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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 5

The champagne tower hit the flagstone in a cascade of gold—fifty-seven crystal glasses shattering like the sound of a six-year marriage dying.

The crash echoed through the garden like a gunshot. Guests screamed and stumbled backward, their designer shoes slipping on the spreading puddle of champagne and glass. I watched it all happen in slow motion—the crystal fountain collapsing in on itself, the golden liquid arcing through the air, the horrified faces of Seattle's elite as their perfect party dissolved into chaos.

Sloane's scream cut through the air, sharp and piercing. She stood frozen in her ivory gown, now splattered with champagne and dotted with tiny glass fragments that caught the afternoon light like deadly diamonds. The custom beadwork that had probably taken months to complete was ruined, twenty thousand dollars of couture destroyed in an instant.

Birdie pressed her face against my shoulder, her small body trembling as she sobbed. The sound of shattering glass had terrified her, and I could feel her tears soaking through my shirt. I rubbed her back in slow circles, whispering soothing words while my eyes never left Garrett's face.

He stood there for a heartbeat, champagne dripping from his perfect navy suit, his mouth hanging open in shock. Then his instincts kicked in—not toward his daughter who was crying in my arms, but toward Sloane.

"Are you hurt?" He rushed to her side, his hands hovering over her champagne-soaked dress, his voice thick with concern. "The baby—is the baby okay?"

Sloane leaned into him, one delicate hand pressed to her forehead, the other cradling her pregnant belly. "I think so," she whispered, her voice trembling with what I now recognized as perfectly performed fragility. "But Garrett, look at my dress... my grandmother's pearls..."

I watched this intimate dance of concern and comfort, feeling something cold and final settle in my chest. Even in crisis, even with his own child sobbing three feet away, his first instinct was to protect her.

"You're insane!" Garrett's voice cracked as he finally turned to face me, his eyes blazing with a fury I'd never seen before. "What the hell is wrong with you? You could have hurt someone!"

The accusation hung in the air like smoke. Around us, the elegant guests whispered behind manicured hands, their eyes darting between the destruction and the small family drama playing out in their midst. I could see phones being discreetly raised, capturing this moment for social media gossip that would spread through Seattle's elite circles like wildfire.

"This is my private property," I said, my voice carrying clearly across the suddenly quiet garden. "You're using my backyard without my permission. I have every right to call the police."

I reached into my purse and pulled out my phone, my fingers steady as I began to dial 911. The sight of those three numbers on my screen seemed to electrify the crowd—gasps rippled through the assembled guests like a wave.

Garrett moved faster than I'd ever seen him move. His hand shot out and knocked the phone from my grip, sending it skittering across the flagstone where it landed with a crack against the fountain's base.

"Don't you dare," he hissed, grabbing my wrist hard enough to leave marks. His face was inches from mine, his breath hot against my cheek. "Today is important to me. Don't you dare ruin this."

The grip on my wrist was painful, his fingers digging into my skin with a desperation I'd never felt from him before. For six years, he'd been distant, neglectful, absent—but never physically aggressive. This was something new, something that spoke to how much he had to lose.

"Let go of me," I said quietly, but my voice carried the kind of authority that made several guests take a step closer.

Before Garrett could respond, Sloane was there, pushing between us with surprising force for someone in her condition. Her blue eyes blazed with a fury that transformed her angelic features into something sharp and dangerous.

"She ruined everything!" Sloane's voice rose to a near-shriek, her composure finally cracking. "Our perfect day, our announcement, my dress—everything!" She whirled to face me, her finger pointed like a weapon. "I want her on her knees, Garrett. I want her to apologize for what she's done!"

The demand hung in the air like a challenge. I could feel the weight of fifty pairs of eyes on me, waiting to see if I would break, if I would bend to the will of Seattle's newest power couple.

Garrett stood between us, and for the first time in six years, I saw him for what he truly was. Not the charming man who'd swept me off my feet in college. Not the ambitious businessman climbing Seattle's social ladder. But a weak, cowardly man who would sacrifice anything—including his own daughter—to maintain his position.

He couldn't bring himself to defend me, but he also couldn't bring himself to force me to my knees in front of his new wife. He stood there, paralyzed by his own spinelessness, sweat beading on his forehead despite the cool afternoon air.

I pulled my wrist free from his loosened grip and took a step back, putting distance between myself and their toxic desperation. When I spoke, my voice was calm, clear, and loud enough to carry to every corner of the garden.

"This house belonged to my grandmother, Lillian Whitfield. The deed is in my name. Market value: four point two million dollars." I gestured toward the demolished brick wall where grandmother's prize-winning roses had grown for forty years. "Any unauthorized modifications to the property—including the destruction of a thirty-year-old ivy wall—will result in legal action for damages."

The effect was immediate and electric. Whispers erupted across the garden like popping champagne bubbles. I saw Sloane's father, a distinguished man in his sixties who I now recognized as the head of the Prescott family, go very pale. Eleanor Calloway appeared at Garrett's elbow as if materializing from thin air, her face a mask of barely controlled panic.

"Garrett," she whispered urgently, but her words carried in the sudden stillness. "The property transfers... if she owns this outright..."

I watched understanding dawn in Garrett's eyes—the realization that he'd built his perfect wedding on land he didn't own, with money he couldn't afford to lose, for a woman whose family expected results he couldn't deliver.

Shifting Birdie higher in my arms, I walked toward the garden gate with measured steps. Behind me, I could hear the rustle of expensive fabric as guests began to murmur among themselves, the careful facade of the perfect society wedding crumbling as surely as the champagne tower.

"Norah!" Garrett's voice cracked like a whip across the garden. "Stop! We can talk about this!"

I didn't turn around. At the gate, I paused with my hand on the latch and spoke without looking back.

"You have two choices, Garrett. Move out and restore my property to its original condition within three days, or I'll sue you and the Prescott family for four point two million dollars in damages. Plus interest."

The taxi I'd called was waiting at the curb, its engine running. I slid into the backseat with Birdie still clinging to me, her tears finally slowing to hiccups. As we pulled away, I saw her press her face to the rear window, watching the man who was supposed to be her father standing among the ruins of his perfect day.

Garrett ran after the car, his polished shoes slipping on the wet pavement, his perfect hair finally disheveled. But we were already turning the corner when his phone began to ring.

Through the rear window, I watched him pull the device from his pocket, his face going white as he read the caller ID: Morrison & Associates Law Firm.

A name he'd never heard before, but one that would change everything.

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