
My Husband Married His Brother's Widow
Chapter 4
The phone call came at seven in the morning, jarring me from the first decent sleep I'd had in weeks.
"Bring Birdie to your grandmother's cottage," Garrett's voice carried an unfamiliar warmth, almost excitement. "I have a birthday surprise waiting for her."
I sat up in bed, instantly alert. In six years, Garrett had never once suggested meeting at the cottage. He'd barely acknowledged that I owned property at all.
"What kind of surprise?" I asked, but he'd already hung up.
Birdie bounced on her toes when I told her, her face lighting up with pure joy. "Daddy's waiting for us at Great-Nana's cottage!" she announced to Mrs. Chen in the hallway, to the mailman, to anyone who would listen. Her excitement was infectious, and despite every instinct screaming that something was wrong, I couldn't bring myself to crush her happiness.
The drive to Queen Anne Hill felt longer than usual, Birdie chattering nonstop from her car seat about what Daddy might have planned. "Maybe he got me a pony! Great-Nana's house has that big backyard. Or maybe a treehouse! Daddy's really tall, so he could build it super high!"
Each innocent word twisted the knife deeper. She still believed in him. Still trusted that her father would come through.
As we turned onto Grandmother's street, my hands tightened on the steering wheel. The narrow road was lined with luxury cars—a black Bentley, a pearl-white Porsche Cayenne, a Rolls Royce that gleamed like liquid silver under the afternoon sun. This wasn't a six-year-old's birthday party. This was something else entirely.
"Wow, Mommy! Look at all the fancy cars!" Birdie pressed her face to the window. "Daddy must have invited lots of people to my party!"
My grandmother's Victorian cottage came into view, and my heart stopped. The ivy-covered brick wall where she'd grown her prize-winning roses for forty years was gone. Completely demolished. In its place stood a temporary pavilion draped in white silk and gold trim, with crystal chandeliers hanging from temporary supports.
The garden I'd played in as a child had been transformed into something from a luxury wedding magazine. White rose archways created pathways through the space. A five-tier champagne fountain sparkled in the center, surrounded by round tables dressed in cream linens. Gold Chiavari chairs were arranged in perfect rows facing what could only be described as an altar.
Not a single balloon. Not one child-friendly decoration. Nothing that suggested this was for Birdie at all.
"It's so pretty!" Birdie squealed, already unbuckling her seatbelt. "Like a fairy tale!"
I wanted to turn the car around, to drive us far away from whatever trap was waiting. But Birdie was already out of the car, her little legs carrying her toward the garden gate at full speed.
"Daddy! Daddy!" she called out, her voice ringing with pure delight.
I followed behind, my stomach churning with dread. Through the white silk entrance, I could see at least fifty guests milling about—men in expensive suits, women in cocktail dresses and pearls. The kind of people who belonged to country clubs and charity galas. The kind of people who had never acknowledged my existence.
Garrett stood near the champagne fountain, resplendent in a tailored navy suit I'd never seen before. His hair was perfectly styled, his shoes polished to a mirror shine. He looked like he belonged in this elegant setting, like he was born for it.
Birdie launched herself at him, wrapping her small arms around his legs with the fierce love only a child can give. "Daddy! I knew you'd remember my birthday! I knew you wouldn't forget!"
The transformation in Garrett's face was instantaneous. The warm smile vanished, replaced by something that looked like panic. His eyes darted around the assembled guests—all watching this intimate moment with varying degrees of confusion and disapproval.
He took a step backward, gently but firmly prying Birdie's arms from around his legs. "Birdie, you—" He glanced around again, his voice dropping to an urgent whisper. "You shouldn't have come."
The words hit like a physical blow. I watched my daughter's face crumple in confusion, her bright smile faltering.
"But you called us," I said, stepping closer. "You said you had a surprise for her."
"I said—" Garrett began, but his words were cut off by a rustle of silk behind him.
Sloane emerged from the pavilion like something from a fairy tale, her pregnancy now unmistakably visible beneath a custom ivory gown that probably cost more than my annual salary. Her blonde hair was swept into an elaborate updo, adorned with tiny white flowers. She looked radiant, glowing, perfect.
Everything I had never been.
Birdie tilted her head back to look up at this vision in white, her six-year-old mind trying to process what she was seeing. "Daddy," she said in that clear, carrying voice that children have, "who is this lady? Why is she dressed like a princess?"
The garden fell silent. Fifty pairs of eyes turned toward us—toward the small girl in her rumpled play clothes asking innocent questions that shattered the carefully constructed facade.
I saw Eleanor Calloway near the altar, her face a mask of barely controlled fury. I saw Sloane's relatives, their expressions ranging from confusion to outright hostility. I saw the society photographers positioned discreetly around the garden, their cameras suddenly very still.
And I saw Garrett, looking down at his daughter—his daughter—with something that looked like shame.
"Birdie," he said quietly, his voice strained. "Go find your mother."
The dismissal was gentle but unmistakable. Birdie's face went very still, her bright eyes filling with tears she was too young to understand.
I knelt down and pulled her into my arms, feeling her small body tremble against mine. Over her head, I looked at the man I'd loved for six years, at the elegant party built on the bones of my grandmother's garden, at the champagne fountain that sparkled like liquid gold in the afternoon light.
Slowly, I stood up, keeping Birdie close to my side.
"Norah," Garrett said, his voice carrying a warning I'd never heard before. "Don't do anything—"
But I was already walking toward the champagne fountain, my steps deliberate and sure.
"Norah, what are you doing?" His voice cracked with something that sounded like fear.
I reached out toward the crystal tower, my fingers inches from the delicate structure that represented everything they'd built on the ruins of my life.
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