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My Husband’s Deathbed Vows Included Another Woman Novel Cover

My Husband’s Deathbed Vows Included Another Woman

I stood alone in my wedding dress, a sea of whispers washing over me as fifty tables of New York's elite waited for a groom who would never arrive. The chandelier light caught on the diamond bracelet James had given me last Christmas—a guilt offering, I realized now—sending prisms dancing across the pristine white tablecloths. My phone vibrated in my trembling hand. James's name flashed on the screen, and something inside me already knew. "Grace, I can't make it." His voice was clinical, detached, as if canceling a dental appointment rather than our wedding—our tenth attempt at a wedding. "Lily's having another breakdown. She's threatening to harm herself if I leave her alone right now." I closed my eyes, the familiar script playing out once more. "James, there are three hundred people here. Your parents, my colleagues, everyone we know." "You'll handle it. You always do." A muffled sound came through the line—Lily's voice, soft and needy.
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Chapter 2

The pain in my wrist pulsed in rhythm with my heartbeat as I sat at my desk in the Philharmonic's administrative office. The bandage was stark white against my skin, a visible reminder of what had happened. What he had done.

I stared at the resignation letter on my computer screen, cursor blinking at the end of my carefully worded explanation. My fingers hovered over the keyboard, trembling slightly—not from hesitation, but from a cold, clear certainty I'd never felt before.

This was it. Five years of humiliation. Ten canceled weddings. One broken wrist.

"Grace? My God, what happened?" Antonio Rossi's Italian accent grew more pronounced with his concern as he entered the office, eyes fixed on my bandaged wrist.

Antonio had been more than just my conductor at the New York Philharmonic. He'd been a mentor, championing my career when James had subtly suggested I "scale back" my performances to focus on "our" social obligations—meaning his family's endless demands.

"I fell," I said, the lie bitter on my tongue. I wouldn't give James the satisfaction of people knowing what he'd done. That was my shame to bear, and mine alone.

Antonio's eyes narrowed, unconvinced. "And this has nothing to do with yesterday's... event?"

I clicked 'print' on my resignation letter, the whir of the printer filling the silence between us.

"It has everything to do with it," I finally admitted, retrieving the warm paper and signing my name with my uninjured hand. "I'm leaving, Antonio. Not just the Philharmonic. New York. All of it."

"Leaving?" His bushy eyebrows shot up. "Grace, this is your home. Your career. Take a leave of absence if you must, but don't throw away everything you've built here."

I handed him the letter, my signature still glistening with wet ink. "I'm not throwing away anything worth keeping."

"Your talent is worth keeping," he insisted, refusing to take the paper. "Your first chair is worth keeping. This injury—" he gestured to my wrist, "—it will heal. Take six months. A year if you need it."

I shook my head, placing the letter on his desk. "My wrist will heal. But this—" I pressed my other hand against my chest, where a dull ache had taken up permanent residence, "—this won't. Not here. Not with him."

Antonio's expression softened. He'd seen me through each of the canceled weddings, had watched me return to rehearsals the next day, violin in hand, face composed despite the whispers. He knew what it cost me to keep showing up.

"Where will you go?" he asked quietly.

"London," I said, the word itself tasting like freedom. "The Royal Academy has had a standing offer for me to join their faculty. I called them this morning."

"London," Antonio repeated, a hint of approval in his voice. "James always said he hated London."

"Exactly," I replied, the ghost of a smile touching my lips for the first time in days.

Back at the apartment, I moved methodically through our bedroom, packing only what was undeniably mine. The wedding gifts I left untouched—they had never been rightfully earned. My fingers brushed against James's desk as I passed, knocking his phone to the floor. The screen lit up with a notification, and despite myself, I looked down.

It was a text from Lily: *I'm sorry yesterday got so dramatic. But we handled it like always, right? Just like the other nine times. You and me against the world.*

Something cold and terrible settled in my stomach. With shaking hands, I picked up the phone. James never used a passcode—a small arrogance, believing he had nothing to hide or that I would never look.

I opened his messages with Lily, scrolling back through time. And there they were: Ten separate conversation threads, each dated to one of my wedding days. Each one a manufactured crisis, a desperate plea for his attention. And each one met with his immediate response: *I'm on my way. Grace will understand.*

But I didn't understand. Not until now.

I placed the phone back on his desk, a strange calm washing over me. There was no more doubt, no more wondering if I was overreacting or if I could have done something differently. The evidence of their betrayal stretched back through years of my life—years I would never get back.

I zipped my suitcase closed with my good hand, the finality of the sound like music to my ears. The only thing left to do was tell James exactly what I thought of his precious Lily and their decade-long conspiracy against me.

But as I turned toward the door, I realized something that stopped me in my tracks. For the first time in five years, I didn't care what James thought at all.

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