
Wife Reclaims Her Voice
Chapter 2
I couldn't sleep. The viral video of Leonardo failing to recognize my voice played on repeat in my mind, each cruel comment from strangers etching itself deeper into my heart. The digital clock on our nightstand glowed 12:17 AM when I finally gave up trying to close my eyes.
Leonardo's steady breathing beside me felt like a mockery. How could he sleep so peacefully while my world crumbled around me?
I slipped out of bed, my bare feet silent against our marble floors as I wandered through our penthouse. The city lights twinkled beyond our floor-to-ceiling windows, but I barely noticed them. My mind was elsewhere—caught in a loop of humiliation and doubt.
"Maybe I really am forgettable," I whispered to myself, the words hanging in the darkness.
Without consciously deciding where to go, I found myself standing outside Leonardo's study. The door was slightly ajar—unusual for him. He always locked it when he wasn't working.
"He wouldn't mind," I reasoned, though we both knew that wasn't true. Leonardo guarded his creative space fiercely.
I pushed the door open wider, the soft glow of his computer screen illuminating the room. He must have forgotten to turn it off before bed. As I moved to shut it down, something caught my eye—a folder structure displayed on the screen.
"Voice Recordings - Organized by Subject and Emotion."
My finger hovered over the mouse. This was an invasion of privacy. But then again, so was recording someone without their knowledge.
I clicked.
The folder expanded into dozens of subfolders, each meticulously labeled with names, dates, and emotional states. My breath caught as I saw my own name among them.
"Alexandria - Various Emotional States."
With trembling fingers, I opened it. Hundreds of audio files appeared, each timestamped and annotated with clinical precision.
"Alexandria_laughing_at_joke_2022-03-15.wav"
"Alexandria_crying_during_movie_scene_2022-04-01.wav"
"Alexandria_singing_in_shower_2022-05-10.wav"
The list went on and on. Every moment of vulnerability, every unguarded expression—all captured and cataloged like scientific specimens.
"Sadness, pitch drops significantly," read one note.
"Joy, natural vibrato emerges," said another.
I clicked on a file at random—my voice from our anniversary dinner last year, laughing at something Leonardo had said. The sound of my own laughter, isolated and analyzed, sent chills down my spine.
"How long has he been doing this?" I whispered.
I dug deeper into the folder structure, navigating through layers of recordings until I found something that made my blood run cold.
"Everly Training Sessions."
My finger froze over the mouse. What did that mean?
I opened the folder and found recordings organized by date, each with detailed notes about vocal techniques and emotional authenticity. The most recent one was from just three days ago.
With dread pooling in my stomach, I pressed play.
My own voice filled the room—a recording of me reading a poem at our wedding anniversary. The file was followed immediately by another—Everly's voice, attempting to recreate the same inflection and emotional tone.
"Again," Leonardo's voice instructed from the recording. "Listen to how Alexandria's voice breaks when she's truly heartbroken. Try to capture that vulnerability, but make it more elegant, more refined."
There was a pause, then Everly's voice again—closer to mimicking my emotional state but with a practiced polish that my raw vulnerability lacked.
"Better," Leonardo said. "Your natural voice is already more beautiful than hers."
I sat there in the darkness, listening to my husband teach another woman to steal my voice.
The morning light filtered through our bedroom curtains when I finally emerged from Leonardo's study. I hadn't slept. Instead, I'd spent hours printing out evidence of what I'd found—file directories, notes, timestamps—all documenting the systematic dismantling of my voice for another woman's benefit.
Leonardo was in the kitchen when I approached, coffee mug in hand, looking refreshed and oblivious.
"We need to talk," I said, my voice surprisingly steady despite the storm raging inside me.
He glanced at the papers in my hand, his expression shifting from confusion to wariness. "What's this?"
I spread the printouts across our marble countertop. "This is why you can't recognize my voice on TV. Because you've been too busy dissecting it for Everly."
Leonardo's face hardened as he scanned the documents. He didn't deny it—that would have been easier to bear than the cold justification that followed.
"Everly is an artist, Alexandria," he said, setting down his coffee cup with deliberate precision. "She needs guidance to reach her potential. Your voice has certain... qualities that can help her develop her emotional range."
I stared at him, incredulous. "You recorded me without my knowledge or consent."
He shrugged, his eyes never quite meeting mine. "I thought you'd be proud that your voice is contributing to something meaningful."
"Why can you recognize Everly's voice perfectly but not mine?" The question that had haunted me since the TV show finally escaped my lips.
Leonardo's expression turned to stone. "Some voices are simply more memorable than others," he said flatly. "It's not personal, it's biological."
In that moment, I realized I was married to a stranger who could hear everyone's voice but mine.
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