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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?
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Chapter 3

The sound of the front door opening made my heart skip a beat. I'd been sitting at the kitchen table with Emmett, helping him with his homework, when I heard Sterling's key in the lock. But it was only three in the afternoon—he never came home this early.

Then I heard her voice.

"Sterling, your house is beautiful. I love what you've done with the living room."

Priscilla. In my home.

I instinctively pulled Emmett closer to me, my hand finding his shoulder as footsteps approached the kitchen. My son looked up at me with questioning eyes, sensing the sudden tension in my body.

"Mommy?" he whispered.

Before I could respond, they appeared in the doorway. Sterling walked in first, his expression carefully neutral, while Priscilla followed behind him, her eyes scanning our kitchen with obvious curiosity. She wore a cream-colored blazer that probably cost more than my monthly grocery budget, her blonde hair perfectly styled even at the end of a workday.

Her gaze landed on Emmett first, then shifted to me. I watched recognition flicker across her features—the woman from the office, the one who'd been trailing Sterling in those photos she'd probably seen online.

"Oh," she said, her voice carrying just the right note of polite surprise. "I didn't realize you had... company."

I opened my mouth to speak, to explain, to claim my place in this house that I'd called home for six years. But Sterling's voice cut through the air before I could form a single word.

"They're distant relatives of mine. Just staying for a few days."

The words hit me like ice water. Distant relatives. Four syllables that erased six years of marriage, six years of sharing this space, six years of building a life together. I'd heard this lie before—at company parties, at business dinners, whenever someone asked too many questions. But hearing it now, in our kitchen, with our son sitting right beside me, felt like being stabbed with a familiar knife.

I felt Emmett stiffen under my hand. His homework forgotten, he stared at Sterling with an expression I'd never seen before—not hurt, not angry, but something colder. Something final.

"Hello, Mr. Ashford," Emmett said, his voice steady despite the tears I could see gathering in his eyes.

The formal address hung in the air like a challenge. Not Daddy. Not even Sterling. Mr. Ashford—the name he'd been taught to use in public, the name that kept their relationship safely professional, safely distant.

Sterling's face went pale. I saw his throat work as he swallowed, his eyes fixed on our son with something that might have been shock.

"Emmett—"

"Mommy," Emmett interrupted, sliding off his chair with careful precision. "I think we should go."

My throat felt like it was closing. I looked at my six-year-old son, this little boy who'd just protected himself the only way he knew how—by accepting the lie, by playing the part Sterling had written for him.

"Okay, baby," I managed, my voice barely above a whisper. "Let's go."

I gathered Emmett's homework with shaking hands, stuffing the papers into his backpack. Priscilla stepped aside as we moved toward the doorway, her expression carefully blank. But I caught the way her eyes lingered on Emmett, taking in his dark hair, his familiar features.

As we brushed past Sterling in the narrow hallway, his hand shot out and grabbed my arm.

"Harper." His voice was low, urgent. "What did he just call me?"

I stopped, turning to look at him fully for the first time since he'd walked through our door with another woman. "Isn't this what you always wanted?" I kept my voice level, professional. "Mr. Ashford?"

The color drained from his face completely. For six years, he'd insisted on the distance, the formality, the careful separation between his public and private lives. He'd trained our son to call him by his last name in front of others, to pretend they were strangers. The only difference now was that Emmett had chosen to use that name even when we were alone.

"That's not—" Sterling started, then stopped. His eyes darted toward the living room where Priscilla waited, probably examining our family photos, our shared life that he'd just denied existed.

"Priscilla is waiting for you," I said quietly. "Let go."

His grip loosened, and I pulled away, taking Emmett's hand. We made it to the front door before Sterling caught up with us again.

"Wait." He appeared at our car just as I was buckling Emmett into his booster seat. In his hands was a white bakery box, the kind used for cakes. "This is... this is Emmett's birthday gift. From yesterday. I forgot to give it to him."

