
My Husband Celebrated While Our Daughter Died
Chapter 3
The oak-paneled hallway of St. Catherine's Academy smelled exactly as I remembered—floor wax and old textbooks, with a faint trace of cafeteria lunch drifting from the east wing. I'd walked these halls as a student, then as a teaching assistant during graduate school. Now I was walking them as a supplicant, clutching a leather portfolio that contained my résumé and a decade of buried dreams.
Principal Dawson's office door was open, but his smile was closed. He gestured to the chair across from his desk without rising, his eyes flicking to the window as if checking for witnesses.
"Mrs. Dean," he said, my married name landing like a stone between us. "Your credentials are impressive. However—"
"However, my husband is Philip Dean." I kept my voice level, my hands folded in my lap. "And you're wondering if hiring me will cost the school his annual donation."
Dawson had the decency to look uncomfortable. He adjusted his tie, a nervous tell I recognized from faculty meetings years ago. "The board has concerns about... complications."
The door behind me opened before I could respond. Garrett Matthews stepped into the office, his presence filling the small space with quiet authority. He wore a charcoal suit I'd never seen before, his university credentials hanging from a lanyard around his neck.
"Principal Dawson," Garrett said, extending his hand. "I hope I'm not interrupting. I wanted to personally endorse Mrs. Lewis's application."
Lewis. My maiden name. The one I'd be reclaiming once the divorce was final.
Dawson stood quickly, his entire demeanor shifting. "Mr. Matthews. I didn't realize you were acquainted with—"
"Martha was my father's most talented student," Garrett said smoothly, settling into the chair beside mine. "And she's one of the finest educators I've had the privilege to observe. St. Catherine's would be lucky to have her." He paused, his dark eyes holding Dawson's. "The Matthews Foundation is always looking for institutions that prioritize merit over politics. I think my father would be very interested in expanding our scholarship program here."
The threat was velvet-wrapped, but unmistakable. Dawson's face went through several calculations before landing on a smile that almost reached his eyes.
"Well," he said, turning back to me. "Perhaps we should discuss the curriculum expectations for the position."
The interview lasted forty minutes. I answered questions about pedagogical theory, classroom management, and my approach to teaching literature to high school seniors. Dawson tested me on Shakespeare, on Toni Morrison, on how I'd handle a student in crisis. With each answer, I felt pieces of myself clicking back into place—the woman I'd been before Philip, before I'd shrunk myself to fit into his world.
When Dawson finally extended his hand and said, "Welcome to St. Catherine's, Mrs. Lewis," I felt my spine straighten for the first time in three years.
Garrett drove me home—not to the mansion, but to his father's house, which had become my temporary harbor. The afternoon sun broke through the clouds, turning the wet streets into rivers of light.
"Thank you," I said as he pulled into the driveway. "For what you did back there."
"I didn't do anything," Garrett replied, killing the engine. "You earned that position. I just reminded Dawson not to be an idiot."
I laughed, the sound surprising us both. When was the last time I'd laughed?
That evening, as I sat at Professor Matthews' kitchen table grading sample essays Dawson had given me, my phone buzzed with an email notification. The subject line made my blood freeze: *Dean Estate Charity Auction - Catalog Enclosed.*
I opened the attachment with trembling fingers. Page after page of items from "the Dean collection"—furniture, artwork, Philip's golf clubs. And then, on page seventeen, I saw them.
Grace's silver locket. The one with her baby picture inside, the one I'd clasped around her neck every morning. Her charm bracelet, each tiny silver animal a gift for a birthday or holiday she'd never see again.
Estimated value: $800-$1,200.
My daughter's memories, reduced to four digits and a tax write-off.
I must have made a sound, because Garrett appeared in the doorway, his expression shifting from concern to fury as he read over my shoulder.
"He's auctioning Grace's jewelry," I whispered. "For charity. For his goddamn image."
Garrett's hand came to rest on my shoulder, steady and warm. "Then we go to the auction," he said quietly. "And we bring her home."
I looked up at him, this man who had loved me silently for years, who asked for nothing and gave everything.
"We?" I asked.
"We," he confirmed. "You're not facing him alone anymore, Martha. Not ever again."
You may also like





