
My Husband Celebrated While Our Daughter Died
My Husband Celebrated While Our Daughter Died Chapter 1
The vintage Pinot Noir on the silver tray trembled, the dark liquid lapping against the glass like a warning. It was our tenth anniversary. Ten years of Philip Dean, ten years of being the woman behind the successful man, ten years of trying to fill the silence that had consumed our home since Grace died three years ago.
I stood outside Philip’s study, my hand hovering over the mahogany door handle. I wanted to surprise him. I wanted to pretend, just for tonight, that we were still the high school sweethearts who promised to conquer the world together.
Inside, Philip’s voice was sharp, cutting through the heavy oak door. He was on speakerphone.
"The transfer is delayed, Danny. You’ll get your money when the quarterly report is out."
Danny. My brother. Why was he calling Philip at eleven at night?
"I can't wait that long, Philip!" Danny’s voice was shrill, desperate. "I did everything you asked. I lied to the police. I lied to Martha. We covered up a car bomb, for God's sake! Grace is dead because your enemies rigged that car, and we let my sister believe it was just... bad luck."
The tray slipped from my fingers. I didn't hear it hit the carpet, but I felt the vibration travel up my shins. The world didn't spin; it stopped. It solidified into a jagged, suffocating reality.
A car bomb. Grace. My three-year-old daughter, burned in a wreck I thought was fate, was actually collateral damage in Philip’s business war.
"Keep your voice down," Philip hissed, his tone devoid of remorse, only annoyed by the inconvenience. "Do you want the stock prices to tank? Do you want to lose your chance with Rebecca? You sold your silence for a loan, Danny. Act like a professional."
I didn't scream. I couldn't. The air had turned into glass in my lungs. I left the tray on the floor, the wine staining the rug like old blood, and turned toward the garage. My hands shook so violently I could barely grip the steering wheel, but my foot found the gas pedal with lethal precision.
Twenty minutes later, I was pounding on the door of Danny’s apartment. When he opened it, looking disheveled and smelling of cheap beer, the color drained from his face.
"Martha? What are you—"
I shoved past him, backing him into his cramped living room. "Tell me it’s a lie," I whispered, my voice sounding like it was being dragged over gravel. "Tell me you didn't help him hide the evidence of my daughter's murder."
Danny stumbled back, hitting the wall. He couldn't look at me. He picked at a loose thread on his shirt, his cowardice radiating off him in waves. "It wasn't... it wasn't supposed to happen, Martha. Philip said it was the only way to save the company. If the news got out that the Deans were targeted by the mob... the stocks..."
"Stocks?" I screamed, the sound tearing from my throat. "You traded Grace for stocks? For a loan to impress Philip’s sister?"
"I did it for us!" Danny yelled back, tears finally spilling, pathetic and useless. "I needed the money to get into that circle, to be someone!"
My palm connected with his cheek—a sharp, wet crack that echoed in the dingy room. His head snapped to the side. My hand stung, throbbing with the force of the blow, but it felt like the only real thing in the world.
"You are dead to me," I said, my voice dropping to a terrifying calm. "Don't ever say her name again."
I left him weeping on the floor and drove back to the mansion that was no longer a home. It was a mausoleum. The gate opened automatically, welcoming me back to hell.
I didn't go to the study. I went upstairs, to the master bedroom. I needed to look him in the eye. I needed to see the monster without his mask.
I threw the door open.
The scene before me was almost comical in its cliché, yet it sliced through me with surgical precision. Philip was in bed. But he wasn't alone. Kelsey Harper, his assistant—the woman who smiled at me during company galas, who brought me coffee while I grieved—was straddling him.
She was wearing my robe. The silk one Philip had bought me for my birthday last year.
They froze. Kelsey didn't scramble to cover herself. She looked at me, smoothed the silk over her thigh, and smirked. It was a slow, venomous curling of her lips.
Philip sighed, pushing Kelsey slightly aside but making no move to get up. He looked at me with the same expression he used when a waiter brought the wrong order: mild irritation.
"I suppose the surprise is ruined," he said flatly.
"You knew," I said, standing in the doorway, feeling the ghost of Grace tugging at my skirt. "About the bomb. About everything."
Philip reached for a cigarette from the nightstand. "You were always so emotional, Martha. So boring. I needed a partner, not a charity case. Kelsey understands the cost of doing business."
He lit the cigarette, the smoke curling between us. "Honestly, you should be grateful. I kept you around as a placeholder because it looked good for the brand. Don't make this messy."
The pain I expected didn't come. Instead, the heat in my chest turned instantly, violently cold. The weeping widow died in that doorway. The naive wife vanished.
I looked at the man I had loved for a decade, then at the woman wearing my clothes. I didn't shout. I didn't break anything.
"I want a divorce," I said, my voice steady as a heartbeat. "And I’m taking everything."
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