My name is Eric, and if you’d asked me a few weeks ago, I would’ve said I had the kind of life most people dream of. I’ve been married to Rachel for six years, and we have a bright, spirited five-year-old daughter named Lila. Our life was simple.
Steady. At least, that’s what I believed. Lila is the type of child who makes every day a little lighter.
Her laughter echoes through the house like music, and she has this way of turning even mundane things—like grocery shopping or rainy afternoons—into tiny adventures. She has Rachel’s eyes and my unshakable stubbornness. Honestly, she’s my world.
Rachel, on the other hand, was always my anchor. Steady. Sensible.
Real. One of the things I admired most about her was how grounded she seemed. She wasn’t into frills—she owned exactly one pair of high heels, swore off lipstick as “sticky nonsense,” and had no time for flashy clothes or over-the-top routines.
She liked to keep it natural, and that suited me just fine. That’s why the first signs didn’t register as anything but cute quirks. Lila started strutting around in those very same high heels, wobbling like a tiny giraffe on stilts.
“I’m just like Mommy,” she’d declare, smudged with lipstick, her curls bouncing as she twirled in Rachel’s old dress shirts like they were gowns. At first, I just laughed. “You’re the most beautiful princess in the kingdom,” I’d tell her, scooping her up and planting a kiss on her cheek.
She’d squeal and wrap her arms around my neck like it was the greatest compliment she’d ever received. But then I noticed it was happening more and more. Lipstick.
Dresses. High heels. Little comments about “Mommy’s red shoes” and “Mommy’s pretty makeup.” Something started gnawing at me.
I couldn’t shake the feeling that something wasn’t adding up. One night, after dinner, Lila was giving her dolls a “makeover,” complete with scribbled red lips made from a crayon she insisted was lipstick. Rachel was humming in the kitchen, doing the dishes, the same woman I’d always known—barefaced and barefoot.
I called Lila over, patting my lap. “Hey, sweet pea. You always say you’re dressing like Mommy… but Mommy doesn’t wear this stuff, does she?”
She frowned, clearly confused.
“Yes, she does. Every day. When you’re at work.”
My heart skipped a beat.
“What do you mean?”
She shrugged, like it was the most obvious thing in the world. “She wears the red shoes and puts on lipstick in the car. Then she drops me at Aunt Carrie’s house and goes.”
Now, Aunt Carrie—Rachel’s older sister—did watch Lila now and then, but not daily.
Definitely not every day. I tried to keep my tone calm. “And where does Mommy go?”
Lila puffed out her cheeks.
“I dunno. She says it’s a secret grown-up place.”
I was quiet. My mind was racing.
I nodded, kissed her forehead, and tried to smile. “Thanks, princess.”
Rachel came in a minute later, smiling like nothing in the world was off. “What are you two whispering about?”
“Princess stuff,” I said, forcing a smile, but the words tasted wrong in my mouth.
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