The Perfect Wife - JP Delaney Page 0,103

hardly say it. “Was he ever like that with Abbie?”

“Oh, Abbie was the exception. The one he adored, the one he was going to marry. The mother of his kids. Right from the start. No, even before the start. He’d seen a video of her online, being interviewed about her art. That was the only reason he offered her the residency, because he thought she was insanely hot. And then, somehow, he got her to fall in love with him. But I knew it couldn’t last. I’ve seen it happen before. First he puts them on a pedestal, then…Wham. Suddenly they’re sluts and whores, just like all the others.” He gestures around the empty office. “Silicon Valley has a real problem with corporate sexism. Only ten percent of coders are female. Only five percent of leaders. At Scott Robotics, we’re considered role models for the industry because we have thirty, forty percent female staff. But then you look at the churn—the rate those women leave. Hardly any stay more than a year. And that’s because Tim only hires them if they’re hot. Then, if they won’t do what he wants, he freezes them out. You know what he said to me and Elijah, the last time we had to pay one off? ‘Women are cheaper to hire in the first place, so even when you factor in the payola, we’re still ahead of the game.’ As far as he’s concerned, it’s just part of the cost of doing business.”

“So what happened with Abbie? How did she fall off her pedestal?”

Mike shakes his head. “I don’t really know. Some guy she kissed. One of Danny’s therapists, I think.”

“She didn’t kiss him,” you protest. “He kissed her.”

“I’m not sure that’s a distinction Tim would have taken much notice of.”

“No,” you say, remembering. “He didn’t.”

* * *

Tim really liked the way Magda worked with Danny. He started coming home early, watching the sessions and taking notes. Then one day you got back from buying groceries to find he’d brought along five members of his development team to watch as well.

“What was that about?” you asked later.

“I think we can use some of the same methods Magda uses with Danny to train our AIs. Once you understand the science behind it, it’s fascinating.”

After that, Tim threw himself into researching different kinds of ABA. That was when he found this great place called Meadowbank. It used ABA in a school setting, he told you eagerly. And its results were far, far in excess of anything Magda’s data sheets were showing.

Except that it wasn’t a great place. You hated it at first sight. The thought of sending Danny there terrified you. All this talk of aversives and contingent behaviors was just so brutal.

You did something you rarely did with Tim: You put your foot down. You said No.

Tim just carried on as if it was a done deal. Meadowbank had the best results, so Meadowbank was where Danny was going. End of. Anything else was just irrational emotional chaff. Women’s stuff.

In desperation, you told him you could get Julian back. You admitted he hadn’t really gone abroad. You confessed you’d only said that because he kissed you.

You thought Tim would be fine about it. After all, you’d put a stop to it the moment it started. What more could you have done?

But Tim wasn’t fine.

* * *

“You’re obviously going to fuck him. So I don’t know why you don’t just go ahead and do it.”

You were both shouting now. “What! Of course I’m not—”

“Admit it, you’re horny for him. I wouldn’t mind but I hate that you won’t be honest about it.”

“This is crazy—”

“What I do mind is that you’re letting your sloppy pussy dictate what’s best for Danny.”

“That is unforgivable!”

And you remember how Tim snickered. A weird, high-pitched giggle, like a little kid. “And yet somehow I think you’ll forgive me. Because you’re not about to walk out on all this, are you? The nice houses, the pretty dresses, the private jet. Not to mention all the quack therapists you waste your time and my money on.” He leaned in, too close. “You know what I do to sluts who think they can take me for a ride? I destroy them.”

You stared at him. “What sluts?”

He stopped. “Nothing. Just a figure of speech. Don’t try to twist this, Abbie. Don’t try to make this about me.”

* * *

“He wouldn’t let her simply divorce him,” you say. “She had to be punished. Shamed.

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