
After My Ex Called Me His Property, My Husband Struck Back
Chapter 3
The photo was grainy, taken with a long lens through the wrought-iron fence of Central Park, but the joy on my face was unmistakable. I was laughing, head thrown back, while Oliver, a blur of motion in his little denim overalls, chased a pigeon near the Bethesda Fountain. The headline was vague trash: *"Mystery Beauty Spotted with Child—Nanny or Secret Mom?"*
I scrolled past it on my tablet, sipping my morning matcha in the sunroom of our penthouse. It was a harmless piece of fluff, likely buried on page six of a gossip rag, but my stomach gave a small, warning lurch. Anonymous photos were usually harmless. Usually.
"Something wrong?" Adrian asked, not looking up from his Wall Street Journal. He was buttering toast with the precise, deliberate movements he applied to dismantling corporations.
"Just a paparazzi shot," I said, locking the screen. "Nothing identifiable. Just... noise."
Adrian’s hand paused. He looked at me, his dark eyes instantly alert, scanning my face for distress. "Do I need to have it scrubbed?"
"No," I said, forcing a smile. "Let them speculate. It keeps the real truth safe a little longer."
He nodded, though the tension didn't leave his shoulders. He kissed the top of my head before leaving for the office, leaving the scent of sandalwood and power in his wake. I didn't tell him that the real danger wasn't the public. It was the man from my past who was desperate to rewrite my narrative.
***
Across town, in a hotel suite that smelled of stale air conditioning and desperation, Parker Webb was staring at the same photo. But he wasn't seeing a mother’s joy. He was seeing leverage.
"Look at this," he muttered, pacing the carpet. "A kid. She has a kid."
Vivian Fernandez sat on the edge of the bed, filing her nails with aggressive strokes. She didn't look at the screen. She didn't have to. She had already planted the seed. "I told you, Parker. She’s damaged goods. That’s not a husband’s child. That’s a mistake."
Parker stopped pacing. A slow, twisted smile spread across his face. "A mistake means she's desperate. A single mother in this city? She's probably drowning in debt. No wonder she was at the gala trying to snag a sponsor."
Vivian stood up, smoothing her skirt. She walked over to him, placing a hand on his chest, her voice dripping with calculated poison. "My investigator sent over the file this morning. It’s worse than we thought. She’s not just struggling, Parker. She’s… staff."
Parker frowned. "Staff?"
"A high-end nanny," Vivian lied smoothly, her eyes wide with feigned sympathy. "Or maybe a surrogate. The reports are fuzzy, but she’s definitely being paid by someone wealthy to keep that child. She’s selling her womb, Parker. It’s tragic, really."
Parker’s expression shifted from confusion to a sickening kind of validation. The idea that I was a paid servant, a vessel for someone else's legacy, fit perfectly into his worldview. It made him the savior again.
"She needs me," he whispered, the delusion cementing in his mind. "She needs a way out."
***
The drop-off line at St. Jude’s Preparatory was a daily parade of black SUVs and European sedans. I usually enjoyed the routine—the quick hug from Oliver, the smell of crayons and floor wax wafting from the open doors. Today, however, the air felt heavy.
I had just buckled Oliver’s backpack straps when a shadow fell over us.
"So, this is the baggage."
I froze. My hand lingered on Oliver’s shoulder, instinctively pulling him closer to my legs. I turned slowly. Parker was leaning against the stone archway of the school gate, arms crossed, wearing a smirk that made my skin crawl.
"Parker," I said, my voice ice. "You are trespassing."
He pushed off the wall and walked toward us, ignoring the other parents who were glancing our way. He looked down at Oliver with a mixture of pity and disdain. Oliver, sensing the hostility, buried his face in my coat.
"Cute kid," Parker said, though the words sounded like an insult. "Who’s paying for this place? The parents you work for? Or is this part of the surrogacy deal?"
My blood ran cold. "Excuse me?"
"Vivian found out everything, Emma," he said, stepping closer, lowering his voice to a conspiratorial whisper. "The nanny gig. The paid breeder contract. God, it’s humiliating. You were always proud, but this? Selling your body to raise someone else's heir?"
The sheer insanity of his accusation left me breathless for a moment. He truly believed I was a hired womb. He couldn't conceive of a reality where I was the matriarch, not the help.
"You are delusional," I spat, my grip on Oliver tightening. "Get out of my way."
"I can help you," he hissed, blocking my path to the car. He reached into his jacket pocket and pulled out a checkbook. "I can pay for the kid's needs. School, clothes, whatever. I'll buy out your contract with whoever owns you right now."
"Get away from my son," I warned, my voice rising.
"Just sign an NDA," he pressed on, oblivious to the danger he was courting. "Be my exclusive mistress. I’ll set you up in an apartment. You won't have to scrub floors or raise other people's brats. I'm offering you dignity, Emma!"
Dignity. The word hung in the air, grotesque coming from his mouth.
I didn't have to shout. I simply raised my hand.
Two car doors slammed simultaneously behind me. Silas and another member of Adrian’s security detail, a massive man named Kael, materialized at my side. They didn't speak. They didn't have to. They simply stepped between Parker and me, forming a wall of muscle and dark wool suits.
Parker stumbled back, his confidence faltering as he looked up at Kael, who stood a full head taller than him.
"What is this?" Parker stammered, looking around wildly. "Who are these goons?"
"Mrs. Rogers," Silas said, his voice calm and terrifyingly polite. "Is this individual bothering you?"
"Yes," I said, looking Parker dead in the eye. "He was just leaving."
Parker’s face flushed a deep, ugly red. He pointed a shaking finger at me over Kael’s shoulder. "You're making a mistake, Emma! You think these hired thugs change anything? You're still just a girl playing dress-up! You'll come crawling back when the money runs out!"
Silas took one step forward. Parker flinched, turned on his heel, and scrambled toward his car, shouting obscenities over his shoulder.
I watched him go, my heart hammering not from fear, but from a dark, simmering rage. He thought I was trapped. He thought I was for sale.
I knelt down and smoothed Oliver’s hair, forcing my hands to stop trembling. "It's okay, baby. Just a silly man."
But as I watched the yellow Porsche peel away, I knew this wasn't over. Parker wasn't just a nuisance anymore. He was a threat to my peace. And Adrian Rogers did not tolerate threats.
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