Follow
Chapters
Share
My CEO Husband Never Let Our Son Call Him Dad Novel Cover

My CEO Husband Never Let Our Son Call Him Dad

Harper Langley has been Sterling Ashford's secret for six years — his hidden wife, the mother of his son, and the woman he refuses to acknowledge. While Sterling parades his glamorous assistant through Manhattan's elite circles, Harper raises their son Emmett alone, watching from the shadows of a marriage that was never supposed to exist. When Sterling skips Emmett's sixth birthday to wine and dine another woman, Harper reaches her breaking point. She's done begging. Done waiting. Done being invisible. But Harper isn't just leaving — she's been quietly building an escape plan for months. A new city. A new life. And a divorce agreement designed to get Sterling's signature before he realizes what he's giving up. The only question is: will Sterling let her go? Or will the man who never wanted to be a husband suddenly decide he can't live without the wife he never deserved?
Chapters
Share

Chapter 1

The HR director's office felt smaller than usual, the fluorescent lights casting harsh shadows across her mahogany desk. I placed the resignation letter on the polished surface, my fingers steady despite the earthquake happening inside my chest.

"My husband is transferring to the Seattle office," I said, the lie sliding off my tongue with practiced ease. "I'd like to put in my two weeks."

Director Martinez looked up from the document, her eyebrows raised in genuine surprise. "Harper, I have to say, we've always assumed you were a single mother. You've never mentioned a husband in all your years here."

I smiled, a careful curve of my lips that revealed nothing. "I prefer to keep my personal life private."

She wouldn't be wrong for much longer anyway. In two weeks, I'd be exactly what she'd always thought I was—a single mother starting over.

The hallway stretched before me as I left her office, my heels clicking against the marble floor in a rhythm that matched my racing heartbeat. The resignation letter was submitted. The first domino had fallen.

Then I saw them.

Sterling Ashford walked toward me, his assistant Priscilla Vale beside him. My breath caught as I watched him deliberately slow his pace to match hers, his long strides shortened to accommodate her smaller steps. She held a stack of files in one hand while her other hand lightly grasped the edge of his charcoal suit jacket—a casual, intimate gesture that sent a sharp pain through my throat.

They moved together like a matched set, like two people who belonged in the same frame. The way couples did.

The way we never had.

"Sterling—" The word escaped before I could stop it.

He paused, turning toward me with the kind of polite, distant expression reserved for business acquaintances. "Ms. Langley."

Two words. Two syllables that contained six years of our marriage, six years of pretending we were nothing more than boss and employee. Six years of our son asking why Daddy couldn't come to school events, why he had to call him 'Mr. Ashford' in public.

Ms. Langley. Not Harper. Never Harper, not here.

I swallowed the words that wanted to spill out—about the resignation, about finally being free, about how I was done pretending we were strangers. He wouldn't care anyway.

My phone buzzed against my palm. A message from Emmett's smartwatch: "Mommy, will Daddy come for my birthday today?"

I looked up at Sterling, watching as he leaned down to murmur something to Priscilla. His hand moved instinctively to the small of her back as a group of executives passed by, protecting her from the crowd. The gesture was so natural, so automatic.

He'd never done that for me. Not once in six years.

I started to turn away, ready to disappear back into the maze of cubicles and conference rooms where I could pretend my heart wasn't breaking in real time.

"Harper."

His fingers wrapped around my wrist, stopping me mid-step. The contact sent electricity shooting up my arm—his thumb finding that spot on the inside of my wrist where my pulse hammered against my skin. It was an old habit, something from seven years ago when we were different people who made different choices.

My breath hitched. The warmth of his touch spread through my body like wildfire, awakening memories I'd tried so hard to bury. The night Emmett was conceived started with this exact touch, this same gentle pressure against my pulse point.

Sterling leaned closer, his voice dropping to that low register that used to make me forget my own name. "Tonight... I'll be home."

His breath brushed against my ear, carrying the scent of his cologne—bergamot and cedar, expensive and achingly familiar. My body remembered what that proximity meant, what usually followed when he spoke to me in that tone.

My fingers trembled, almost reaching for his hand before reality crashed back. I stepped away, breaking the contact that threatened to unravel six years of careful emotional distance.

I'd already sent him the text an hour ago: "Today is Emmett's birthday. Can you come home?"

I watched him pull out his phone, his expression unreadable as he glanced at the screen. Then he slipped it back into his pocket without responding.

No reply. No acknowledgment. Just silence.

I forced another smile and walked away, my legs somehow carrying me to the elevator despite feeling like they might give out at any moment.

By the time I picked up Emmett from school, my phone had been quiet for hours. Then, as we pulled into our driveway, it finally buzzed.

Sterling: "I have time. I'll be home tonight."

I stared at the message, reading it three times before the words sank in. Six years. Six birthdays where Daddy was too busy, too important, too absent. And now, suddenly, he had time.

