
Seven Years His Luna, Just the Nanny
Chapter 3
The house felt hollow after Sterling disappeared upstairs with Briar, their footsteps echoing through the hallway like a funeral march. I stood frozen in the kitchen doorway, watching Willow pick at the abandoned birthday cake with her finger, her party dress now wrinkled and stained.
"Mommy?" Her voice was so small I almost missed it. "Can I have some cake now?"
The simple request broke something loose in my chest. I moved mechanically to the dining room, cutting a slice of the vanilla cake that had sat untouched for hours. The pink frosting roses had completely wilted under the warm light, leaving sticky puddles on the white surface.
"Here, baby." I placed the plate in front of her, along with a single candle from the abandoned set of five. "Make a wish."
Willow stared at the lone flame, her dark eyes reflecting the tiny light. She was so quiet I could hear the grandfather clock ticking in the hallway, each second stretching like an eternity.
"What should I wish for?" she whispered.
*For a father who loves you. For a family that isn't broken. For a mother who isn't falling apart.*
"Whatever your heart wants most," I managed.
She closed her eyes, her small face scrunched in concentration, and blew out the candle. The smoke curled between us in the sudden darkness.
"What did you wish for?" I asked, turning on the overhead light.
Willow looked up at me with those eyes—Sterling's eyes—and my heart shattered all over again.
"I wished Daddy would like me," she said simply.
The words hit me like a physical blow. I sank into the chair beside her, my hands trembling as I reached out to smooth her dark hair.
"Oh, sweetheart—"
"He doesn't, does he?" Her voice was matter-of-fact, too mature for a five-year-old. "Daddy doesn't like me. That's why he brought the other little girl. That's why he never wants to play with me or read me stories."
I wanted to lie, to protect her from the truth that was eating me alive. But Willow was too smart, too perceptive. She'd already figured out what I'd been trying to deny for years.
Sterling had never wanted her.
The memory crashed over me like a wave, pulling me back five years to that sterile doctor's office. I'd been so excited, clutching the ultrasound photo in my trembling hands, ready to share the news that would make us a real family.
*"You need to get rid of it."*
*Sterling's voice had been cold, clinical. He'd barely looked up from his phone when I'd shown him the grainy image of our baby.*
*"What?" I'd whispered, certain I'd misheard.*
*"The pregnancy, Harper. End it. We're not ready for children. My company is at a critical stage, and I can't have distractions right now."*
*Distractions. He'd called our unborn child a distraction.*
*"But Sterling, this is our baby. Our family—"*
*"No." His tone had been final, dismissive. "Schedule the appointment. I'll pay for it, obviously, but I won't discuss this again."*
But I hadn't listened. I'd protected Willow from the moment she was conceived, fighting for her right to exist against a father who saw her as nothing more than an inconvenience.
And in the five years since her birth, Sterling had never held her. Not once.
Not when she took her first steps, reaching for him with chubby arms while he scrolled through emails. Not when she'd learned to say "Daddy" and he'd left the room. Not when she'd drawn him pictures that he'd thrown away without looking.
But tonight, he'd held Briar like she was made of spun gold.
"Mommy?" Willow's voice pulled me back to the present. "Why are you crying?"
I wiped my cheeks, not realizing the tears had started. "I'm just tired, baby. It's been a long day."
Footsteps on the stairs made us both freeze. Sterling appeared in the doorway, his expression unreadable as he took in the scene—the demolished cake, the single candle, his daughter's tear-stained face.
"I need you to move your things out of the master bedroom," he said without preamble. "Briar will be staying there with me."
The casual cruelty of it stole my breath. "That's our room, Sterling."
"Not anymore." He straightened his tie, the same gesture he made before difficult business meetings. "There's a guest room down the hall. You'll be more comfortable there."
Comfortable. As if comfort was the issue. As if he wasn't systematically erasing me from my own life.
"It's Willow's birthday," I said, my voice stronger than I felt. "You haven't even said happy birthday to your own daughter."
Sterling's jaw tightened, but he didn't look at Willow. Couldn't look at her.
"Happy birthday," he said flatly, the words empty of any warmth or meaning.
Willow flinched as if he'd slapped her.
Without another word, Sterling turned and headed back upstairs. I listened to his footsteps, waiting for the slam of a door, but instead I heard something that made my blood run cold.
His voice, soft and gentle, drifting down from the master bedroom.
"Once upon a time, there was a beautiful little princess with hair like moonlight..."
I'd never heard that voice before. In seven years of marriage, Sterling had never spoken to me with such tenderness, such genuine affection. The fairy tale continued, punctuated by Briar's delighted giggles and Sterling's warm chuckles.
The sound of the family I'd always dreamed of, playing out in my bedroom with someone else's child.
Something deep inside me began to howl—a sound of pure anguish that had no voice. My wolf, the part of me that had been growing weaker with each passing year, each rejection, each moment of being made to feel invisible in my own home.
The howling grew fainter, more desperate, like an animal calling for help that would never come.
Willow slipped her small hand into mine, her fingers sticky with frosting.
"Mommy," she whispered, "are we still a family?"
Upstairs, Sterling's laughter echoed through the house—a sound I realized I'd been starving to hear for years.
Just never directed at us.
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