Wren struggles to stay together at a family cookout as betrayal weighs on her. Despite secrets, simmering tensions, and a father-in-law who won’t stop praising the one woman she can’t stand, she finally tells the truth. I imagined turning 30 this spring would be like finding stability.
When Stella, my mother-in-law, laid the lemon cake in front of me, I closed my eyes and hoped for a year of joy, peaceful stability, and the belief that Jordan and I had weathered the hardest storms after five years of marriage. “Happy birthday, Wren,” she murmured affectionately. I reassured myself that we would always find each other and that our flaws had strengthened us.
As I ate the frosting, I didn’t understand I was yearning for a broken life and a marriage that was crumbling in ways I couldn’t see. Lisa. Lisa always existed.
Jordan was a thorn in my side from the start. Jordan’s mouth dropped the name of the woman who seemed to be everywhere in our marriage. He called her his “girl best friend,” which seemed silly coming from a 30-year-old male, but I tried to believe it.
“Relax, Wren,” he murmured while making supper burritos. “Lisa and I have known each other for years. If something was meant to happen, it would have — a long time ago.”
Though he was trying to soothe me, his statements sounded more like a warning or omen.
Lisa had known Jordan since childhood, and their relationship appeared unbreakable. I could never match its past. I told myself every marriage had concessions, and she was mine.
Still, compromises increased. Lisa entered locations I thought were ours. She went on family vacations, watched movies on our couch with Jordan, and texted him often.
Their chats felt secret, like I was never invited. I tried not to be petty or insecure, but every time his phone lit up with her name, I felt uneasy. I described my feelings when we cleaned up one night.
“It’s not that I don’t like Lisa,” I remarked gently, rinsing plates under the tap. “It’s just… she’s always here. And sometimes it feels like she lives in this marriage too.
That’s not normal, right?”
Jordan stacked bowls too rapidly and sharply. “You’re overthinking it, Wren. She’s like a sister to me.
You’re making this into something it’s really not.”
“I don’t think I am, Jordan,” I said. “I see the way you look at her. And she doesn’t exactly act like a sister would.”
His irritated sigh was long.
“We’ve been friends forever. You can’t expect me to cut her out of my life just because you’re feeling jealous.”
The word hurt. Jealous.
My uneasiness was dismissed as pettiness. Because I wanted to believe him, I stopped arguing. I hoped he meant Lisa was simply a friend.
Sometimes, when she sat across from me at dinner, smiling confidently, I almost convinced myself she meant nothing. Almost. Only Stella, my mother-in-law, saw me.
Her eyes caught my anxiety even as I tried to hide it. At dinner, she would gently touch my hand or lean close when others were distracted. “Don’t let them make you think you’re crazy, sweetheart,” she said.
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