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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 2

The silence stretched between us like a chasm, broken only by the soft rustle of the child's dress as she shifted in Sterling's arms. My heart hammered against my ribs as I stared at those violet eyes—eyes that seemed far too knowing for someone so young.

"Daddy, I'm hungry," the little girl said, her voice sweet as honey as she nuzzled against Sterling's neck. The casual intimacy of the gesture made my stomach lurch.

Sterling's face softened in a way I hadn't seen in years. "Of course, sweetheart. We'll get you something to eat right away."

The endearment hit me like a slap. When was the last time he'd called me sweetheart? When was the last time he'd looked at me with that gentle expression?

"Sterling." My voice cracked as I forced the words out. "Who is this child?"

He finally met my eyes, his expression shuttering closed. "This is Briar. Ivy's daughter."

The name fell between us like a stone dropped into still water, sending ripples of shock through my entire being. Ivy. His college girlfriend. The one he claimed meant nothing anymore.

"She's been in foster care," Sterling continued, his tone carefully neutral, as if he were discussing a business transaction. "Today's her fourth birthday. I thought she should have a father figure present for such an important day."

Fourth birthday. The math hit me like a freight train. We'd been married seven years. Seven years ago, Sterling and I were already together, already planning our wedding.

"A father figure?" I repeated, my voice barely above a whisper.

Behind me, I felt Willow press against my legs, her small hands clutching at my dress. When I looked down, her dark eyes—so much like Sterling's—were wide with confusion and hurt.

"Mommy," she whispered, tugging at my skirt. "Is that Daddy's other little girl?"

The innocent question shattered something inside me. I knelt down, pulling Willow close, breathing in the familiar scent of her strawberry shampoo. Her party dress was wrinkled now, the bow in her hair completely askew.

"I don't know, baby," I whispered against her hair.

Briar's head snapped toward us at the sound of Willow's voice, those violet eyes narrowing with sudden displeasure. She straightened in Sterling's arms, her cherubic face twisting into something ugly.

"Who are they?" she demanded, pointing a small finger at us. "Why are they here? This is supposed to be my birthday!"

My blood ran cold. Her birthday. On the same day as Willow's party. The same day Sterling had promised to be here for his own daughter.

"Briar," Sterling's voice held a note of gentle correction, but there was no real authority behind it. "That's not polite."

"I don't care!" The little girl's voice rose to a shrill pitch. "I want them gone! This is my house now! Daddy promised it would be just us!"

The words hit me like physical blows. My house. The home I'd decorated, the space where I'd raised Willow, where I'd tried so desperately to build a family.

Willow pressed closer to me, her small body trembling. "Mommy, I'm scared."

"Make them leave, Daddy!" Briar's voice turned wheedling, manipulative in a way that chilled me to the bone. "You said I was your special girl. You said you'd take care of me forever!"

I looked up at Sterling, waiting for him to correct her, to explain that this was our home, our family. But he stood there, silent, his jaw tight as he avoided my gaze.

"Sterling," I said, my voice stronger now, fueled by a mother's protective fury. "Tell her. Tell her this is Willow's home too."

But he didn't. He just stood there, holding this stranger's child while his own daughter cowered behind my legs.

Briar's violet eyes locked onto mine, and I saw something there that made my skin crawl. Intelligence, yes, but also a calculating coldness that had no place in a four-year-old's gaze. She smiled then, a sweet expression that somehow managed to be more terrifying than her tantrum.

"Daddy doesn't need you anymore," she said, her voice sing-song and innocent. "He has me now. I'm his real daughter."

The words hung in the air like poison. Real daughter. As if Willow—Sterling's own flesh and blood—was somehow less than this child with her perfect blonde curls and designer dress.

I studied Briar's face more carefully, my mind racing. Four years old. Violet eyes—unusual, striking. The same shade I'd seen in old photos of Ivy, tucked away in Sterling's college yearbooks. The delicate bone structure, the way she held her head with unconscious arrogance.

The timeline crashed over me like a wave. Seven years of marriage. Four-year-old Briar.

My legs felt weak as the horrible possibility took root in my mind. Sterling and Ivy. While we were engaged, while I was planning our wedding, dreaming of our future together.

"How long?" I whispered, the question torn from my throat.

Sterling's face went carefully blank. "What?"

"How long have you known she was yours?"

The silence that followed was answer enough. Sterling's grip tightened on Briar, and she snuggled closer to him, those violet eyes never leaving my face.

"I think," she said in that eerily mature voice, "it's time for the nanny to put the other little girl to bed. Daddy and I have celebrating to do."

Nanny. The word echoed in my head, each repetition driving the knife deeper. In my own home, holding my own daughter, I'd been reduced to hired help.

Willow's small voice broke through my spiraling thoughts. "Mommy, why does she keep calling you the nanny? You're my mommy."

I looked down at my daughter—my beautiful, innocent daughter who'd spent her fifth birthday waiting for a father who'd never really been hers to begin with. Her dark eyes, so trusting, so full of love and confusion.

Then I looked back at Briar, with her perfect curls and knowing smile, nestled in the arms of the man I'd thought was my husband.

The man who'd been living a lie for four years.

Maybe longer.

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