Chapter 1

"X equals four, Y equals twelve." Lucas tapped his yellow pencil against the grid of his graph paper.

"Are you sure about the variable?" I held out a ceramic plate of sliced apples.

"Variables are absolute. People are not." My seven-year-old son didn't look up. He tapped his forehead twice with his index finger. It was a self-soothing rhythm he used when the math got complicated.

Genius. Asperger's. The two labels that defined my entire existence.

"Did you finish the geometry assignment for school?" I walked closer to his desk.

"Shapes are rudimentary. I moved on to cryptography."

"You need to do your homework, Lucas."

"The public education system fails to challenge my intellect."

"Mrs. Gable said you refused to participate in art class today."

"Finger painting lacks algorithmic structure, Mom."

"You still have to try."

"Trying implies a possibility of failure. I do not fail at art. I simply reject it."

"Eat a slice of apple." I pushed the plate closer, changing the subject.

"Sugar spikes disrupt cognitive flow."

"Just one."

"Negative."

The bedroom door swung open. Julian walked in, forcefully loosening his silk tie.

"Who is rejecting what?" Julian asked.

"Art class."

"He doesn't need art." Julian bypassed me completely and leaned over the small desk. "He needs logic."

"He needs to socialize with kids his age, Julian."

"He's a genius, Theresa. Stop trying to make him average."

"I just want him to be happy."

"He is happy. Right, buddy?" Julian patted the boy's shoulder.

"Emotional states are subjective. I am currently engaged." Lucas kept his eyes on the screen.

"See?" Julian smirked at me. "He's perfectly fine."

"He had a meltdown yesterday because someone sat in his assigned chair at the library."

"Because you didn't manage his schedule properly." Julian dismissed my concern with a wave of his hand. "What are you working on now, Lucas?"

"I am compiling the string array." His small fingers flew across the mechanical keyboard. "It requires a nested loop to decrypt the ASCII values."

"Show me." Julian pointed at the monitor.

I stood there holding the fruit. Invisible in my own home.

"Your mother wouldn't understand this part," Julian muttered to Lucas.

"Mom doesn't code."

"I used to."

"That was a long time ago." Julian crossed his arms. "Let's run the execution command, Lucas."

I stepped closer, ignoring the slight. I looked at the screen.

"Eighty-seven is W."

Julian paused. He glanced at me over his shoulder. "What?"

"The first ASCII value in your array. It's a capital W."

"You remember ASCII tables?" Julian sounded genuinely surprised.

"I was top of my class, Julian. One-hundred-one is E. Thirty-two is a space."

Lucas typed rapidly. "Mom is correct. The decryption is processing."

"Let him finish it himself." The surprise morphed immediately back into annoyance.

I read the rest of the numbers on the screen. 108, 111, 118, 101. L-o-v-e.

65, 117, 110, 116. A-u-n-t.

77, 97, 110, 100, 121. M-a-n-d-y.

*We love Aunt Mandy.*

I stopped breathing for a second. My jaw locked tight. The muscles in my face turned to stone. The encouraging smile I had worn for the last twenty minutes vanished.

"Run the script," Julian ordered.

The terminal window flashed green. The text printed across the black background.

*We love Aunt Mandy.*

"The syntax is flawless." Julian squeezed Lucas's shoulder. "She's going to love this."

"Aunt Mandy appreciates logical expressions of affection."

Mandy. The ghost from Paris. Julian's first love. The woman who moved back to New York three months ago and slowly began infecting every corner of my marriage.

"Mom, your face is performing a micro-expression of distress." Lucas adjusted his glasses.

Julian finally looked at me. His gaze swept over my stiff posture.

"What is wrong with you now?"

"Who asked him to write this?" My voice trembled slightly.

"I did."

"Why?"

"Because Mandy helped me secure the new venture capital funding today. She likes Lucas. I thought a thank-you message from him would be a nice touch."

"A thank-you message that says 'We love you'?"

"Don't start this paranoid nonsense again, Theresa."

"She's been back from Paris for three months, Julian. You see her every single week."

"We work together."

"You used to sleep together."

Julian's eyes darkened. "If you're sick, go to the hospital. I'm not a doctor. Telling me is useless."

"I'm not sick. I'm your wife."

"You're acting crazy. Put the fruit down and leave us alone."

I set the glass plate on the edge of the desk. The ceramic clinked softly against the wood.

"Don't drip water on the keyboard," Julian added.

I didn't answer. I turned around and walked out, closing the door quietly behind me.

