No Longer Your Perfect Husband
s, I was the p
he perfect l
iends of my parents, took me in. They paid for my final year of school and,
mance. It was
ul, intelligent, and completely uninterested in domestic life
agr
e. Lily Davies. It sounded right, somehow. She looked just lik
ist and took a stable graphic design j
l into a ri
ol, went to work, and no matter what, I was home by five
d a day. I ne
and the hot meals. She never said
e Ethan. Not
ia's mother, told her
was di
uge national campaign. My boss insisted on a celebratory dinner. It
ted O
. Celebrating a prom
. That w
y called me a genius. For a few hours, I felt like the old me,
g house were on. I walked up to the front d
ss D
gain. Sam
changed
cold night air seeping into my s
Lily? I
ass panel beside the door, I saw a small shadow. It wa
't open
gain, harde
e door. It's c
The shado
to voicemail. I called the house line. It
y bones. It wasn't just about being locked out. It was about what it meant. After s
ck again. I
h swing, sat down, and wa
de. I walked to my car, drove to a
lled me, around noon, I was a
r ride to school, and I have a meetin
" I said calmly. "I'
n the other end. Then
ause you had to spend one night
cooking and cleaning. My abandoned art. My daughter who called me by my
tely,"
nd authoritative. The tone she use
. You can divorce me. But you can't tak
gave me a cautious look. I
"I'll waive my parental righ
ear her shock th
me. You can have the car, too. It's in your fath
ing, and then Lily's voice, small and cle
the child. But I also heard the unmistakable sound of
he final c
you doing? If this is about last night, I'm sorr
ng. The lock was just a
livia," I said. "The lawye
up th
shed over me. It felt like taking off a heavy
like lib
was a respectable, stable career. He had looked at my paintings
to provide, Ethan. N
pro
house every six months. She treated me like a well-dressed butler, introducing me to her frie
g of calling at six to say she was out with friends and wouldn't be h
thousand
avings account I had contributed to, my parental rights. I walked out of th
y lawyer with pity. "H
his head. "He says th
via' s father
his voice laced with patronizing concern.
a cage," I replied, and wal
the skyscrapers shrink in the distance. I didn't kn