

Chapter 1 of The Maid with the Diamond Ring
The kitchen smelled of garlic and disappointment as I ladled the last of the chicken soup into Martha's bowl. My mother-in-law sat at the head of our dining table like a queen holding court, her silver hair perfectly coiffed despite it being nearly nine in the evening. The overhead light cast harsh shadows across her angular face, emphasizing the perpetual frown lines that had deepened over the three years I'd been married to her son.
"Finally," Martha muttered, not bothering to look up from her phone as I placed the bowl before her. "I was beginning to think you'd forgotten how to use a stove."
I bit back the urge to remind her that I'd been cooking dinner for this family every night since Ethan and I got married. Instead, I forced a smile and took my seat across from her, next to where Ethan was hunched over his laptop, completely absorbed in whatever game had captured his attention this time.
The familiar sound of gunfire and explosions echoed from his headset, loud enough that I could hear every digital bullet. He hadn't even acknowledged the meal I'd spent two hours preparing.
Martha lifted the spoon to her lips, and I watched her expression shift from mild annoyance to outright disgust. She dropped the spoon with a clatter that made me flinch.
"This is cold," she announced, her voice cutting through the kitchen like a blade. "Stone cold."
My heart sank. I'd kept the soup on low heat while waiting for everyone to come to dinner, but Martha had been on a phone call that stretched for forty minutes, and Ethan... well, Ethan had been gaming for the past three hours.
"I'm sorry, Martha. I can heat it up for you—"
"Heat it up?" She pushed the bowl away from her as if it were contaminated. "Do you think I'm some common peasant who eats reheated slop? This is exactly the kind of careless, thoughtless behavior I've come to expect from you, Olivia."
The words hit me like physical blows. I could feel heat creeping up my neck, a mixture of embarrassment and anger that I'd learned to swallow over the years.
"Mom's right," Ethan chimed in without looking up from his screen, his fingers still clicking rapidly across his keyboard. "You should pay more attention to timing. It's not that hard."
The casual cruelty in his voice—the way he dismissed me without even pausing his game—sent a sharp pain through my chest. This was my husband, the man who once promised to love and protect me, reducing me to nothing more than an inconvenience.
Martha's eyes glittered with satisfaction at her son's support. She leaned back in her chair, crossing her arms over her chest like a general who'd just won a battle.
"You see, Olivia, this is what happens when you don't apply yourself properly. In my day, wives took pride in their domestic duties. We understood that a man works hard all day and deserves to come home to a proper meal, served at the proper temperature, at the proper time."
I stared down at my own bowl of soup—still warm, actually—and felt something inside me crack. "I work too, Martha. I write—"
"Writing," she scoffed, waving her hand dismissively. "Playing around on a computer all day isn't real work. Real work is maintaining a household, caring for a family, ensuring everything runs smoothly. But you can't even manage to keep soup warm."
Ethan finally glanced up, but only to grab his water glass. "Maybe you should set timers or something," he suggested before immediately returning to his game. "Mom, did I tell you about the promotion possibility at work?"
And just like that, I became invisible again. Martha's face brightened as she turned her full attention to her precious son, asking about his job, his colleagues, his future prospects. They talked around me as if I were a piece of furniture, occasionally gesturing toward my cold soup as evidence of my inadequacy.
I sat there, mechanically eating my dinner while they discussed Ethan's career, Martha's bridge club, the neighbor's new car—anything and everything except acknowledging my presence. The soup tasted like ash in my mouth.
It was then that my phone buzzed against my leg. I glanced down discreetly, expecting another spam message or notification from some app I'd forgotten to silence.
Instead, my breath caught in my throat.
BANK ALERT: Deposit of $50,000.00 has been processed to your account ending in 4721. Available balance: $67,543.21.
Fifty thousand dollars. From my publisher.
I stared at the screen, my heart hammering so hard I was sure Martha and Ethan could hear it. The latest installment from my book deal—the book deal they knew nothing about. The book deal that had already earned me more money than Ethan made in an entire year at his precious job.
Martha was still lecturing, her voice a distant drone as she explained proper soup-serving etiquette to someone who apparently needed such basic instruction. Ethan was nodding along, making appropriately supportive sounds while fragging enemies on his screen.
Neither of them noticed that I'd gone completely still.
Fifty thousand dollars. Just one payment of many.
I slipped the phone back into my pocket, keeping my expression carefully neutral. The same expression I'd perfected over three years of enduring Martha's criticism and Ethan's indifference.
But inside, something had shifted. The money wasn't just numbers on a screen—it was possibility. It was freedom. It was proof that while they saw me as nothing more than a failed housewife, the rest of the world valued what I had to offer.
"Are you even listening to me?" Martha's sharp voice cut through my thoughts.
I looked up to find both of them staring at me with identical expressions of irritation.
"I'm sorry," I said quietly, the words automatic after years of practice. "What were you saying?"
Martha's lips pursed. "I was explaining how my friend Eleanor manages her household. Perhaps you could learn something. She would never serve her family cold soup."
"Of course not," I murmured, taking another spoonful of my perfectly warm dinner.
But for the first time in months, I was smiling on the inside.
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