
Wife Reclaims Her Power
Wife Reclaims Her Power Chapter 1
I stared at my reflection in the mirror, the designer dress hanging awkwardly on my frame. The fabric bunched at my waist and pooled around my feet in a way that made me look like a child playing dress-up in her mother's clothes. This was supposed to be my birthday gift—something special from my husband of three years. Instead, it felt like another reminder of how little Max truly saw me.
Taking a deep breath, I stepped out of the bedroom, trying to smooth the material as best I could. "Max? I think there might be something wrong with the sizing."
Max barely glanced up from his phone, his thumb continuing to scroll through whatever had captured his attention more thoroughly than I could. After a moment, his eyes flicked over me dismissively.
"I just realized how short your legs are," he said, his tone casual as if commenting on the weather. "No wonder the dress looks so ridiculous on you."
The words hit me like a physical blow. I stood frozen, the expensive fabric suddenly feeling like sandpaper against my skin. Three years of marriage, and this was what he saw when he looked at me—flaws to be cataloged and mentioned offhandedly.
I retreated to the bathroom, locking the door behind me as tears welled in my eyes. Leaning against the cool tile wall, I slid down until I was sitting on the floor, the ridiculous dress pooling around me. Through the door, I could hear the faint sound of Max's continued scrolling, the occasional chuckle indicating he'd found something amusing online.
He hadn't even noticed I'd left the room.
I don't know how long I sat there, but eventually I composed myself, changed into my regular clothes, and prepared dinner as I always did. The birthday candles I'd bought earlier that week remained in the drawer. There was nothing worth celebrating anymore.
Dinner was a quiet affair, the tension between us thick enough to cut with the knife that lay unused beside my barely touched plate. Max cleared his throat, setting down his fork with deliberate precision.
"Lauren Bell is coming back to the city," he announced, not meeting my eyes.
Lauren Bell. His first love. The woman whose name I'd heard whispered in his sleep more times than I cared to admit.
"She needs a place to stay for a while," Max continued, his tone suggesting the matter was already decided. "I told her she could stay with us."
The fork in my hand trembled slightly. "For how long?"
"A few months, maybe longer." He took a sip of water. "She'll need the master bedroom."
"Our bedroom?" I couldn't keep the shock from my voice. "Where are we supposed to sleep?"
"You can take the guest room," Max said, as if it were the most reasonable solution in the world. "And Lauren will need your mother's bedding set."
My heart stopped. "My mother's...? Max, you know what that means to me. My mother made that by hand before she—"
"Lauren is pregnant and needs comfort more than you do," he cut me off, his voice hardening. "Besides, it's just fabric."
Just fabric. The last gift my mother had given me before cancer took her—the bedding she'd spent months creating while undergoing chemotherapy—reduced to "just fabric" in my husband's eyes.
In that moment, something inside me broke. Or perhaps it finally woke up.
I didn't sleep that night. Instead, I lay awake in our bed—soon to be Lauren's bed—running my fingers over the intricate stitching my mother had lovingly created, memorizing every pattern, every thread.
The next morning, Lauren arrived with the confidence of someone who had never doubted her welcome. Her perfectly manicured hand extended toward me in a mockery of politeness as Max carried her designer luggage into our home.
"Diana, right? Max has told me so much about you," she said, though her eyes suggested he had told her very little of consequence.
I watched in silent horror as she swept through our home—my home—with Max trailing behind her like an eager puppy. When they reached the master bedroom, Lauren surveyed it with calculating eyes before running her fingers over my mother's handmade bedding.
"Quaint but adequate," she declared, then turned to me with a smile that never reached her eyes. "Thank you for being so understanding about this arrangement. Max told me how accommodating you are."
Max hovered nearby, clearly enchanted by his ex-lover's presence, completely oblivious to my silent devastation. As Lauren began unpacking her belongings, placing her expensive perfumes on the vanity where my modest collection had once stood, I knew with absolute certainty that my marriage was over.
What Max didn't know—what neither of them knew—was that Diana Cruz, the accommodating housewife, was about to disappear. And in her place, the true heiress to Cruz Holdings would emerge.
Wife Reclaims Her Power of Contents
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