
My Husband Celebrated While Our Daughter Died
Chapter 5
The courier arrived at ten in the morning, his uniform crisp despite the humidity. He handed me a manila envelope with no return address, just my name typed on a label in sans-serif font. I signed for it on Professor Matthews' front porch, my coffee going cold in my other hand.
I should have known. I should have thrown it away unopened.
Inside were photographs—glossy, professional quality, the kind you pay extra for at theme parks. Philip and Kelsey at Disney World, their faces pressed together under matching Mickey Mouse ears. Kelsey wore denim shorts and a tank top that showed her tan shoulders. Philip's arm was slung around her waist, his smile wider than I'd seen in years.
My hands started shaking before my brain caught up. I flipped to the next photo. They were on a roller coaster, hands raised, mouths open in laughter. The next showed them sharing cotton candy, Kelsey's lips sticky with pink sugar as Philip leaned in to kiss her.
Then I saw the date stamp in the corner. Small white numbers, clinical and precise: three years ago. June fifteenth.
The day Grace died.
The photos slipped from my fingers, scattering across the porch like accusatory evidence at a crime scene. I grabbed the railing to keep from falling, my vision tunneling to those eight digits. June fifteenth. The day I'd sat in a hospital waiting room, my clothes still damp with Grace's blood, while a doctor with kind eyes told me my daughter hadn't survived the surgery. The day Philip had arrived two hours late, his shirt wrinkled, claiming he'd been in an emergency board meeting about the 'incident.'
He'd been eating cotton candy with his mistress.
I don't remember driving to the cemetery. I found myself kneeling in front of Grace's headstone, the grass damp against my jeans, the photos clutched in my fist. Her name was carved in granite: Grace Elizabeth Dean, Beloved Daughter. Below it, the dates that bookended her too-short life.
'I'm sorry,' I whispered, my voice breaking. 'Baby, I'm so sorry. I didn't know. I should have known.'
The stone was cool under my palm. I traced the letters of her name, remembering how she'd practiced writing it in crayon, the 'G' always too big, the 'e' backwards.
'He was with her,' I said, the words scraping my throat raw. 'While you were dying, while I was begging God to save you, he was laughing and eating cotton candy and—'
I couldn't finish. The sobs came in waves, violent and uncontrolled, three years of grief and rage finally breaking through the dam I'd built. I pressed my forehead to the headstone, my tears leaving dark spots on the granite.
'I promise you,' I said when I could speak again. 'I swear on your memory, Grace. I won't just leave him. I won't just divorce him. I'm going to destroy him. I'm going to make sure everyone knows what he did. What he is.'
The wind picked up, rustling through the oak trees that lined the cemetery. It sounded like whispers, like permission.
I pulled out my phone with trembling fingers and called Garrett.
'Martha?' His voice was immediate, concerned. 'What's wrong?'
'I need your help,' I said. 'I need to take him down. Not just in court. Everywhere. His company, his reputation, everything. Can you help me do that?'
There was a pause, then: 'I'll be there in twenty minutes. Don't move.'
---
Garrett's car pulled up to the cemetery gates exactly nineteen minutes later. He found me still kneeling by Grace's grave, the photos spread out on the grass like tarot cards predicting doom.
He looked at them, his jaw tightening with each image. When he reached the one with the date stamp visible, his hands curled into fists.
'Jesus Christ,' he breathed.
'I recorded the phone call,' I said, my voice hollow. 'The night I overheard Philip and Danny talking about the car bomb. I was holding my phone, and I just... pressed record. I didn't even think about it. But I have it. I have proof.'
Garrett crouched beside me, his burned arm still bandaged from the auction fire. 'Then we use it. I know someone—Marcus Chen, investigative journalist. He's been trying to expose Dean Corporation's corruption for years, but he's never had solid evidence.'
'When?' I asked.
'Philip's planning to take Dean Corporation public next month,' Garrett said. 'The IPO is supposed to make him a billionaire. We release everything the day before. We destroy him when he has the most to lose.'
I looked at Grace's headstone one more time, then gathered the photos with steady hands.
'Set up the meeting,' I said. 'It's time Philip learned what it feels like to lose everything.'
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