Emmett bounced in his car seat, chattering about his day at school, oblivious to the way my hands shook as I gripped the steering wheel. Tonight would be different. Tonight, Sterling would finally show up for his son.

I spent the afternoon in the kitchen, preparing Emmett's favorite meal—homemade chicken nuggets shaped like dinosaurs, mac and cheese from scratch, and a chocolate cake that took three hours to bake and decorate. Emmett finished his homework in record time, then stationed himself by the front window, his small face pressed against the glass.

"Is Daddy coming soon?" he asked for the tenth time, his breath fogging the window.

"Soon, baby," I promised, checking my phone again. Seven o'clock became eight. Eight became nine.

Emmett's excitement gradually dimmed, his shoulders sagging as he curled up on the couch. "Maybe Daddy got stuck in traffic?"

"Maybe," I whispered, though Sterling's office was only fifteen minutes away.

By ten o'clock, Emmett had fallen asleep on the couch, still wearing his birthday crown made of construction paper and glitter. The dinosaur nuggets sat cold on his untouched plate. The candles on his cake had melted into colorful puddles of wax.

I picked up my phone to call Sterling, then stopped. Instead, I opened Instagram, scrolling mindlessly through my feed to distract myself from the crushing disappointment.

That's when I saw it.

Priscilla's story. A photo of an elegant restaurant table, crystal glasses catching candlelight, a plate of what looked like beef wellington artfully arranged beside a glass of red wine.

But it was the corner of the image that made my blood turn to ice. A hand resting on the white tablecloth, and on the pinky finger—a thin gold band that I recognized immediately.

Sterling's ring. The one he wore on his left pinky because he said wearing a wedding ring on the traditional finger would raise questions at work.

While our six-year-old son waited by the window for a father who would never come, Sterling was having a romantic dinner with another woman.

I set my phone down with shaking hands and looked at Emmett, still asleep in his paper crown, still believing that maybe, just maybe, Daddy would show up.

For six years, I'd made excuses. For six years, I'd convinced myself that Sterling's distance was just his way of protecting our secret. For six years, I'd told myself that someday, things would be different.

But as I stared at my sleeping son on his sixth birthday, surrounded by the remnants of a celebration that never happened, I finally understood the truth.

Sterling hadn't chosen to protect our marriage by keeping it secret.

He'd chosen to pretend it didn't exist at all.

