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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 3

The phone screen glowed in my palm.

Kade's message sat there, clean and ordinary: *At the park with Harper. What do you want for dinner? 😊*

Through the earbud still pressed into my left ear, his voice was warm and unhurried. "We should try that new omakase place. The one on Meridian. I've been wanting to take you for weeks."

Sienna's laugh—low, pleased, already possessive—curled through the speaker.

Ten seconds. Maybe less.

My thumb hovered over the keyboard, shaking so slightly that anyone watching might have mistaken it for a chill. The words I wanted to type were already formed, already burning in my throat: *I heard everything. I heard all of it.*

I didn't type them.

Something moved through me—not calm, exactly, but something that wore calm's face. It came up from somewhere deep, from a place I didn't recognize, cold and deliberate and utterly still. I watched my own thumb move across the screen like it belonged to someone else.

*Sure, whatever works 🙂*

Send.

I set the phone face-down on the dresser. Gently. The way you set down something that could go off.

For a long moment I just stood there, listening to the faint sound of my own breathing, and the distant murmur of Kade and Sienna's voices still leaking from the earbud. I pulled it out and coiled the wire around my fingers, slow and methodical, until the voices disappeared.

The bedroom looked exactly as it had twenty minutes ago. Lavender diffuser humming. Late light slanting through the curtains. The scattered laundry on the floor, Harper's tiny clothes in small soft piles.

Nothing had changed.

Everything had changed.

I walked to the living room.

The crayon drawing was on the coffee table where it had been since morning. I'd seen it when I brought in the laundry basket—glanced at it, registered it, moved on. Harper was always drawing. Stick figures and suns and dogs that looked like clouds.

I picked it up now.

Three figures. The tallest one had a label in Harper's careful, crooked letters: *daddy*. The shortest—the one with the stumpy arms and the scribbled dark hair—said *mommy*. Between them, or maybe slightly apart from them, was a third figure. Yellow hair, long and flowing, rendered in Harper's most deliberate strokes. The kind of strokes she used when she was trying to get something right.

Next to that figure, in letters that tilted uphill: *ella*.

I'd thought it was a teacher. A classmate. Some character from a cartoon.

I set the drawing back down on the table, face-up, and looked at it for another moment. Then I went to the kitchen.

The salmon was in the refrigerator, wrapped in paper from the good fish market three blocks over. I'd bought it yesterday without thinking, the same way I bought it every two weeks because Kade liked it with miso glaze and I had learned, over twelve years, to anticipate what Kade liked.

I unwrapped it. Found the scallions in the crisper drawer. Started chopping.

The knife was sharp. The sound it made against the cutting board was clean and rhythmic, and I focused on that—the sound, the motion, the thin green coins of scallion accumulating at the blade's edge.

When did he start locking his phone?

I kept chopping.

Two years ago. Maybe a little more. He'd said it was a work thing—sensitive client files, the IT department had sent a memo. I'd believed him because it was a reasonable thing to believe, and because I was tired, and because Harper had just started kindergarten and we were both adjusting to the new schedule, and there were a hundred small fires to manage every day, and I didn't have the bandwidth to go looking for larger ones.

The knife moved.

There was a night last February. He'd come home at two in the morning, the third time that month he'd worked past midnight. I'd been half-asleep on the couch, waiting, and when he leaned down to kiss my forehead I'd caught it—a citrus note, sharp and bright, not his cologne. Not mine. I'd filed it away under *probably nothing* and gone to bed.

I'd been filing things away for years, apparently. A very organized, very tidy archive of *probably nothing*.

The scallions were done. I moved to the miso paste, measuring by instinct, the way my hands had learned to do this without my brain's involvement.

I didn't cry. I noticed that. I kept waiting for the tears to come back, the way they had in Harper's bedroom, the chest-heaving, vision-blurring kind. But they didn't. My hands were steady. My breathing was even. The kitchen smelled like fish and miso and the faintest trace of the morning's coffee, and I moved through it all like I was underwater—muffled, slow, precise.

The front door lock turned.

"Babe, we're home!"

Harper's feet hit the entryway tile—I knew the sound, the particular rapid-fire patter of her sneakers when she was excited—and then she came around the corner at full speed, arms out, and crashed into my legs.

"Mama!"

I looked down at her.

Her nails were painted. Bright pink, the glossy, high-shimmer kind, catching the kitchen light as her small hands gripped my jeans. Each nail perfectly done. No smears, no amateur edges. Someone who knew what they were doing had painted my daughter's nails.

I knew the color. I had heard Sienna ask Harper which kind she wanted—sparkly or shimmer—and I had heard Harper choose shimmer, her voice bright with delight, and now the evidence of it was right here, pressed against my leg, asking me wordlessly to look.

I looked.

Kade came into the kitchen behind her, moving with the easy, unhurried confidence of a man who had no idea the floor had shifted beneath him. He was still wearing his jacket. His smile was the one I knew well—warm, slightly tired, the *good husband home from the park* smile. He'd been practicing it for years. So had I.

"Something smells great," he said.

I lifted my eyes from Harper's nails to his face.

There it was—the smell. It hit me when Harper tightened her arms around my knees, her face pressed into my thigh, her hair fanned out against my hip. Sweet and heavy and unmistakable. A perfume I didn't own, had never owned, that had no business being in my daughter's hair.

Sienna's perfume. Soaked in, the way scent does when you've been close to someone for hours.

My chest locked. Something cold and absolute moved through me, from the base of my spine to the back of my teeth.

I smiled.

I felt myself do it—felt the muscles move, the corners of my mouth lift, the expression settle into place like a mask I'd apparently been keeping in a drawer for exactly this moment.

"Today was fun?" I asked.

My voice came out even. Warm, even. The voice of a woman who had spent a pleasant afternoon at home, folding laundry, making dinner, waiting for her family.

Kade's smile didn't flicker. "Yeah, good day. She wore herself out on the swings."

Harper pulled back to look up at me, her face flushed and happy, those pink nails still curled around my leg. "Daddy pushed me so high I could see the whole park!"

"I bet you could," I said.

I reached down and smoothed her hair back from her forehead, my fingers moving through the strands slowly, deliberately, as if I could find the shape of the afternoon hidden there—every laugh, every nail painted, every moment I hadn't been present for.

Kade moved to the counter, glancing at the pan. "Miso salmon? You didn't have to do all this."

"I wanted to," I said.

And I kept smiling, and the scent of Sienna's perfume rose from my daughter's hair like smoke, and across the kitchen my husband smiled back at me, and neither of us said a single true thing.

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