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After Her Betrayal, Our Family Was Ruined Novel Cover

After Her Betrayal, Our Family Was Ruined

The call came on a rainy Tuesday afternoon. "Nala, you need to come to Washington General Hospital immediately." Ian's voice cracked through the phone, and something in my chest tightened before he even finished speaking. "What happened?" I asked, though part of me already knew. The Patterson family had been riding high for years—Ian's political star ascending, our four children thriving. We weren't due for tragedy. "It's Jason. There's been an accident." I remember the rain pounding against the windshield as I drove to the hospital, my knuckles white against the steering wheel. Jason, our eldest, had just finished his freshman year at Georgetown. He was supposed to come home that weekend with stories about his classes, his girlfriends, his plans for summer internships. Instead, I found him lying motionless in a hospital bed, tubes snaking from his arms, his face pale beneath the harsh fluorescent lights.
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Chapter 1

The call came on a rainy Tuesday afternoon.

"Nala, you need to come to Washington General Hospital immediately." Ian's voice cracked through the phone, and something in my chest tightened before he even finished speaking.

"What happened?" I asked, though part of me already knew. The Patterson family had been riding high for years—Ian's political star ascending, our four children thriving. We weren't due for tragedy.

"It's Jason. There's been an accident."

I remember the rain pounding against the windshield as I drove to the hospital, my knuckles white against the steering wheel. Jason, our eldest, had just finished his freshman year at Georgetown. He was supposed to come home that weekend with stories about his classes, his girlfriends, his plans for summer internships.

Instead, I found him lying motionless in a hospital bed, tubes snaking from his arms, his face pale beneath the harsh fluorescent lights.

"Mom," he whispered when he saw me, tears streaming down his face. "I can't feel my legs."

The doctor's words blurred together—spinal cord injury, permanent paralysis, rehabilitation—but one phrase cut through everything: "He'll never walk again."

I held Jason's hand as he sobbed, feeling something inside me fracture. This wasn't supposed to happen to us. We were the Pattersons—Washington's golden family.

---

Three months later, we buried our second son.

Marcus had always been the rebellious one, staying out late, getting into fights, but he was still my baby. That night, he'd gone to meet friends downtown. I'd argued with him about it—too dangerous, too late—but he'd slipped out anyway.

The police found him in an alley behind the old warehouse district. Stabbed three times, they said. Robbery gone wrong.

"I'm sorry, Mrs. Patterson," the detective said, his face grim as he handed me a bloodstained baseball cap—Marcus's favorite. "We're doing everything we can to find the perpetrators."

But his eyes told me what he couldn't say: This was probably random. Senseless violence in a city where such things happened too often.

At the funeral, Ian stood rigid beside me, his politician's mask slipping only when he thought no one was watching. "This is my fault," he whispered once, so quietly I almost didn't hear him. "They're targeting us because of me."

"Who?" I asked, clutching Marcus's cap to my chest.

But Ian just shook his head, his eyes scanning the cemetery gates as if expecting someone to appear.

---

Spring came, but it brought no relief.

"We can't find him, Mom." Haley's voice trembled over the phone. She'd been watching her little brother at the park while I ran errands.

"What do you mean, you can't find him?" My heart stopped.

"Tyler was playing on the swings. I just turned to talk to Cali for a minute, and when I looked back—" Her words dissolved into sobs.

We searched everywhere. The park, the surrounding streets, even the nearby canal. Police dogs, volunteers, Ian's security team—all combing the area for any sign of our seven-year-old son.

"Mrs. Patterson," the lead officer said after three days, his face drawn with exhaustion. "We've done everything we can. There's simply no trace."

No trace. As if Tyler had vanished into thin air.

I collapsed then, right there on the park bench where Haley had last seen him. Ian caught me before I hit the ground, his own face ashen.

"This isn't random," he muttered, pulling me against his chest. "This is targeted."

But who would target a child? And why?

---

If I thought we'd hit rock bottom with Tyler's disappearance, I was wrong.

Cali started changing around that time. My sweet six-year-old girl, who used to dance around the house singing made-up songs, became withdrawn. Quiet. She'd sit for hours staring out windows, or hide under her bed when strangers came to the house.

"Mommy, there are monsters in my head," she told me one night, her small fingers digging into my arm. "They tell me bad things."

I took her to doctors, therapists, specialists. The diagnosis came back: severe childhood schizophrenia, possibly triggered by trauma.

"Mrs. Patterson," Dr. Chen said gently, "children are remarkably resilient, but with everything your family has been through..."

She didn't need to finish. I knew what she meant: Our family was crumbling under the weight of tragedy.

I sat by Cali's bed that night, watching her sleep fitfully, her small face contorted in dreams I couldn't imagine. Downstairs, Ian paced the floors, making calls to security consultants and private investigators.

Somewhere in the darkness beyond our windows, I felt eyes watching us. Waiting.

The Pattersons had always been untouchable. But now, something—or someone—was systematically destroying everything we loved.

And I had no idea how to stop it.

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