“Oh, it was on silent. I didn’t hear it.” My tone was calm, indifferent.
I turned to head upstairs, but before I could take another step, Hugo suddenly seized my arm.
“What’s wrong with you? Why are you dressed like this? And your hair, what kind of proper mother looks like this?”
I let out a cold laugh.
So that was all I amounted to in Hugo’s eyes. Just the mother of his child. Nothing more.
At that moment, Jasper leaped off the couch, his face scrunched up in disgust.
“Mom, you look so ugly now! Like some low-class thug! Change your hair back right away, or I’ll never let you pick me up from school again!”
I met his gaze, unbothered, my expression unreadable. Seconds stretched between us before I finally spoke.
“Do as you please.”
Jasper’s lips trembled. He hadn’t expected his usual threats to fall flat. The realization sent him into a full-blown tantrum, tears, stomping, wailing.
Ava smiled gently, pulling him into her arms.
“Jasper, don’t cry. If you keep crying, Auntie will feel heartbroken. If you want, I can pick you up from school instead.”
Jasper sniffled, touched by her kindness, and threw himself against her.
“Aunt Ava, you’re the best! I wish you were my mom.”
Then, he turned, glaring at me with resentment.
“Unlike some people, who only care about themselves and completely ignore their responsibilities as a mother. So selfish.”
Hugo’s sharp gaze softened the moment it landed on Ava. His voice, once cold and cutting, turned warm, indulgent.
“I’ve been busy with work and haven’t had time to take care of Jasper. I don’t know what I would’ve done without you.”
Ava’s cheeks flushed instantly. She lowered her gaze, feigning modesty.
“You’re too kind. If it weren’t for you taking me in, I might be homeless right now.”
A subtle warmth passed between them, an intimacy so blatant it made my stomach turn.
I watched in silence, my expression unreadable, yet a cold detachment settled deep within me.
How ridiculous. I felt like a stranger in my own home.
Could they not have waited a little longer? The wife was still here, yet they carried on as if I had already vanished.
Just a few more days, was that too much to ask?
Saying nothing, I turned and walked toward the bathroom. But the moment I stepped inside, I froze.
My towel. My toothbrush. Both were carelessly discarded behind the toilet tank like trash.