My throat began to itch the second I reached the bottom of the stairs.

I coughed, pressing a hand to my chest.

On the glass coffee table sat a massive bouquet of red roses. Dozens of them, wrapped in expensive gold paper.

I took a step back. My skin prickled. Pollen allergy. Severe.

"Lucas!"

The bedroom door upstairs opened. Footsteps approached the landing. Julian appeared, fixing his gaze down at me.

"Stop yelling." Julian gripped the wooden banister. "He's trying to focus."

"Where did these come from?" I pointed at the table.

Lucas peeked out from behind his father's legs. "I brought them inside."

"Why are there flowers here, Lucas?"

"Aunt Mandy said the house needs a relaxing scent," Lucas yelled down the stairs. "She told me to buy them with my allowance."

"You know I'm allergic to pollen."

"Aunt Mandy said exposure therapy builds immunity."

"Mandy is not a doctor!"

"Neither are you," Julian fired back.

"I am his mother! And your wife! I could go into anaphylactic shock!"

"You're being dramatic." Julian scoffed. "If you don't like them, throw them away. Stop traumatizing the boy over a nice gesture."

"A nice gesture? She is marking her territory!"

"She bought him a new jacket yesterday," I continued, anger fueling my words.

"So?"

"I already bought him a winter coat."

"Hers is better quality. Stop being ungrateful."

"She's trying to play mother to my son!”

“That’s enough Theresa, you’re mad.”

I felt my blood running cold.

Chapter 2

I grabbed the gold wrapping paper. The heavy scent of red roses instantly burned my nostrils.

"I'm throwing them out." I yanked the bouquet toward my chest.

Julian stepped off the bottom stair and snatched the stems. Thorns scraped my palm.

"Mandy bought these." He tightened his grip on the flowers.

"Mandy abandoned you." I coughed, rubbing my itchy throat.

"She relocated for her education."

"She fled." I stepped closer, ignoring the watering in my eyes. "Ten years ago, she couldn't stand to be in the same room as you."

"Human memory is flawed. You are rewriting history."

"Am I? We were all at the same university. You were the golden boy. The billionaire Prescott heir. She was the beautiful art major. And I was just the invisible girl in the computer science lab."

"Your coding skills were adequate." Julian placed the roses back on the glass table.

"She hated your condition, Julian. She hated your Asperger's."

"Mandy appreciated my intellect."

"She cried in the campus courtyard because you refused to comfort her when her dog died." I pointed a finger at his chest. "She called you a monster. That's why she bought a one-way ticket to Paris."

"Her emotional regulation was poor at the time. She has matured."

"She left because you wouldn't hold her hand! She couldn't handle the coldness. The silence. The absolute lack of empathy."

"I possess empathy. I simply express it efficiently."

"You didn't express anything back then." I crossed my arms, trying to stop my hands from shaking. "You stopped eating. You stopped going to classes. Your mother showed up at my dorm room in tears."

"My mother overreacts."

"She got down on her knees, Julian." My voice cracked. "She knew I had a crush on you. She begged me to marry you. To save you."

"A mutually beneficial contract." He adjusted his cuffs, his face completely blank.

"It wasn't a contract to me. I loved you."

"Love is a neurochemical illusion. I married you because my mother presented a statistical probability of long-term stability. You possessed a low-maintenance personality."

"Low maintenance?" I let out a sharp, bitter laugh. "I spent ten years managing your life! I learned every trigger. I mapped out your routines. I gave up my senior internship to be your full-time caretaker."

"A logical choice. You were better suited for domestic management."

"I spent three years teaching you how to smile at business dinners." I stepped into his personal space. "I taught you how to shake hands without flinching. I built the mask you wear every single day."

"Masks are necessary for corporate survival. Your coaching was effective."

"I thought I healed you." The fight drained out of my voice, leaving only exhaustion. "You started making eye contact. You started engaging in conversations. I thought my dedication fixed the broken parts of you."

Julian tilted his head. "You provided a stable baseline. You did not fix anything."

"Three months," I whispered. "She's been back from Paris for three months."

"She is a valuable asset to my company."

"You bought her a diamond necklace last week."

"It was a performance bonus for closing the tech merger."

"You never buy me jewelry."

"You do not attend galas. Jewelry would be an inefficient use of capital for a stay-at-home mother."

"Lucas wrote her a decryption code just to say he loves her! He won't even hug me!"

"Mandy stimulates his intellect. You force him to paint with his fingers."

