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My Husband Married His Brother's Widow Novel Cover

My Husband Married His Brother's Widow

Norah Whitfield married Garrett Calloway in a courthouse with no guests, no dress, and no announcement — because his family's tradition demanded secrecy until she bore a son. For six years, she raised their daughter Birdie alone, swallowing her loneliness while Garrett built his empire. When Garrett's brother dies unexpectedly, his widow Sloane moves into the family orbit — and into Garrett's bed. He promises Norah it's temporary: just a child to carry on his brother's name. But when Norah catches Garrett proposing to Sloane inside her own grandmother's cottage, using her inheritance as the backdrop for another woman's fairy tale, she realizes the only person who was ever "temporary" was her. With divorce papers in one hand and her daughter in the other, Norah vanishes. But Garrett isn't prepared for what she takes with her — or for the woman she becomes when she stops waiting for him to choose her.
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Chapter 3

"Sign it, and you walk out with two hundred thousand dollars. Refuse, and you walk out with nothing — including your daughter."

Eleanor's words sliced through the air like a blade, each syllable calculated to cut deep. I stared at the custody papers in my hands, my fingernails digging crescents into my palms as the legal language blurred before my eyes. The formal header seemed to mock me: *Voluntary Relinquishment of Parental Rights*.

The silence in the room felt suffocating. Even the grandfather clock in the corner had stopped ticking, as if time itself was holding its breath.

"You agreed to this?" I looked up at Garrett, my voice barely above a whisper.

For the first time since we'd arrived, he lifted his head. His expression was a complicated maze of guilt and resignation, but underneath it all, I saw something that made my stomach turn—relief.

"Norah, it's just temporary," he said, his voice carrying that same practiced tone he'd used for six years of broken promises. "Once everything gets sorted out, Birdie will still be our daughter. You have to understand—"

He reached across the space between us, his hand extended like an olive branch. I slapped it away so hard the sound echoed off the marble walls.

"Temporary?" The word tasted bitter on my tongue. "Your 'temporary' has already lasted six years!"

The room fell silent again. Birdie stirred in her oversized chair, her small face scrunching in confusion at the raised voices. I forced myself to lower my tone, but the fury still burned in my chest like acid.

Sloane pressed a delicate hand to her forehead, her other arm wrapping protectively around her pregnant belly. "Please don't argue," she whispered, her voice trembling with what I now recognized as perfectly performed fragility. "I'm getting a headache, and the stress isn't good for the baby..."

Garrett's attention snapped to her immediately, his body turning away from me as if I'd ceased to exist. He was beside her in seconds, his hand gentle on her arm, his voice soft with concern.

"Are you okay? Should I get you some water?"

I watched this intimate dance between them—the way she leaned into his touch, the way his thumb traced circles on her wrist—and felt something cold and final settle in my chest. This wasn't duty or family obligation. This was love. Real, present, chosen love.

The kind he'd never shown me.

I took a deep breath, feeling the rage transform into something sharper, more focused. When I spoke again, my voice was steady as steel.

"No."

I pushed the papers back across the polished coffee table, watching Eleanor's perfectly composed mask slip for just a moment.

"Birdie is my daughter. If you want custody, you can fight me for it in court."

Eleanor's laugh was like breaking glass. "You? A woman with no family, no income, no connections?" She gestured around the opulent room with its oil paintings and crystal chandeliers. "What exactly do you think you can do against the Calloway family fortune?"

I stood slowly, lifting Birdie into my arms. She was warm and solid against me, her balloon strings still tangled around her small wrist, a reminder of the birthday that should have been perfect.

"Who said I don't have family?"

The words hung in the air like a challenge. Eleanor's eyebrows raised slightly, the first crack in her imperial composure. Garrett looked up from where he was fussing over Sloane, confusion flickering across his features.

"What do you mean?" he asked.

I walked toward the massive front doors, my footsteps echoing on the marble. At the threshold, I turned back to look at him—really look at him—for what I knew would be the last time.

"You never asked where my parents live, did you, Garrett? In six years, you never once asked about my family."

His mouth opened, then closed. The confusion in his eyes deepened, and I saw the exact moment he realized how little he actually knew about the woman who'd given him six years of her life.

"Norah, wait—"

But I was already walking out into the Seattle night, carrying my daughter away from the golden prison they'd tried to build around us.

Back in our small apartment, I tucked Birdie into her bed, her birthday dress finally changed for soft pajamas. She was exhausted from the long day, her eyelids heavy as she clutched her stuffed rabbit.

"Mommy, why was everyone so angry?" she asked, her voice small in the darkness.

I smoothed her hair back from her forehead, my heart breaking at the innocence in her question. "Sometimes grown-ups disagree about important things," I said carefully. "But you don't need to worry about any of it, okay?"

"Are we going to live in that big house?"

"No, sweetheart. We're going to stay right here, where we belong."

She nodded, already drifting toward sleep. "Good. I like our home better anyway."

Once her breathing evened out, I crept to the living room and opened my laptop. The blue glow illuminated my face as I navigated to Garrett's family sharing account—the same password he'd used for everything since college, because he'd never seen me as enough of a threat to bother changing it.

What I found made my blood run cold.

Transaction after transaction, dating back six months. Jewelry purchases at Tiffany's totaling forty-three thousand dollars. Baby furniture from the most expensive boutiques in the city. A Tesla Model S, purchased outright and registered to Sloane Prescott.

But it was the real estate documents that made my hands shake with rage. Property transfer papers, still in draft form, for my grandmother's old house—the Victorian cottage on Queen Anne Hill that she'd left me in her will. Garrett was planning to sign it over to Sloane as a "wedding gift."

The house that held every happy memory of my childhood. The house where my grandmother had taught me to bake bread and told me stories of her own grandmother's journey from England. The house that was supposed to be Birdie's inheritance someday.

I screenshot everything—every receipt, every bank transfer, every legal document. My fingers flew across the keyboard as I compiled the evidence into a single email.

Then I typed a number I hadn't called in months, my hands trembling as I hit send.

The response came faster than I'd expected, despite the time difference. Just a few lines from my father in London, but they changed everything:

*"I've already contacted Morrison & Associates. They'll be in Seattle tomorrow morning. And Norah—don't forget about the deed in your grandmother's safety deposit box. That property is worth 4.2 million dollars now. The developers have been circling like vultures."*

I closed the laptop and sat back in the darkness, feeling something I hadn't experienced in six years.

Power.

For the first time since I'd met Garrett Calloway, I smiled.

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