I was stunned when my husband, Chad, brought in a maid to “teach” me how to cook and clean like the perfect wife. Instead of fighting back, I went along with it. What Chad didn’t see coming was the lesson I had planned for him—one that flipped his grand plan upside down.
I’m April, 32, juggling a full-time job, a hectic home, and a 34-year-old husband who’s recently decided he’s the expert on what a “perfect wife” should be.
Chad and I both have demanding jobs: he’s in finance, always stressed about reports, while I’m in marketing, coming home mentally exhausted. You’d think we’d cut each other some slack, but lately, Chad’s expectations have been through the roof.
It all started after that unforgettable dinner at his boss Craig’s house. Craig’s wife, Jamie, welcomed us with a warm smile, wearing a pristine dress that probably cost more than my old rent. Her house? Spotless. Not a speck of dust, not a cushion out of place.
And don’t get me started on the five-course meal she served up like she was born with a chef’s knife in hand. Chad couldn’t stop staring.
“You see how Jamie keeps everything so tidy? Dinner’s ready the moment Craig walks in,” Chad said on the drive home, his voice dripping with admiration. “You could learn a thing or two.”
I clenched my jaw, staring out the window to keep from snapping. But Chad wasn’t done. “Why don’t you try harder? I mean, how hard can it be to keep things neat when you get home before me?”
The comparisons kept coming. Every day brought a new jab. “Jamie’s house is always perfect. Jamie makes fresh bread from scratch. Jamie always looks so polished.”
He’d say this while tossing his dirty socks just shy of the laundry basket or leaving his plates wherever he ate.
One evening, he came home and started inspecting the house like a picky landlord. He ran his finger along the windowsill and scowled. “You missed a spot, April. Are you even trying?”
I looked up from my laptop, barely holding back my irritation. “Seriously, Chad?”
He shrugged. “I’m just saying, maybe put in a bit more effort. It’s not like you don’t have time.”
That was his new favorite line. Not like you don’t have time. As if my workday and commute weren’t as draining as his. But the final straw came one Friday night.
I walked in, craving a hot shower and some peace, but instead, I found a young woman in our kitchen. She held a mop, wore an apron, and looked nervous, like she’d wandered into the wrong house.
Chad stood beside her, arms crossed, with a smug grin. “April, meet Sara. She’s here to teach you how to clean and cook the right way.”
I blinked, trying to process it. “Teach me?”
Chad sighed, like I was a slow learner. “Yeah, honey. I’ve been patient, but you’re not getting it. Jamie suggested hiring someone to help you step up. So, here we are.”
Sara glanced at me, then at Chad, and back at me. “I usually just… clean houses,” she said quietly, almost apologetic. “He offered me double to show you how.”
I turned to Chad, my voice barely steady. “So, you’re paying her to teach me to clean and cook?”
He nodded, completely clueless. “Yeah. This way, you’ll learn how to do it right. Sara, don’t go easy on her.”
I wanted to yell. This man, who never lifted a finger, had the nerve to hire someone to teach me how to clean? I could see Sara’s unease too, like she’d been roped into some strange drama.
I forced a smile, burning inside. “I’m sure I’ve got plenty to learn, Chad. Thanks for thinking of me.”
Chad left, pleased with himself, while Sara looked ready to bolt. I leaned in, lowering my voice. “Listen, I don’t need lessons. But I do have a plan that could use a partner. You in?”
Sara’s eyes sparked with interest. “What’s the plan?”
I grinned, already scheming. “Let’s just say Chad’s about to get a lesson he won’t forget.”
Over the next few weeks, I gave Chad exactly what he wanted: the perfect housewife. Every morning, I was up early, making his breakfast, scrubbing the house until it gleamed, and cooking fancy dinners that looked like they belonged on a cooking show.
I even dressed up every evening, greeting him at the door with a smile that didn’t reach my heart.
