
My CEO Husband Never Let Our Son Call Him Dad
Chapter 4
The resignation email sat in my inbox like a loaded gun, Harper's name glowing in bold letters against the stark white screen. I stared at the subject line—"Resignation - Harper Langley"—feeling something cold settle in my chest.
I reached for my mouse to click it open when Priscilla walked into my office without knocking, a familiar confidence in her stride.
"Mr. Ashford," she said, placing a thick manila folder on my desk. "Here's the quarterly report you requested."
Her hand lingered on my shoulder as she leaned over to point at something in the document, a gesture that had become natural between us over the past few months. But today, the contact felt wrong somehow. Invasive. I shifted in my chair, creating distance.
I opened the report and immediately felt my jaw tighten. The first page was a disaster—numbers that didn't add up, formatting that looked like it had been done by a freshman intern, and our department name spelled incorrectly in three different ways.
By the third page, my patience had evaporated entirely.
"What is this garbage?" I slammed the folder shut, the sound echoing through my office. "Who the hell put this together? It looks like it was written by a child."
Priscilla's face went white. "Mr. Ashford, I—"
"Get Clark up here," I continued, my voice rising. "I want to know how HR is hiring people who can't even spell 'quarterly' correctly. This is completely unacceptable."
"Sterling," she whispered, her voice barely audible. "I wrote that report."
The words hit me like ice water. I looked up at her face—pale, stricken, her eyes already filling with tears. For the first time since she'd started working here, I saw her not as the polished professional who laughed at my jokes and stayed late to help with difficult clients, but as someone who had just failed spectacularly at a basic task.
The anger drained out of me, replaced by something I couldn't quite name. Disappointment, maybe. Or recognition.
"Oh," I said quietly.
Priscilla's lower lip trembled. "I'm so sorry. I worked on it until almost midnight last night, and I was so tired... I must have made mistakes."
I rubbed my forehead, suddenly feeling exhausted. "It's fine. Just... fix it and get it back to me by tomorrow."
After she left, I sat alone in my office, staring at the disaster of a report. Almost without thinking, I pulled up Harper's quarterly reports from the past two years, opening them side by side on my screen.
The difference was staggering.
Harper's reports were flawless—every number verified, every chart perfectly formatted, every recommendation backed by solid data analysis. The font was consistent, the margins precise, even the page breaks fell in exactly the right places. I'd never once had to ask her to revise anything.
I'd also never once thanked her for it.
The realization sat heavy in my chest. For six years, Harper had made my professional life seamless. Every presentation I gave was backed by her research. Every client meeting ran smoothly because of her preparation. Every deadline was met because she worked late into the night, making sure everything was perfect.
I'd taken it all for granted. Worse—I'd expected it.
My finger hovered over Harper's resignation email. Part of me didn't want to open it, didn't want to face whatever she'd written. But I clicked anyway.
The message was brief, professional, devastating in its simplicity:
*Mr. Ashford,
Please accept this letter as my formal resignation from my position as Senior Analyst, effective immediately. I will complete any urgent projects before my departure.
Thank you for the opportunity.
Harper Langley*
No explanation. No emotion. Just the bare minimum required by corporate policy.
I read it three times, searching for some hint of the woman I'd shared a bed with for six years, the mother of my son. But there was nothing. She'd written to me the same way she might write to any boss she barely knew.
My phone buzzed with a text notification. For a wild moment, I thought it might be Harper, but it was just a reminder about tonight's client dinner.
I thought about last night—about walking into our kitchen with Priscilla, about calling Harper and Emmett "distant relatives," about the look on my son's face when he called me "Mr. Ashford" in that careful, polite voice.
I thought about the cake. God, that stupid robot cake that was meant for Priscilla, hastily repurposed for a son whose fears I didn't even remember. The way Emmett had tried so hard to be grateful, even though I could see the terror in his eyes when he looked at the metallic blue frosting.
Every year, Harper sent me a text on Emmett's birthday. A simple message asking if I could make it home. Every year, I read it and said nothing, assuming she'd understand that work came first.
This year was the first time I'd actually said yes. And then I'd forgotten completely.
I pulled out my phone and started typing: *Harper, we need to talk.*
I stared at the words for a long moment, then deleted them.
I tried again: *About your resignation—*
Delete.
*Can we discuss this?*
Delete.
I set the phone down, frustrated with myself. What was I supposed to say? That I was sorry? That I hadn't meant for things to go this far? That somewhere along the way, I'd lost sight of what mattered?
The truth was, I didn't know how to fix this. I didn't even know if it could be fixed.
The rest of the day passed in a blur of meetings and phone calls, but my mind kept drifting back to Harper's empty desk outside my office, to Emmett's careful politeness, to the resignation letter that felt like a door slamming shut.
By six o'clock, I couldn't concentrate on anything. I canceled my client dinner and drove across town to the small apartment I'd bought for Harper and Emmett—the place I'd visited maybe a dozen times in six years, the place I'd never spent a full night.
The building looked the same as always, but something felt different as I climbed the stairs to the third floor. The hallway was too quiet, too still.
I knocked first, a courtesy I'd never bothered with before. No answer.
I used my key—the spare Harper had given me years ago, more out of obligation than invitation. The door swung open to reveal darkness.
I flipped on the lights and my breath caught.
The apartment was empty.
Not just quiet—empty. The couch where Emmett did his homework was gone. The kitchen table where we'd shared that awkward birthday cake just yesterday had vanished. Even the refrigerator, which had been covered in Emmett's artwork and school notices, stood bare and sterile.
I walked through the rooms in a daze. Emmett's bedroom was stripped clean—no dinosaur sheets, no toy chest, no glow-in-the-dark stars on the ceiling. The master bedroom looked like a hotel room after checkout, nothing left but dust outlines on the dresser where picture frames used to sit.
In the bathroom, I found a single forgotten item: Emmett's toothbrush, bright blue with a cartoon character on the handle. I picked it up with shaking hands, this small piece of evidence that my son had once lived here, had once called this place home.
They weren't just gone for the night. They weren't staying with friends or taking a short trip.
Harper and Emmett had disappeared completely, taking every trace of our life together with them.
I sank onto the bare floor of what used to be our bedroom, still holding that small blue toothbrush, finally understanding that some doors, once closed, can never be opened again.
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