I stared at the box, confused. Sterling had never bought Emmett a birthday cake before. I'd always handled the celebrations, the parties, the special moments.

I took the box and opened it carefully. Inside was a robot-shaped cake, metallic blue frosting gleaming under the afternoon sun. It was beautifully made, expensive-looking, the kind of custom creation that required advance planning.

"It's very nice," I said, though something felt wrong. Emmett leaned over to see, and I watched his face carefully.

He went very still.

"Robots," he whispered, and I heard the tremor in his voice.

My heart sank as the memory crashed back. Emmett's fifth birthday, the one time Sterling had taken him somewhere special—a robotics exhibit at the science museum. Emmett had been excited until one of the interactive displays malfunctioned, its mechanical arms jerking erratically while it emitted loud, grinding sounds. My son had screamed in terror, clinging to Sterling's leg while other children laughed.

Sterling's response had been swift and cutting: "Don't be such a baby, Emmett. It's just a machine."

Emmett had nightmares about robots for months afterward.

"Sterling," I started, but Priscilla's voice interrupted from behind him.

"Oh good, you found it!" She appeared at his shoulder, smiling brightly. "I was worried we'd left it at the bakery. This cake was actually supposed to be for me—I mentioned loving robots to Sterling last week—but when he remembered it was your son's birthday, Ms. Langley, well..." She shrugged elegantly. "It seemed like perfect timing."

The box suddenly felt like it weighed a thousand pounds. A cake meant for another woman, hastily repurposed for the son he'd forgotten. A robot cake for a child who was terrified of robots, bought by a father who didn't know his own son well enough to remember his fears.

I wanted to give it back. I wanted to throw it away. I wanted to explain that Emmett would probably have nightmares tonight because of this thoughtless gesture.

But then I caught sight of Emmett's face. Beneath the fear, beneath the careful composure he'd worn since Sterling walked in with Priscilla, I saw a flicker of something else. Hope. The desperate, fragile hope of a six-year-old who wanted so badly to believe his father cared, even if the gift was wrong, even if it scared him.

"Can we... can we eat it here?" Emmett asked quietly, his voice barely audible. "The cake?"

Sterling looked surprised, then glanced back at Priscilla. She checked her watch with practiced patience.

"I suppose we have a few minutes," he said finally.

Emmett's face lit up, and my heart broke a little more. He grabbed my hand and pulled me back toward the house, his fear of robots temporarily forgotten in the face of this unexpected attention from his father.

In the kitchen, I cut the cake with mechanical precision while Priscilla made small talk about the neighborhood. Emmett bounced on his toes, more animated than I'd seen him in weeks. He carefully carried a slice to Sterling, who sat stiffly at our kitchen table looking like he'd rather be anywhere else.

"Thank you, Mr. Ashford," Emmett said formally, setting the plate down with the careful manners I'd taught him.

Sterling stared at the cake for a long moment, his fork suspended in midair. I watched him take in the scene—his son serving him cake in his own kitchen, using the formal address that kept them strangers, trying so hard to be grateful for a gift that showed how little his father knew about him.

For the first time since I'd known him, Sterling looked genuinely shaken.

"Emmett," he said quietly, "you can call me—"

"We should go," I interrupted, standing abruptly. I couldn't watch this anymore—couldn't watch Sterling try to fix six years of distance with one awkward conversation, couldn't watch Emmett hope for something that would never come.

I reached into my purse and pulled out a white envelope, placing it on the kitchen table next to Sterling's untouched cake.

"This is my resignation letter," I said. "I already submitted it to HR."

Sterling's eyes snapped to mine, then to the envelope. His hand moved toward it, then stopped.

"Harper—"

"Come on, Emmett," I said, ignoring Sterling completely. "Time to go home."

As we walked toward the door, I heard Sterling's voice behind us, quiet and strained: "This is your home."

I didn't turn around. "No," I said simply. "It never was."

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