kade murmured something in the background, but his words blurred, unimportant. The focus was Harper’s shiny happiness, the ease in her voice, her trust—given so freely to someone who had made a high school sport of breaking me.
When did it start? I tried to count—when had Harper first met Sienna? Kade’s calendar, always full of plausible excuses: "Colleague’s family day." Last week, "bike ride at the park." The week before, "Daddy’s friend’s birthday." Every time I’d believed him. Every time, I’d waited at home, making dinners that went cold, Harper bursting through the door with arms flung around my legs, face open and guileless.
Had she always been lying? Or was it simpler than that—a child, compartmentalizing, learning to keep secrets because the adults around her demanded it?
A sharp, bitter laugh scraped at my throat. I clamped my hand over my mouth, desperate not to let any sound escape. The realization was worse than Kade’s affair, worse than the humiliation: I wasn’t losing my family. I’d never truly had it. I was an accessory, a fixture. The wrong thing to bring to the party, to be left in the car.
My daughter’s laughter—so much like the laughter at home, the one that used to be just for me—rang out again. “Ella auntie, can you show me how to do that twisty braid? Mommy’s hair is always just plain.”
I squeezed my eyes shut. Behind my eyelids, I saw the mornings spent braiding Harper’s hair for school, fingers fumbling with elastics, Harper squirming on the stool. I’d thought it was a ritual, a tether. I’d never imagined it was a disappointment.
Sienna’s voice was syrupy, indulgent. “Of course, sweet pea. Your hair is perfect for it. Maybe next time I’ll show you how to do it yourself.”
The glint of triumph in her voice was unmistakable. I could picture her, nails immaculate, lips curled in a smile that didn’t reach her eyes. The same smile she’d used on me, all those years ago. She was winning. And she knew it.
I realized I wasn’t crying anymore. The tears had dried up, burned away by something harder, colder. My limbs felt heavy but precise as I pushed myself to my feet, the room swimming in late afternoon light. Clothes were scattered, the scent of lavender thick and cloying.
I moved without thinking, down the hallway, past the gallery of family photos—Kade, Harper, me, all of us smiling, frozen. I avoided looking at the glass, the neat rows of faces.
The walk-in closet was cool and shadowed. I knelt, pushed aside a row of boots, and reached behind a battered suitcase. My fingers found the edge of a brown paper envelope, taped shut, the corners soft from years of hiding. Inside: the pawn shop receipt and transfer slip from five years ago. I’d sold my grandmother’s jade brooch—her last gift to me—so Kade could make payroll that first desperate spring. I’d told myself it was love. But now, as I smoothed the yellowed paper, I saw it for what it was: evidence. Not of devotion, but of the bargain I’d struck with myself. How much of myself I’d been willing to give away.
My phone buzzed in my pocket. I flinched, the jolt of it breaking the trance. The screen glowed with Kade’s name, the message preview lighting up beneath it:
"At the park with Harper. What do you want for dinner? 😊"
The smiley face was a slap. I stared at it, the absurd normalcy of it, the way it blotted out everything I’d just heard. For a moment, I waited for the world to tilt back into place, for something to make sense again.
But through the thin plastic of the earbud, I could still hear Kade’s laughter, braided through Sienna’s, warm and private and real in a way the emoji could never be. The sound of my family, seamless and easy—without me.
I slipped the envelope into my jacket pocket. My hands were steady now. The ache in my chest was a dull, familiar throb. I stood in the silent closet, surrounded by old coats and the faint scent of cedar, and waited for the next sound, the next message, the next fracture in the day.
Outside, the sun was low and golden, slanting shadows across the floor. The meditation app had gone quiet, the ocean silenced at last. In its place was the echo of Harper’s voice, looping in my ear, bright and certain:
“…Mommy doesn’t get it. But you and me, we’re different.”
I closed my eyes and listened until the words became nothing but a pulse. And then I opened them, the envelope heavy in my pocket, and waited for whatever would come next.
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