But I was cold as stone. I didn’t nag or complain, but I also didn’t connect. No chats about my day, no warm touches, no shared laughs. I was the image of domestic perfection, but it was all an act. It didn’t take long for Chad to sense something was wrong.
“Hey, babe,” he said one evening, lingering at the kitchen door while I prepared a three-course meal. “You’ve been really quiet. Everything okay?”
I barely glanced up, keeping my tone polite but distant. “I’m fine, Chad. Just busy with the house, like you wanted.”
His brow creased. “You don’t have to be… this intense. I mean, it’s great, but it’s like you’re here but not really here.”
I shrugged, setting the table with precision. “I’m just doing what you asked, Chad.”
He nodded, but I could see the confusion in his eyes. This was what he wanted, right? A spotless house, perfect meals, perfect wife. But I wasn’t giving him my usual warmth, and it was getting under his skin.
As the days went on, I kept up the performance. Every task was flawless, but our relationship? It was as cold and mechanical as a robot’s routine. I knew Chad felt the gap growing, but he didn’t know how to bridge it. And I wasn’t going to help him.
Then came the day I’d been building toward. After a perfectly silent dinner, I cleared the plates and turned to him with a bright smile. “Chad, we need to talk.”
He looked up, a nervous twitch in his smile. “What’s up?”
I sat across from him, sliding a neatly folded piece of paper across the table. “I’ve been thinking about this ‘perfect housewife’ thing. Sara really showed me how much work it takes to run a house like this. It’s a full-time job.”
Chad frowned, unsure where this was headed. “Okay?”
“So, I’ve decided,” I said cheerfully. “I’m going to quit my job and focus on this full-time.”
His jaw dropped. “You’re quitting your job?”
I nodded eagerly. “Yep! You wanted the house spotless, meals cooked from scratch, everything perfect. To do that, I need to focus completely. But here’s the thing—I can’t do it for free.”
He blinked, puzzled. “What do you mean ‘for free’?”
I pushed the paper toward him. It was a contract I’d typed up, listing my new terms.
“If I’m giving up my career, I deserve a salary. Jamie doesn’t work, and Craig supports her. So, I’ll need you to pay me. This is what I think is fair.”
He stared at me, his face shifting from confused to outraged. “You want me to pay you? April, that’s ridiculous!”
I kept my tone sweet, but my words were sharp. “Oh, it makes perfect sense. You wanted a perfect wife, and I’ve been delivering. But perfection has a price, Chad. If you expect me to keep up this level of work, I need compensation. If you’re not willing to pay, that’s fine. I’ll just stop.”
He gaped, his face going pale. “I never asked you to quit your job! I didn’t want this.”
I leaned back, arms crossed, savoring the moment. “Oh, but you did, Chad. You wanted a house like Jamie’s, meals like hers, and a wife who poured everything into domestic life. I’m just giving you what you asked for. But I have my own standards, and if you want this level of effort, it comes with a cost.”
A long, tense silence hung between us. Chad clutched the contract, staring at the steep salary. I could see the wheels turning as he realized he’d backed himself into a corner.
Finally, he stammered, “This isn’t what I meant! I work hard all day. I don’t have time to do everything around here!”
I stood, my voice calm but firm. “Exactly. And now you get how it feels. If you’re not paying me, maybe it’s time you start helping out more. Or you could hire Sara full-time. She’s great, after all.”
I left him sitting there, flustered and speechless.
From that day on, Chad’s attitude changed. He never agreed to pay me, of course, but he stopped complaining. And suddenly, chores weren’t just my job anymore.
Chad started picking up after himself, doing laundry, and even cooking dinner some nights. He never mentioned Jamie again, and I never saw him checking for dust on the shelves.
Turns out, when you give someone exactly what they think they want, they quickly learn the fantasy isn’t as great as reality. Chad found that out the hard way, and I got what I’d wanted all along: respect.
In the end, Chad didn’t need a perfect wife; he needed a partner. And if it took hiring a maid and drafting a fake contract to get there, well, that was a lesson worth teaching.
What do you think?