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Seven Years His Luna, Just the Nanny Novel Cover

Seven Years His Luna, Just the Nanny

He walked through the front door on their daughter's fifth birthday carrying another woman's child — and introduced his wife as "the nanny." For seven years, Harper poured everything into a marriage that gave nothing back. Sterling never held their daughter. Never made her breakfast. Never read her a bedtime story. But the moment a little girl with violet eyes appeared, he became the father Harper had begged him to be — just not for their child. While Harper was being erased from her own life, her body was quietly dying. The mate bond she'd fought to maintain was consuming her from the inside out, starved by years of neglect. The doctors gave her six months. But the deepest satisfactions come from the darkest betrayals. Because the child Sterling destroyed his family for? She was never his. And the man whose love was powerful enough to heal what Sterling's guilt never could? He'd been standing right beside Harper the entire time.
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Chapter 1

The vanilla cake sat untouched on the dining table, its pink frosting roses wilting under the warm glow of the chandelier. Five candles stood like tiny sentinels, their wicks still pristine, waiting for a wish that might never come.

I glanced at the clock for the hundredth time tonight. 9:17 PM.

Seven years. Seven years of marriage, and Sterling still couldn't manage to show up for his own daughter's birthday party. Our anniversary had become an afterthought, buried beneath his endless business meetings and late-night calls that he claimed were "urgent."

"Mommy, when is Daddy coming home?" Willow's voice was small, tired. She sat curled up on the couch, still wearing her party dress—a lavender confection I'd spent weeks picking out. The matching bow in her dark hair had gone crooked hours ago.

My heart clenched at the sight of her. Five years old today, and she'd spent most of it waiting.

"Soon, sweetheart," I lied, the words bitter on my tongue. "He's just running a little late."

I pulled out my phone, staring at the screen that mocked me with its silence. My last three messages to Sterling showed as read, but unanswered. The birthday party emoji I'd sent at six looked pathetic now, a desperate plea for attention from a man who'd already checked out of our lives.

My finger hovered over his contact. One more try.

The phone rang once before going straight to voicemail. He'd declined the call.

The sound of my own breathing filled the quiet house. Even the grandfather clock in the hallway seemed to tick louder, each second a reminder of time slipping away. Of promises broken. Of a little girl who deserved so much better than a father who treated her like an obligation.

"I'm hungry," Willow whispered, her small hand pressed against her stomach.

Guilt crashed over me. In my anxiety about Sterling, I'd forgotten that she'd barely touched her dinner, too excited about cake and presents to eat properly. Now the party food sat cold and abandoned, and my daughter was starving.

"Oh, baby, I'm sorry." I rushed to the kitchen, my heels clicking against the hardwood floors. "Let me make you something quick."

As I pulled ingredients from the refrigerator, my hands shook slightly. This wasn't how today was supposed to go. I'd planned everything perfectly—the decorations, the cake from her favorite bakery, even the special dinner Sterling claimed to love. Seven years of trying to hold this family together, and for what?

The sound of a car door slamming made me freeze.

Willow's head snapped up from the couch, her eyes bright with hope. "Daddy!"

I smoothed my dress, checked my reflection in the kitchen window. Maybe he'd have an explanation. Maybe there'd been an emergency, or traffic, or—

The front door opened, and my breath caught in my throat.

Sterling stood in the doorway, his expensive suit slightly wrinkled, his dark hair mussed. But it wasn't his disheveled appearance that made my blood run cold.

It was the child in his arms.

A little girl, maybe three or four years old, with platinum blonde hair and the most striking violet eyes I'd ever seen. She wore a pristine white dress and clutched a stuffed rabbit against her chest. Her small arms were wrapped around Sterling's neck with the familiarity of someone who belonged there.

The world tilted.

"Daddy!" Willow scrambled off the couch, running toward Sterling with her arms outstretched.

But Sterling's attention was entirely focused on the child he carried. He whispered something in her ear, his voice gentle in a way I hadn't heard in years. The little girl giggled, a sound like silver bells.

Willow stopped short, confusion clouding her features as she took in the scene. Her arms fell to her sides.

"Sterling?" My voice came out strangled. "What... who is this?"

He finally looked at me, and for a moment, I saw something flicker across his face. Guilt? Regret? But it was gone so quickly I might have imagined it.

The little girl lifted her head from Sterling's shoulder, those impossible violet eyes studying me with an intensity that made my skin crawl. When she spoke, her voice was clear and confident.

"Daddy, who's she?"

Daddy.

The word hit me like a physical blow. I gripped the kitchen counter behind me, my knuckles white against the marble surface.

Sterling's jaw tightened, and when he answered, his voice was carefully neutral. Professional, even.

"That's the nanny I hired for you, sweetheart."

The room spun. The nanny. Not his wife. Not Willow's mother. The nanny.

I stared at him, waiting for the punchline, for him to laugh and explain this horrible joke. But Sterling's face remained impassive, almost cold. As if the past seven years meant nothing. As if I meant nothing.

Willow looked between us, her lower lip trembling. She didn't understand what was happening, but she could feel the tension crackling in the air like electricity before a storm.

"I don't understand," she whispered.

Neither did I.

The little girl—this stranger who called my husband Daddy—studied me with those unsettling eyes. There was something ancient in her gaze, something that didn't belong in a child so young.

"What's her name?" she asked Sterling, still staring at me.

"Harper," he replied, not meeting my eyes.

Not 'your stepmother.' Not 'my wife.' Just Harper.

The birthday cake sat forgotten on the table, its candles now drooping in the heat. The carefully planned celebration, the anniversary dinner, the life I thought we'd built together—all of it crumbling around me like ash.

And in the center of it all stood my husband, holding another woman's child, looking at me like I was nothing more than hired help.

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