Follow
Chapters
Share
My Husband Celebrated While Our Daughter Died Novel Cover

My Husband Celebrated While Our Daughter Died

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.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 2

The rain started as I threw clothes into a duffel bag—not the matched luggage set Philip had bought for our honeymoon in Santorini, but the worn canvas bag I'd used in college. My hands moved mechanically, grabbing whatever they touched. A sweater. Jeans. Grace's stuffed rabbit from the closet shelf, its fur matted from years of being held.

I didn't look back at the bed where Kelsey had sprawled in my robe. I didn't look at Philip, who had already turned his attention back to his phone, scrolling through emails as if I were a minor interruption in his evening.

The Mercedes—my car, though Philip's name was on the title—fishtailed slightly as I pulled out of the circular driveway. The rain came down in sheets now, turning the windshield into a waterfall. I drove without destination, each turn automatic, until I found myself on the tree-lined street I hadn't visited in months.

Professor Matthews' house glowed amber through the downpour, the porch light a beacon I didn't deserve. I sat in the car for ten minutes, watching water stream down the windows, my breath fogging the glass. What was I doing here? What could I possibly say?

The front door opened before I reached the porch. Garrett Matthews stood silhouetted in the doorway, his shirt sleeves rolled to his elbows, reading glasses pushed up into his dark hair. He took one look at me—soaked through, clutching my pathetic bag—and his expression shifted from surprise to something fierce and protective.

"Martha." Not a question. He stepped aside, his hand gentle on my elbow, guiding me into the warmth.

I stood dripping on the hardwood floor of the entryway, unable to form words. The house smelled like coffee and old books, exactly as I remembered from the dinner parties Professor Matthews used to host when I was his student. Before Philip. Before everything.

"I'll get towels," Garrett said, already moving toward the hallway. "And dry clothes. The guest room is ready—it's always ready."

That last part broke something in me. Always ready. As if he'd been waiting for this moment, for me to finally shatter.

Twenty minutes later, I sat at the kitchen table wearing Garrett's university sweatshirt and a pair of his sister's old yoga pants. He set a mug of tea in front of me—chamomile, the kind his father used to make when I stayed up too late grading papers as a teaching assistant.

"Tell me," Garrett said quietly, sitting across from me. His hands were flat on the table, steady and patient.

So I did. The words came out jagged and raw—the car bomb, Danny's betrayal, Philip's cold dismissal, Kelsey in my bed wearing my robe. Garrett didn't interrupt. He barely moved. But I watched his right hand curl slowly into a fist, the knuckles whitening, a muscle jumping in his jaw when I described finding them together.

"Grace," he said finally, his voice rough. "Jesus Christ, Martha. Grace."

I nodded, unable to speak her name aloud.

Garrett stood abruptly, pacing to the window. Rain lashed against the glass. "What do you need? A lawyer? I know someone—Sarah Chen, she's ruthless in family court. Or if you need—"

"A divorce," I said. "I need to be free of him."

He turned back to me, and in the kitchen light, I saw the boy who used to blush when I smiled at him during his father's faculty dinners. But his eyes held a man's resolve now.

"Then we start tomorrow," he said.

---

Sarah Chen's office was all glass and steel, her handshake firm enough to hurt. She listened to my story with the clinical detachment of a surgeon examining a wound, taking notes on a yellow legal pad.

"He'll fight dirty," she said, sliding the divorce petition across her desk. "Men like Philip Dean always do. Sign here, here, and here."

My signature looked foreign on the documents, the loops of my name trembling slightly.

The next morning, I found out exactly how dirty Philip would fight.

I was at the grocery store—a small act of normalcy, trying to buy eggs and bread—when my card was declined. I tried another. Declined. The cashier's smile turned pitying as the line behind me grew restless.

My phone buzzed in my purse. A text from Philip: *Come home and play your role, or I'll make sure you have nothing. Your choice.*

I abandoned the groceries and walked out into the parking lot, my hands shaking with rage rather than fear. He'd frozen everything. Every account, every credit card. Ten years of marriage, and I couldn't buy a carton of eggs.

The second message came that evening while I sat in Garrett's guest room, staring at Grace's rabbit. An unknown number. I almost didn't open it.

The photo loaded slowly: Kelsey and Philip at Marcello's, the Italian restaurant where Philip had proposed to me a decade ago. She wore a diamond bracelet on her wrist—the one Philip had shown me in a catalog two Christmases ago, promising it would be mine "when the bonus came through."

The caption read: *He finally has a woman who matches his status.*

I blocked the number. Deleted the message. But the image burned behind my eyelids—Kelsey's triumphant smile, Philip's hand covering hers on the white tablecloth, the bracelet catching the candlelight.

I set my phone face-down and picked up Grace's rabbit, pressing it to my chest. The fabric still smelled faintly of her strawberry shampoo.

Let them have their victory dinner. Let them think they'd won.

I was just getting started.

