The Ghost in My House Was Me - Chapter 1: Chapter 1

Book: The Ghost in My House Was Me Chapter 1 2025-10-16

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My procrastinating son is in tears, scrambling to finish homework due tomorrow, while my emotionally distant husband sits glued to his video game, headphones on—blissfully tuned out.
Neither of them wants anything to do with me.
My son shoots me a resentful glare after I scolded him to the point of tears. My husband acts like I'm invisible, as if acknowledging me would shatter whatever fragile peace he's carved out in his digital world.
I clear the dinner table in silence, stacking plates with mechanical precision, telling myself this mess is my own fault.
But the ache in my chest won't listen to reason.
Night settles in. Kevin retreats to the study to sleep—or pretend to. Tommy dozes off, tear tracks still glistening on his cheeks. And me? I'm left staring at my own exhausted reflection in the bathroom mirror, wondering how we got here.
Three months. That's how long Kevin's been giving me the silent treatment. Three whole months—so long I've almost forgotten what started our cold war in the first place.
Under the same roof, and not a single word. I've dug in my heels, refusing to bend. He was wrong, so he should apologize. But here I am, wide awake at midnight, creeping into Tommy's room to pack his schoolbag like some kind of guilty ghost.
That's when I see it—the new notebook I bought him. Flipping to the "Rewards" section, my breath catches at the shaky, childish scrawl:
"I wish Mom would disappear."
I rubbed my eyes, certain I must have misread the words.
Grabbing the notebook, I stumbled into the living room and read the line again:
"I hope Mom disappears. She looks so scary when she screams at Dad. She's the reason he left."
My legs gave out. I collapsed onto the couch, hit by a pain so sharp it left me numb.
Then—light flooded the study. Kevin stepped out, smiling to himself—until he saw me. His expression iced over instantly. Without a word, he snatched his car keys off the coffee table.
As he passed, the scent of gardenia cologne hit me.
My gardenia cologne.
I'd picked it for him back in college, back when he was just a scrawny engineering nerd in black-framed glasses and baggy tees. I'd upgraded his whole wardrobe, even taught him how to wear fragrance. "Girls notice this stuff," I'd said. He'd promised to treasure everything I gave him.
Twelve years later, he still wore it.
That familiar sweetness tugged at me, dragging up old memories—our stupid fights, our sweet boy, the wreck we'd made of us. Tommy's words had carved me open, and suddenly, I was scrambling for anything to stitch myself back together. Pride be damned.
I lurched up from the couch and grabbed his arm.
"Kevin. Please. Let's talk."
Tears streaked my cheeks, silent.
He shook me off—just as his phone lit up with an active call.
Who the hell was he talking to at midnight? And why was he wearing cologne for them?
A girl's voice, sugar-sweet, crackled through the speaker: "Kevin, you coming? I'm downstairs. I've been dying for BBQ!"
That voice—young, effortless—hit like a bucket of ice water. Of course. This was why he'd been freezing me out.
I spun away, but Kevin caught my wrist.
He arched a brow, lips quirking. "Beg me, and I'll stay. Keep you and Tommy company."
Beg.
He always loved this—watching me fold, grovel, need him. Especially now, with some girl half his age dangling on the line. His offer wasn't kindness. It was a power move, a patronizing pat on the head.

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