"I spent five years trying to get my own son to hug me!" I shouted, the anger flaring back to life. "He says physical touch burns his skin. But yesterday, I saw him hold Mandy's hand in the driveway."

"Mandy's perfume has a calming lavender base." Julian checked his watch. "Your detergent is abrasive."

"I use the unscented hypoallergenic brand you demanded!"

"Then it is your energy. You project anxiety. Mandy projects peace."

A heavy silence fell over the living room.

I stared at the man I had devoted my entire adult life to. The man I had sacrificed my career, my youth, and my identity to protect.

Footsteps padded across the upstairs landing.

Lucas walked down the stairs. He held a silver tablet in his hands.

"Dad, Aunt Mandy is initiating a video call."

Julian's rigid posture vanished. The stiff lines of his shoulders dropped. A faint, genuine smile touched his lips.

"Bring the device here, Lucas."

Lucas hurried down the remaining steps and handed his father the tablet.

"Hi, Mandy," Julian said.

His tone was soft. Warm. It was a voice I hadn't heard in a decade.

"Julian! Did Lucas finish the code?" A bright, melodic voice echoed from the speaker.

"He did. You should see his array structure. It's brilliant."

"Put him on the screen!"

Lucas stepped into the frame, leaning against his father's leg. "Aunt Mandy, the ASCII values compiled perfectly."

"You are my absolute favorite genius," Mandy said.

Lucas actually smiled. A real, wide smile that crinkled the corners of his eyes. He reached out and touched the screen. "Your visual presence elevates my serotonin levels."

I backed away from them.

My husband and my son. Glowing. Happy.

They weren't incapable of love. They weren't devoid of emotion.

They just reserved all of it for her.

"Theresa?" Mandy's voice called out from the tablet. "Are you there? Did you like the roses?"

Julian glanced at me. He looked at the red petals on the glass table.

"She tried to throw them away," Julian said flatly.

"Oh." Mandy sounded hurt. "I just wanted to brighten up your home."

"She lacks aesthetic appreciation," Lucas added, not looking away from the screen.

My chest caved in. The two people I had built my entire existence around were dismissing me like a broken appliance.

I turned and walked toward the stairs.

"Where are you going?" Julian called out, annoyance creeping back into his tone.

"To do laundry," I lied.

I climbed the steps. I didn't stop at the bedroom. I walked straight down the hall and stepped into Julian's home office.

I locked the heavy oak door behind me.

The room was dark, save for the blinking blue light of his primary workstation.

If I was just the invisible coder, the low-maintenance domestic manager, then I had nothing left to lose.

I sat in his leather chair and booted up the secondary monitor.

My fingers hovered over the mechanical keyboard.

It was time to see exactly what my husband had been hiding in his encrypted files for the last three months.

Chapter 3

The glowing monitor of Julian's computer reflected in my eyes. I reached for the mouse, ready to crack his encrypted folders.

My phone buzzed in my pocket. The sudden noise made me jump.

I pulled the device out. A calendar alert flashed on the screen. *Lucas's 8th Birthday.*

I stared at the glowing letters. The investigation could wait. My son needed me.

I spent the next six hours in the kitchen. I measured almond flour. I scraped fresh vanilla beans. Lucas despised artificial colors. He hated excessive sugar. For seven years, my kitchen was the only bakery he trusted. I frosted the edges perfectly white, ensuring no crumbs broke the smooth surface. He demanded geometric perfection.

"Mom, open the door," Lucas commanded from the foyer.

I wiped my hands on my apron. "Is your father home early?"

"I expedited an invitation."

I unlocked the front door and pulled the handle.

Mandy stood on the porch. She wore a tailored red dress and held a massive, neon-blue fondant cake.

"Theresa!" Mandy beamed. She stepped inside without waiting for an invitation. "I hope I am not intruding."

"You are," I said.

"Aunt Mandy!" Lucas bypassed me completely. His eyes locked onto the blue monstrosity. "The structural integrity of that icing is fascinating."

"I bought it from that French place downtown," Mandy announced. She walked past me and set it directly on my dining table. Right next to my homemade vanilla cake.

"Lucas does not eat food dye," I stated. I moved to intercept, placing myself between my son and the table. "It overstimulates his nervous system. You know this, Mandy."

"Actually, Theresa, exposure to new stimuli encourages neuroplasticity," Mandy countered smoothly. She handed Lucas a silver cake cutter. "Want to do the honors, genius?"

"Affirmative."

"Lucas, stop." I pointed at the white pastry. "I spent six hours on your cake. The vanilla bean. The one you specifically requested last week."