You may also like

After Saving His Mistress, My Husband Left Me Crippled Novel Cover
8.7
The ground wouldn't stop shaking. I braced myself against the doorframe as another violent tremor rocked the hospital wing, dust cascading from the ceiling in fine streams. The magnitude-7.2 earthquake had struck without warning, transforming Seattle General's east wing into a crumbling deathtrap. "Dr. Hayes, you can't go in there!" The safety officer grabbed my arm, his face pale beneath his helmet. "The structural engineer says it could come down any minute." I shook off his grip, my stethoscope swinging against my chest. "There are still patients trapped in there. I can hear them." Through the chaos of alarms and distant screams, I could indeed hear faint cries for help beyond the partially collapsed corridor. My department wasn't even assigned to this zone—I'd been across campus when the first tremor hit—but that hardly mattered now. "At least take this." The officer thrust a hard hat into my hands, resignation in his eyes.
After Sterilizing Me, He Adopted His Mistress' Child Novel Cover
9.7
When my child was just a year old, we had a car accident, and the scene was horrific. Sterling was beside himself, calling in the most acclaimed specialists and staying by our sides day and night, yet our son couldn't be saved. I was heartbroken, awash in tears every day, only able to find rest with sleeping pills. Three months later, I accidentally overheard a conversation between Sterling and a doctor. "Mr. Morgan, that child was yours too. Why didn't you let us treat him immediately when there was still hope?" "He was doomed from the start, simply because he was Liliana's son." "And besides, Cora and I have a child who's almost a year old. I promised her that our child would carry the Morgan name proudly. Only by removing him can I convince Liliana to adopt our child." What I thought was a happy life was just an illusion of my own making. Since that was the case, it was time for me to leave.
Breaking The Mafia Lord's Golden Cage Novel Cover
9.8
I stood next to the most dangerous man in Chicago, smiling for the cameras while my phone vibrated against my leg. I was the perfect mafia wife—a well-dressed pet in a gilded cage. But the message on my screen shattered everything. It was a photo of my husband, Dante, with his assistant, Jade. She wasn't just straddling him; she was wearing the shark tooth bracelet—a sacred war trophy Dante swore was locked in our safe. He lied to my face when I asked about it. Then came the video. I watched as he told her I was "barren" and a "failing appliance" he planned to shelf once she gave him a son. After two years of trying for a baby, he was mocking my pain to his mistress. He thought I would just cry. He thought a black Amex card and a trip to Paris would buy my silence. He believed I was too weak to survive without his protection. He was wrong. I didn't just leave. I took his grandmother's wedding ring to a jeweler and made him melt it down with a blowtorch until it was nothing but an ugly lump of gold. Then, I sent his darkest secrets to the FBI. It was time for Elena Paletti to die.
Five Billion Dollar Bride: The Reborn Genius Novel Cover
7.2
She was collateral. A silent bride in a five-billion-dollar deal, bound by a contract that stripped her of her name and her voice. He was Austin Walton. A ruthless billionaire who viewed his new wife not as a partner, but as an asset with a depreciating value. His plan was simple: use her to secure his empire, then discard her. Her plan was simpler: survive him. But on their wedding night, something changes. The terrified girl he expected is replaced by a woman with cold fire in her eyes, a woman who can do the math faster than his analysts and anticipate his enemies' moves before they happen. She dismantles her own family's treachery from the inside out, turning his wedding into a corporate battlefield where she is the undisputed victor. Austin bought a pawn for his chessboard. He's about to discover he married his queen. And in this game of power, the only rule is winner takes all.
Hidden Pregnancy: The Billionaire CEO's Secret Heir Novel Cover
7.8
I woke up in a bed of Egyptian cotton with a jackhammer headache and the naked CEO of my company sleeping beside me. I was a low-level analyst who had accidentally texted the world's most ruthless billionaire instead of my crush. Now, Sebastian Sterling wasn't just my boss-he was the man who owned my debt, my marriage, and a secret that was currently burning us both alive. He forced me into a cold-blooded marriage contract, trading my mother's life-saving medical bills for a year of my life as his trophy wife. I thought I was just a pawn in his corporate war against his ex-fiancée, but the tattoo over his heart-0825-held the date of the fire that destroyed my childhood and killed my peace. He hadn't just found me; he had been watching me from the shadows since I was twelve. He built a fortress of money and lies around me, manipulating my every move while his family tried to have me erased. When they finally targeted my mother and my son, I realized I couldn't just be a victim anymore. I fled to the industrial slums of Newark, erasing my identity to hunt down the ledgers that could put his family behind bars. But Sebastian didn't let me go; he stripped off his suits and checked out of his penthouse to follow me into the grime. Now, he's posing as a low-life driver named Ben, watching over me from a beat-up SUV while I infiltrate a criminal syndicate. He thinks he's my guardian angel, but I'm the one holding the match that will either save his empire or burn it to the ground.
LOVE PAINTED IN LIES  Novel Cover
9.0
Prologue ‎Some stories begin with love. ‎Some begin with war. ‎But theirs began with a promise, one whispered under the fading glow of a streetlamp, sealed with youthful dreams and a future full of light. Neither of them knew how quickly love could twist into something darker... or how far a wounded heart could go just to feel whole again. ‎This is not a tale