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My Husband Made My Abuser’s Daughter Our Nanny Novel Cover

My Husband Made My Abuser’s Daughter Our Nanny

I wake to the weight of Sterling's hand in my hair. Not pulling. Never pulling. Just... there. Fingers threading through the strands with mechanical precision, the way you'd groom a show dog. The morning light filters through floor-to-ceiling windows, turning our bedroom into a fishbowl of gold and glass. Thirty stories above Manhattan, and I can't breathe. "Happy birthday to our little prince," Sterling murmurs against my temple. His cologne—something obscenely expensive that smells like cedar and control—fills my lungs.
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Chapter 2

The humming starts on Tuesday.

I'm standing in the hallway outside Nico's nursery, my hand frozen on the doorframe, because Ashley is singing. Not just any song—the lullaby I used to whisper in that basement when the darkness got too heavy, when I needed to remember I was still human. A melody I made up from scraps of memory and desperation, something I've never sung aloud since Sterling found me.

She knows.

Inside, Nico giggles. The sound should fill me with joy, but instead it carves me hollow. Through the crack in the door, I watch Ashley lift my son from his crib, her movements fluid and confident. She's wearing a cream cashmere sweater—probably one Sterling bought her—and her honey hair catches the afternoon light.

She looks like she belongs here.

I push the door open. "I'll take him."

Ashley turns, and for just a heartbeat, something flickers across her face. Recognition? Satisfaction? It's gone before I can name it.

"Mrs. King." Her voice is honey over glass. "We were just having tummy time. Weren't we, sweet boy?"

Nico reaches for her when I step closer. Actually reaches away from me, his chubby hands grasping for Ashley's sweater, and the rejection punches the air from my lungs.

"Nico, baby, it's Mama—"

He starts to cry. Not the tired fussing I know how to soothe, but real distress, his face crumpling as I try to take him. Ashley makes a soft sound, sympathetic and devastating, and pulls him back against her chest. He quiets immediately.

"He's just tired," she murmurs, but her eyes meet mine over his dark curls. "Sometimes babies sense tension. They're so intuitive."

I flee before she can see me break.

---

Eleanor King arrives Thursday with the force of a nor'easter.

She sweeps into the penthouse in Chanel and judgment, her silver hair sculpted into submission, her mouth a thin line of disapproval that's been aimed at me since the day Sterling brought me home. The housekeeper serves tea in the formal living room—the one with furniture too expensive to actually sit on—and I perch on the edge of a chair while Eleanor examines me like a stain on expensive silk.

"Selene." She doesn't ask how I am. She never does. "Where's the nanny?"

Before I can answer, Ashley appears with Nico on her hip. She's changed into a dove-gray dress that makes her look like she stepped out of a Ralph Lauren ad. Nico is babbling happily, playing with a strand of her hair.

"Mrs. King." Ashley's smile is demure, perfect. "What a pleasure."

Eleanor's face transforms. Actual warmth floods her features, something I've never seen directed at me in four years of marriage.

"My dear girl, come sit. Let me see my grandson." She pats the sofa beside her, and Ashley glides over like she's done this a thousand times. Eleanor coos at Nico, then turns her attention to Ashley. "Sterling tells me you studied early childhood development at Columbia?"

"Just finished my degree." Ashley's voice carries just the right note of humble pride. "I'm so grateful Mr. King gave me this opportunity."

I'm invisible. Literally sitting three feet away, and I might as well be furniture.

Sterling enters then, still in his suit from whatever meeting he left early. He kisses his mother's cheek, ruffles Nico's hair, and his hand lands on Ashley's shoulder—casual, proprietary—before he even glances my way.

"Mother, I see you've met our Ashley."

Our Ashley.

Eleanor sips her tea, her gaze sliding to me with surgical precision. "Finally," she says, her voice carrying across the room like a verdict, "a woman in this house who doesn't look like she's about to shatter." She turns back to Sterling, lowering her voice just enough that I have to strain to hear. "Think of Nico's genetics, Sterling. What he needs. What he deserves."

The teacup trembles in my hands. I set it down before it can betray me further, before the hairline cracks in my composure split wide open.

No one notices when I leave the room.

---

Friday night, Sterling's phone won't stop buzzing.

He's in the shower, and the sound drills into my skull where I'm lying in bed, staring at the ceiling, counting the ways I've become a ghost in my own life. The buzzing continues. Insistent. Wrong.

I shouldn't look. I know I shouldn't.

I look.

The screen lights up with a name I don't recognize—Graves Investigations—and a preview of the latest message: "Final payment received. Pleasure doing business."

My hands shake as I unlock his phone. I know the passcode because Sterling never thought he needed to hide anything from me. Why would he? I'm his rescued bird, his grateful project, too damaged to question.

The message thread goes back six months.

Six months of communications with a private investigator. Photos of Ashley at her college campus. Background checks. Addresses. And then, three months ago: "Target located and willing to relocate. Awaiting your instructions."

Sterling's response: "Arrange everything. I want her in place by Nico's first birthday."

The phone slips from my fingers onto the duvet.

He didn't find Ashley. He hunted her. Paid for her degree, her relocation, her entire life—and brought the daughter of my nightmare into our home like a gift.

The shower shuts off.

I'm still holding the phone when Sterling walks out, towel around his waist, water beading on his shoulders. He sees his phone in my hands. Sees my face.

He doesn't even have the decency to look surprised.

"Selene," he says quietly. "Let me explain."

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