"Variables change," Lucas replied. He sliced into the bright blue sponge.

He lifted a piece to his mouth. I held my breath. I waited for the inevitable meltdown. I waited for him to scream about the texture, the artificial sweetness, the disruption to his routine.

He chewed. He swallowed.

"The sucrose levels are optimal," Lucas announced.

"See?" Mandy smiled at me, her lips curling at the edges. "He just needed a little push out of his comfort zone. You baby him too much, Theresa."

"I am his mother. I know his dietary restrictions."

"Restrictions limit growth," Mandy said.

"Have a piece of mine, Lucas." I pushed my glass plate forward. "Just one bite. Please."

Mandy leaned down. She rested her manicured hand on Lucas's shoulder. "You know, buddy, too many cakes might clutter the table. We need space for your presents. Your dad bought you that new drone you wanted."

Lucas analyzed the table. He looked at my cake. He looked at Mandy.

"This one is redundant," he said.

He picked up the heavy glass platter. Before I could process his trajectory, he tilted it over the stainless-steel trash can.

The cake hit the bottom with a heavy, wet thud. Frosting splattered against the plastic liner.

My hands went completely numb.

"Lucas!" I yelled.

He adjusted his glasses, utterly unbothered. "I optimized our surface area. The table is now efficient."

Mandy covered her mouth, feigning shock. "Oh, Theresa, I am so sorry. He is just so literal, is he not? I did not mean for him to throw it away."

She was not sorry. Her eyes danced with victory.

Tears burned my vision. My throat tightened until breathing became impossible.

"I need to get the cleaning supplies," I choked out, spinning around.

I retreated to the dark hallway. I pressed my back against the cool plaster wall, dragging a hand across my damp cheeks.

The front door clicked open. Julian's heavy footsteps echoed on the hardwood.

"Did I miss the sugar rush?" Julian asked.

"Dad!" Lucas chirped. "Aunt Mandy brought a superior confection."

"Is that right?" Julian's voice held a soft chuckle. "Mandy, you should not spoil him."

"It is impossible not to," Mandy said. "He is my favorite guy. You two are my family."

A pause stretched in the dining room. I held my breath. I waited for Julian to correct her. I waited for him to remind her of his actual wife standing just rooms away.

"We love you too, Mandy," Julian said.

His tone was gentle. Warm.

My heart stopped beating.

"I love you, Aunt Mandy," Lucas echoed.

The words slammed into my chest. They shattered every excuse I had built over the last decade.

*We love you.*

For ten years, I blamed them for never saying they loved me, but now they say it so easily to Mandy.

I used to think they just had a speech impediment, but now I understand, they just don't love me.

I stumbled backward toward the balcony doors before anyone could see my face crack apart.

Cold night air slammed against my skin the moment I stepped outside. The city lights below blurred into streaks of gold through my tears. I gripped the metal railing so hard my fingers ached.

Inside the dining room, laughter continued.

Mandy's bright voice. Lucas explaining drone specifications in excited detail. Julian's low chuckle threading between them like he belonged there. Like they were a perfect family portrait framed behind glass.

And I was the ghost standing outside it.

I pressed a trembling hand against my mouth to stop the sob escaping my throat.

For years, I defended them.

Julian was emotionally reserved, I told myself. Lucas struggled with emotional expression because of his condition. Love did not always need words. Love could exist in routines, in quiet companionship, in practical gestures.

I believed that. Desperately.

But tonight destroyed the lie.

They were capable of saying the words.

Just not to me.

The balcony door slid open behind me. I froze, but no footsteps followed. Through the narrow gap, I heard Mandy laugh softly.

"Honestly, Julian, Theresa gets too emotional over tiny things."

"Ignore her," Julian replied calmly. "She'll cool down eventually."

My chest tightened so violently it felt like my ribs were collapsing inward.

Ignore her.

Ten years of marriage reduced to two careless words.

I wiped my face roughly and pulled my phone from my pocket with shaking fingers. My contact list opened automatically to one familiar number.

Dad.

My thumb hovered above the screen for several seconds before I finally pressed call.

The line connected almost instantly.

"Theresa?" My father's deep voice carried quiet concern. "It's late. Is everything alright?"

A sob nearly escaped my throat again, but I swallowed it down.

I stared through the balcony glass at the family laughing without me.

Then I closed my eyes.

"Dad," I whispered, my voice breaking, "about returning home to take over the CTO position..."

I inhaled shakily.

"I've made my decision."

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