Truthfully, I just needed space to think. Brian believed I was still unemployed, broken, vulnerable, afraid to face the world. He had no idea I was still working, no idea I’d just been promoted, no idea I was using the time to pull myself together.
Quietly, carefully, I froze when I heard not one, but two voices enter the house. The second voice didn’t belong to a co-worker or a friend. It belonged to Linda, my mother-in-law.
I stepped silently into the hallway, standing just beyond the crack of the guest room door. I knew I shouldn’t listen, but something about the way they spoke, so casually in the middle of a weekday, made my skin crawl. So, Linda’s voice rang sharp and familiar.
Why the sudden midday visit? Everything alright? It’s all going exactly as planned, Brian replied, sounding almost pleased. She told me she got fired yesterday. Totally devastated, just like you predicted.
I covered my mouth with my hand, willing myself not to gasp. Finally, Linda said, exhaling with satisfaction. She won’t have any choice now.
She’ll have to agree to our terms. My knees buckled slightly. I leaned against the wall, heart pounding so loudly I could barely hear what came next.
She’s completely dependent on me now, Brian continued. Selling the house is just a matter of time. Linda let out a smug little chuckle.
See, I told you that girl was never right for you. Too ambitious. Too independent.
You really think she’d be with you if it weren’t for your father’s house? It felt like being punched in the chest. That house had been our home for a decade. I’d invested so much of myself into it.
My time, my money, my heart. And now, they were planning to sell it like I was just some tenant they’d finally tricked into leaving. Don’t start, Mom, Brian said with a sigh.
We already talked about this. And what about Claire? Linda asked, when are you going to tell her it’s time? Claire. The name hit me like ice water down my spine.
Claire Jennings. I knew who she was, vaguely. Mark’s girlfriend before the accident.
Mark, Brian’s older brother, who died in a car crash three years ago. Claire had disappeared after the funeral. I had no idea Brian had kept in touch, let alone.
She’s ready, Brian said, voice suddenly gentler. The baby’s doing great. Claire says he’s growing fast, already looks just like Mark.
My stomach twisted violently. I’ll adopt him as soon as the divorce goes through, Brian continued, almost like he was discussing a business deal. He’ll be my son, our son.
I couldn’t breathe. Linda purred. Just think how happy Claire will be when she hears the house is going up for sale.
She’s waited so long for this. My ears were ringing. My vision blurred.
This wasn’t just betrayal. This was a coordinated replacement. They weren’t just planning to leave me.
They were planning to erase me. And the worst part was, I had no idea how long this had been going on. No clue how many smiles, how many kisses had been lies, rehearsed, strategic, calculated.
My husband wasn’t just cheating. He was plotting. I always knew Claire was the one for you, Linda said, her voice melting into that sickly sweet tone she reserved for people she actually liked.
You two are perfect together. It’s just a shame you met her too late after you married that one. That one.
That’s how she referred to me. Not Rachel. Not your wife.
Just that one. A placeholder. An obstacle.
I bit down on my knuckle to keep from making a sound. My entire body was shaking, but I couldn’t stop listening. I needed to hear everything.
Let’s not get carried away, Brian muttered. We still have to make sure Rachel doesn’t fight us on the divorce. She won’t, Linda replied confidently.
Not if you handle it right. Remind her she has nowhere to go. No job.
No savings. She’ll fold. I clenched my fists, every nerve in my body screaming.
They thought I was powerless, that I was trapped. But I wasn’t. Not yet.
Not entirely. And what if she doesn’t fold? Linda asked. What if she gets a lawyer? Brian’s voice dropped, low and calm.
Too calm. Then we hit her with the infidelity angle. I nearly stumbled backward.
What infidelity? Linda asked. Doesn’t matter, Brian said. I’ve got a few old photos from that conference she went to two years ago.
Just her with some colleagues. But they can be interpreted the right way. Enough to raise doubt.
You’re a clever boy, Linda cooed. Just like your father. But he wasn’t done.
If that doesn’t work, Brian continued. We accused her of leaking internal documents. She worked with sensitive client files.
She brought stuff home all the time. I’ll say I caught her trying to sell data to competitors. I felt my knees give way.
And I sank slowly to the floor. My hands were ice cold. My husband, the man who once held my hair back while I threw up from food poisoning, who painted our bedroom walls while I picked the color, was planning to destroy my life from the inside out.