
My Husband’s Deathbed Vows Included Another Woman
Chapter 3
The doorbell rang just as I finished packing the last of my sheet music. I knew who it would be before I even opened the door. The Sterling family never called before arriving—another small reminder that my time, my space, my very existence was considered secondary to their convenience.
I took a deep breath and opened the door to find James's mother, Eleanor Sterling, flanked by his father and two aunts. Their faces wore identical expressions of polite concern that didn't reach their eyes.
"Grace, darling," Eleanor said, air-kissing both my cheeks while her gaze swept critically over my casual attire and the bandage on my wrist. "We've come to talk some sense into you."
I stepped aside to let them enter, watching as they assessed my half-packed apartment with thinly veiled disapproval.
"This is quite the overreaction," James's father said, not bothering with a greeting. "James explained about the unfortunate... incident. But really, Grace, marriages have rough patches."
"Ten canceled weddings isn't a rough patch," I replied, my voice steadier than I expected. "It's a pattern."
Eleanor perched on the edge of the sofa—the same spot where Lily had been nestled against my husband just days before. "The Christmas charity gala is in six weeks, Grace. You've always handled the seating arrangements so beautifully. And Thanksgiving—you know how James's allergies act up if the stuffing isn't prepared exactly right."
I almost laughed at the absurdity. My marriage was in ruins, and she was worried about stuffing.
"I'm sure you'll manage," I said, folding my arms across my chest.
"And what about the New Year's Eve party?" Aunt Meredith chimed in. "You promised to play that Vivaldi piece. Everyone's looking forward to it."
"I've resigned from the Philharmonic," I said, watching their faces register genuine shock for the first time. "I'm leaving New York."
"Don't be ridiculous," Eleanor snapped, her facade cracking. "You have obligations to this family. James may have been... inconsiderate, but that's no reason to abandon your responsibilities."
"My responsibilities?" The words tasted bitter. "I was never your daughter-in-law. I was your unpaid event planner and social secretary."
"Now, see here—" James's father began, but I cut him off.
"No, you see here. For five years, I've planned your parties, managed your social calendar, and stood alone at ten different wedding venues while your son comforted another woman. I'm done."
Their expressions hardened in unison, the pretense of concern evaporating.
"If you leave like this," Eleanor said coldly, "don't expect to be welcomed back."
I looked at these people—this family that had never truly been mine—and felt nothing but relief. "I wouldn't dream of it."
---
The lawyer's office was cold and impersonal, much like the marriage it was dissolving. I sat across from James, avoiding his gaze as Mr. Feldman outlined the terms of our divorce.
"Given the brevity of the marriage and absence of children," the lawyer droned, "Mr. Sterling proposes an equal division of joint assets acquired during the marriage, with each party retaining their personal property and pre-marital assets."
I looked up sharply. I'd expected a fight—James had always been possessive of what he considered his, and technically, most of our wealth had come from his professor's salary and family money. My violin career, while respected, had never matched his income.
"You're agreeing to split everything equally?" I asked, suspicious of this sudden generosity.
James nodded, not quite meeting my eyes. "It seems fair."
Something wasn't right. James Sterling didn't do fair; he did calculated. But I wasn't about to question this unexpected stroke of luck.
"I accept the terms," I said quickly, before he could change his mind.
As we signed the papers, his fingers brushed against mine accidentally. I flinched away, the memory of falling, of pain shooting through my wrist, still fresh.
"Grace," he said softly, finally looking at me directly. "Where will you go?"
I hesitated, then decided there was no reason to hide it. "London. I've accepted a teaching position at the Royal Academy of Music."
For a moment, something flashed across his face—surprise, dismay, I couldn't tell which. London. The city he'd always claimed to despise after some mysterious academic humiliation in his youth.
"London," he repeated, his voice oddly hollow. "I see."
As I walked out of the lawyer's office, settlement papers in hand and divorce proceedings underway, I felt lighter than I had in years. With my share of our assets, I had enough to start fresh in London—a new home, a new career, a new life far from the Sterlings and their suffocating expectations.
What I didn't know then was that James's uncharacteristic cooperation wasn't the end of his surprises. It was only the beginning.
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