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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 5

The key felt foreign in my hand as I stood outside Harper's apartment door. I'd driven here on autopilot, my mind still reeling from her resignation letter, from the way Emmett had called me "Mr. Ashford" with such careful politeness.

I knocked first—something I'd never done before. The silence that answered felt different from the usual quiet of an evening at home. This was the silence of absence.

When I turned the key and pushed open the door, the emptiness hit me like a physical blow.

The living room stretched before me, bare and hollow. No couch where Emmett did his homework. No coffee table cluttered with his coloring books and toy cars. The walls, once covered with his crayon drawings and school certificates, stared back at me blank and accusing.

I flipped on the lights, hoping somehow I'd missed something in the darkness. But the harsh fluorescent glow only made it worse. Even the refrigerator, which had been a gallery of Emmett's artwork held up by alphabet magnets, stood naked and sterile.

"Harper?" I called out, my voice echoing in the empty space. "Emmett?"

Nothing.

I walked through each room like a man in a trance. The kitchen—no dishes in the sink, no coffee mug with Harper's lipstick stain on the rim, no high chair pushed up to the table. The dining area where we'd shared that awkward birthday cake just yesterday was completely bare, not even dust outlines to show where furniture had once stood.

Emmett's bedroom was the worst. I pushed open the door to find nothing but carpet indentations where his bed had been. The walls, once covered with glow-in-the-dark stars and dinosaur posters, were stripped clean except for small tears in the paint where tape had been pulled away too quickly.

I opened his closet. The hangers swayed gently in the cross-breeze from the open door, empty and mocking.

My hands shook as I pulled out my phone and dialed Harper's number. The automated voice that answered felt like a slap: "The number you have dialed is no longer in service."

I tried again, certain I'd misdialed. Same message.

Frantic now, I opened WhatsApp. Harper's profile picture—a photo of her and Emmett at the zoo—had been replaced by a gray default silhouette. I tried to send a message anyway: "Where are you?"

The message never showed as delivered.

I switched to text messages, then email, then every social media platform I could think of. Blocked. All of them. Harper had systematically erased every digital connection between us.

The master bedroom was my final stop, and somehow the most devastating. No clothes in the closet, no books on the nightstand, no family photos on the dresser. Just empty space and the faint scent of Harper's perfume lingering in the air like a ghost.

In the bathroom, I found the only evidence they'd ever lived here: Emmett's toothbrush, bright blue with a cartoon character on the handle, forgotten on the counter. I picked it up with trembling fingers, this small piece of my son's life, and felt something break inside my chest.

They weren't coming back. This wasn't a temporary move or a dramatic gesture. Harper had planned this, executed it with the same methodical precision she brought to everything else, and vanished without leaving a trace.

I drove back to the office in a daze, my mind cycling through possibilities. Maybe she'd left something at work, some clue about where they'd gone. Maybe there was a forwarding address, a contact number, anything.

The building was dark at this hour, but my keycard still worked. I took the elevator to our floor, my footsteps echoing in the empty hallways as I made my way to Harper's desk.

Her workspace was as empty as the apartment. The computer was gone, the desk drawers cleaned out, even the small succulent plant she'd kept by her monitor had disappeared. But there, centered perfectly on the pristine desktop, was a manila folder.

My hands shook as I opened it.

The first page made my blood run cold: "PETITION FOR DISSOLUTION OF MARRIAGE."

I sank into Harper's chair—the chair she'd sat in every day for six years, managing my schedule, fixing my mistakes, making my life run smoothly while I barely acknowledged her existence.

The divorce papers were thorough, professional, devastating in their completeness. Harper wasn't asking for alimony. She wasn't seeking half of our assets or any portion of the house. She'd waived her rights to everything.

Everything except Emmett.

The custody section was brutal in its accuracy: "Petitioner requests sole physical and legal custody of the minor child, Emmett Langley. Respondent has demonstrated minimal involvement in the child's daily care, education, and emotional development throughout the marriage. Respondent has never publicly acknowledged paternity or participated in parental responsibilities."

Every word was true. Every accusation was deserved.

I flipped through page after page of legal language that boiled down to one simple fact: Harper was taking our son and disappearing, and she had every legal and moral right to do so.

The final page contained only Harper's signature, dated yesterday—the same day as Emmett's birthday, the same day I'd brought another woman into our home and called them "distant relatives."

My signature line waited below hers, marked with a small penciled arrow.

I grabbed my phone and tried calling Harper again. Still disconnected. I called the office's main line and asked to be transferred to HR, demanding to know if Harper had left a forwarding address.

"I'm sorry, Mr. Ashford," the night security guard who'd answered said. "Ms. Langley requested that no information be shared. She was very specific about that."

I hung up and called my driver. "Meet me downstairs. We're going to the airport."

"Sir? It's almost midnight."

"Now," I snapped. "Check all the flights leaving New York today. All of them."

I was halfway to the elevator when my phone buzzed with a text from an unknown number. My heart hammered as I read the single line:

"Don't look for us. This time it's final. —H"

I immediately called the number back. "The number you have dialed does not exist."

I stared at the screen, my reflection ghostlike in the black glass. For the first time in my adult life, I had no plan, no next move, no way to control the situation.

I'd lost them. My wife. My son. And the worst part was, I was only now realizing I'd never really had them at all.

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