You may also like

After My Husband Gave Our Fortune to His Mistress Novel Cover
8.4
The numbers on my monitor ticked upward in a dizzying blur, a neon-green cascade that should have felt like victory. *Fifteen million dollars.* In one week. My fingers hovered over the keyboard, trembling slightly. This was *Aetheria*. My code. My architecture. The culmination of three years of sleepless nights, caffeine overdoses, and missed birthdays. I sat in the cramped, windowless storage closet Maddox graciously called my "home office," listening to the hum of the server cooling fans. That sound was the heartbeat of our future—or so I’d let myself believe. I checked the time.
Breaking Free from CEO Novel Cover
9.8
The Mandarin Oriental ballroom glittered like a dream. Crystal chandeliers cast diamond-like reflections across the sea of Manhattan's business elite, all here to celebrate Sterling Enterprises' biggest triumph—my triumph. My hand instinctively went to my clutch, feeling the weight of both the five-billion-dollar deal documents and the platinum engagement ring I'd purchased last month. Tonight was the night everything would change. Seven years of shadows were about to end. I smoothed down my midnight blue gown, chosen specifically because Logan once said it made my eyes look like 'oceans he could drown in.' The thought brought a smile to my lips. How many nights had I spent working until dawn, sacrificing sleep, friendships, and even my health for this moment? The migraine medication in my purse was a silent reminder of the toll, but it would all be worth it now. "Nicole! You look stunning," Jessica Chen, a junior executive I'd mentored, approached with a champagne flute.
Escaping Wedding Humiliation Novel Cover
8.2
I stood alone in the center of the Plaza Hotel's grand ballroom, a vision in white that no one remained to see. My ninety-ninth wedding dress—a hand-beaded Vera Wang creation that had taken six months to complete—felt like a mockery now, its weight crushing against my ribs with each shallow breath I managed to take. Ninetieth. Ninth. Time. The chairs, arranged in perfect rows and adorned with white roses and silk ribbons, sat empty. The string quartet had long since packed away their instruments. Only the champagne flutes remained on the tables, untouched, the bubbles gone flat—much like my dreams. "Poor Isabella Martinez," came a whisper from the doorway, where a cluster of Manhattan's elite lingered, their designer heels and Italian loafers not quite crossing the threshold. "Abandoned at the altar again." "Ninety-nine times," another voice added, not bothering to lower her tone.
His ruthless contract  Novel Cover
7.2
Leila never believed in fairy tales - especially not the kind sealed with signatures instead of kisses. When a carefully structured contract binds her to billionaire Damian Black, it's supposed to be simple: public appearances, flawless smiles, and zero emotional attachment. A calculated arrangement designed to protect reputations and secure power. But high society is watching. Whispers follow her into every ballroom. Rumors trail behind every step she takes beside him. They call her an outsider. A contract wife. Temporary. What they don't see is the silent tension unfolding beneath polished smiles. Damian Black is controlled, strategic, unreadable - a man who doesn't allow weakness. Yet Leila begins to notice the subtle shifts. The possessive glances. The quiet approval in his voice. The rare moments when his composure falters... just for her. And Leila is far from fragile. As jealousy simmers, rivals test boundaries, and past secrets threaten to surface, the line between pretense and reality begins to blur. What happens when a marriage built on conditions starts to demand something real? In a world where power is currency and vulnerability is dangerous, can a contract survive the slow burn of genuine emotion? A billionaire romance filled with tension, rumors, emotional push-and-pull, and undeniable chemistry.
Marrying My Ex's Powerful Billionaire Uncle Novel Cover
7.9
On my wedding day, my fiancé Connor received an urgent phone call. He told me a D-list actress had broken her leg on set, then abandoned me right at the altar. In my past life, I cried until my throat bled, begging him not to leave. But my tears only brought endless humiliation. My mother and adopted sister mocked me, framed me, and forged my signature to steal my multi-million dollar trust fund. They kicked me out of the family estate without a single dime. I ended up freezing to death in the minus-twenty-degree New York blizzard, listening to my mother's voicemail telling me to die in the street as long as I didn't bleed on her carpets. Until my last breath, I couldn't understand why my own blood relatives hated me so much, yet treated an adopted daughter like a precious princess. The only person who showed me any mercy—draping his wool coat over my frozen corpse and giving me a proper burial—was Connor's ruthless, untouchable uncle, Harding Snow. Opening my eyes again, I was back in the bridal suite, right as Connor was rushing out the door. This time, I didn't shed a single tear. I let him run to his actress, then walked straight into the VIP room to face the most feared billionaire on Wall Street. "The wedding proceeds as planned, but the groom's name changes to yours."
Marrying My Ex's Ruthless Uncle Novel Cover
8.4
I'm Kailee Lynn. On the night of my engagement party, my fiancé Julian left me standing alone in front of every wealthy guest in the city, humiliating me without a single shred of mercy. I became the biggest laughingstock of high society overnight, written off as a nobody from a small town with no status, no backing, and no right to stand among them. Everyone looked down on me, convinced I was weak and easy to push around. But I've never been one to swallow insults or accept defeat. Instead of fleeing in shame, I turned and walked straight toward the darkest, most intimidating figure in the entire banquet hall-Ervin Hendricks, the reclusive and ruthless fifth heir of the powerful Hendricks family. Rumors followed him everywhere: they said he was confined to a wheelchair, cold-blooded, dangerously unhinged, and cruel enough to ruin anyone who crossed him. The entire room held its breath, certain I was walking straight to my doom. I lifted my chin, met his sharp gaze steadily, and spoke in a calm, unshakable tone: "Ervin Hendricks. Marry me. I'll clear every obstacle in your path and help you seize everything that belongs to you. In return, you'll stand by my side and shield me from this world's cruelty." In the blink of an eye, I went from Julian's discarded fiancée to his aunt by marriage, the official Mrs. Hendricks. The whole town waited eagerly to watch me break down, to see me suffer at Ervin's hands and beg for mercy. They had no clue I was hiding far more than they could ever imagine. I'm the elite medical genius that top hospitals beg to consult, the unbeatable hacker who can crack any system in minutes, the hidden tycoon pulling strings behind global empires, and the secret powerhouse even the most elite families dare not cross. One by one, my true identities were unveiled, and every person who once mocked me fell silent, bowing to my power. As for Julian? He watched me rise from a social outcast to the most feared and respected woman in the city, standing proudly beside the all-powerful Ervin Hendricks. Meanwhile, his own fortune crumbled, his reputation was in tatters, and the life he'd chased after leaving me turned into a complete disaster. He was consumed by regret, so desperate he lost his mind. He chased me down at every high-society event, his eyes red with guilt and desperation, pleading for forgiveness, groveling to take back every cruel word, begging me to give him a second chance. He whined about how he'd made the worst mistake of his life, how he'd thrown away the only person who could have made him truly successful. I felt nothing but cold contempt for him. You cast me aside like worthless trash when you thought I had nothing to offer. You chose arrogance and greed over loyalty, and now you think a few empty apologies can erase that? I didn't even spare him a glance, simply linking my arm through Ervin's and stepping past him without a second thought. And then, the man everyone believed would never walk again suddenly rose from his wheelchair, pulled me tight against his chest, and whispered in a deep, soft, and utterly possessive voice that only I could hear: "Kailee. You're my little treasure, my only obsession, and the only person I'll ever love and protect with everything I have." This life, I'm taking down every enemy that wronged me, dominating every circle I step into, and making the most powerful man in the city wrap himself entirely around my finger.