
My CEO Husband Never Let Our Son Call Him Dad
Chapter 2
The Instagram story glowed on my phone screen like a neon sign announcing my own funeral. Sterling's pinky ring caught the candlelight at what looked like Le Bernardin—the restaurant where we'd never been, where he'd never taken me, where apparently he took women who mattered.
I stared at that thin gold band for a long moment, feeling something shift inside my chest. Not the sharp crack of heartbreak I'd expected, but something quieter. Something final.
I tapped the heart icon.
Liked.
Then I set my phone down with steady hands and turned toward my sleeping son.
Emmett lay curled on the couch, his construction paper crown slightly askew, one small fist clutched around the edge of his birthday blanket. Six years old today. Six years of waiting for a father who would never come home.
I knelt beside him, carefully adjusting his crown. "Emmett, sweetheart. Wake up for just a minute."
His eyes fluttered open, still heavy with sleep. "Did Daddy come?"
The question hit like a physical blow, but I kept my voice gentle. "Not yet, baby. But we still have birthday cake to eat, don't we?"
I carried him to the kitchen table where his chocolate cake sat waiting, the melted candles now just colorful pools of wax on the frosting. I scraped them off and pressed six new candles into the chocolate, lighting each one with the careful precision of a woman performing a ritual.
"Make a wish, birthday boy."
Emmett closed his eyes tight, his small hands pressed together in prayer position. The candlelight flickered across his face—Sterling's eyes, my stubborn chin, a perfect blend of two people who should never have created something so precious together.
"I wish..." he whispered, then opened his eyes to look at me. "I wish to stay with Mommy forever and ever."
The words hit me like lightning. Not a wish for his father to come home. Not a wish for toys or games or the things six-year-olds usually wanted. Just me. Just us.
"Forever and ever?" I managed, my throat tight.
"Forever and ever," he confirmed solemnly, then blew out his candles in one breath.
I pulled out my phone and captured the moment—Emmett grinning at his cake, chocolate frosting already smeared on his cheek, his paper crown reflecting the warm kitchen light. This. This was what mattered. This was what I'd been fighting for without even realizing it.
"Okay, baby," I whispered, kissing his forehead. "Mommy promises. Forever and ever."
After I tucked Emmett into his bed, reading him three stories and singing the lullaby that always made him smile, I stood in his doorway for a long moment. The house felt different now. Lighter somehow, despite everything.
I walked to our bedroom—my bedroom, I corrected myself—and opened my laptop.
The hidden folder was exactly where I'd left it, buried three layers deep in my work files. I'd been building this escape plan for three months, ever since the night Sterling came home smelling like Priscilla's perfume and didn't even bother to lie about where he'd been.
The divorce papers were pristine, drafted by my law school roommate who specialized in family court. I'd kept the terms simple—no alimony, no property division, no messy fights over assets. I only wanted one thing: full custody of Emmett.
I knew Sterling wouldn't fight me for it. He'd probably be relieved.
Two plane tickets to Seattle, purchased with money I'd been saving from my salary for months. A lease agreement for a small apartment near a good elementary school. I'd already secured a job transfer through a contact at our Seattle office—someone who had no idea about my connection to Sterling Ashford.
Everything was ready. I just needed the right moment.
I pulled up Sterling's calendar, synced to my phone from years of managing his schedule. Tomorrow was packed with meetings, but the day after—Wednesday—showed a client dinner at The Plaza. The Hendricks account, worth millions. Sterling would be distracted, focused, desperate to close the deal.
Perfect.
I opened a new document and began typing:
*Sterling,
I need you to sign these papers. It's just a formality for Emmett's school enrollment. I'll bring them to your office Wednesday afternoon.
- Harper*
Short. Professional. The kind of message he'd skim and forget about until I was standing in front of him with a pen.
I attached the divorce papers to the email, then paused with my finger over the send button. Once I pressed it, there would be no going back. No more pretending this marriage was something worth saving.
I thought about the Instagram story, about Sterling's hand covering Priscilla's at that expensive restaurant while our son waited by the window. I thought about six years of birthday parties where Daddy never showed, six years of school plays where I sat alone in the audience, six years of being married to a ghost.
I pressed send.
The clock on my nightstand read 2:17 AM as I pulled two suitcases from the closet. One large, one small—everything Emmett and I would need for our new life.
I packed methodically, folding clothes with the same careful precision I'd used to light his birthday candles. Emmett's favorite stuffed dinosaur. My grandmother's jewelry. The photo albums filled with pictures of just the two of us—mother and son adventures, bedtime stories, lazy Sunday mornings.
I reached for the memory box on the top shelf, expecting to find mementos from our marriage. Wedding photos, anniversary gifts, vacation souvenirs from trips we'd taken as a family.
The box was nearly empty.
A single photo lay at the bottom—me in my simple white dress outside the courthouse, holding a bouquet of grocery store flowers. I'd taken the selfie while waiting for Sterling, who'd been delayed by an "emergency meeting." His driver had served as our witness, checking his watch every few minutes.
No honeymoon photos because we'd never taken a honeymoon. No anniversary gifts because Sterling didn't believe in celebrating "arbitrary dates." No family vacation pictures because we'd never taken a family vacation.
Six years of marriage, and I had one photo to show for it.
I closed the box and left it on the shelf.
The suitcase zippers sounded like gunshots in the quiet bedroom, final and irreversible. I stood there for a moment, looking around at the room I'd shared with a man who'd never really been there.
Tomorrow, I would pack Emmett's lunch and take him to school like any other day. I'd go to work and smile at my colleagues and pretend everything was normal.
But Wednesday—Wednesday, I would walk into Sterling's office for the last time. And when I walked out, Harper Ashford would cease to exist.
I would just be Harper Langley again. Emmett's mom. Nothing more, nothing less.
And for the first time in six years, that felt like enough.
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