Follow
Chapters
Share
Battle for My Stolen Son Novel Cover

Battle for My Stolen Son

"Mom, will this take long? I want to finish my volcano before dinner!" Andrew bounced on his toes beside me in the pristine hallway of Mount Sinai Hospital, his dark curls falling across his forehead. I smoothed them back automatically, my hand lingering on his warm skin. "Not long, sweetheart. Dr. Reed just needs a small blood sample for your check-up. Then we can go home and finish your science project." I smiled down at my son, my perfect, beautiful boy. The nurse called his name, and we followed her into the examination room. Andrew chattered excitedly about the papier-mâché volcano he was building for school, barely flinching when the needle slid into his arm. Such a brave little man.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 1

"Mom, will this take long? I want to finish my volcano before dinner!" Andrew bounced on his toes beside me in the pristine hallway of Mount Sinai Hospital, his dark curls falling across his forehead. I smoothed them back automatically, my hand lingering on his warm skin.

"Not long, sweetheart. Dr. Reed just needs a small blood sample for your check-up. Then we can go home and finish your science project." I smiled down at my son, my perfect, beautiful boy.

The nurse called his name, and we followed her into the examination room. Andrew chattered excitedly about the papier-mâché volcano he was building for school, barely flinching when the needle slid into his arm. Such a brave little man. I felt that familiar swell of pride as I watched him—seven years old and already so resilient.

"You're doing great, Andrew," I encouraged, squeezing his free hand. "Think about how the baking soda and vinegar will make your volcano erupt."

He grinned, revealing the gap where his front tooth had fallen out last week. "It's gonna be epic, Mom! Tommy Peterson's only spewed a little bit, but mine's gonna blow the roof off!"

I laughed, treasuring these simple moments. After the blood draw, we stopped by the hospital café for ice cream—our little tradition after doctor visits. Andrew's chocolate cone was half-eaten when my phone buzzed. Dr. Reed wanted to see me. Alone.

"Wait here where I can see you," I told Andrew, settling him at a table near the café counter. "I'll be right back."

Dr. Reed's office was cool and quiet, a stark contrast to the bustling hospital corridors. She looked up from her computer when I entered, her expression carefully neutral in that way doctors have when they're about to deliver difficult news.

"Mrs. Harrison, please sit down."

My heart quickened. "Is something wrong with Andrew?"

"Not exactly." She hesitated, then turned her monitor toward me. "These are Andrew's blood test results."

I stared at the screen, the medical terminology swimming before my eyes. "I don't understand."

"Mrs. Harrison, you have Type A blood, correct?"

"Yes."

"And your husband is Type O."

I nodded, a knot forming in my stomach.

"Andrew is Type AB." Dr. Reed's voice was gentle but firm. "This is a medical impossibility. Given your blood type and your husband's, Andrew cannot be your biological son."

The room seemed to tilt. "That's... that's not possible. There must be a mistake."

"We ran the test twice." She slid a printout across the desk. "Blood typing doesn't lie, Mrs. Harrison."

I clutched the paper, my fingers trembling. The world I knew—the life I'd built—fractured in that moment, hairline cracks spreading through the perfect image of my family.

"I gave birth to him," I whispered. "I was there."

Dr. Reed's expression softened with sympathy. "I can't explain how this happened, but the science is clear."

Somehow, I made it back to the café. Andrew looked up, chocolate smeared around his mouth. "Can we go home now, Mom?"

Mom. The word pierced me like a blade.

The drive home passed in a blur. Andrew's voice faded to background noise as my mind raced through possibilities, each more terrible than the last. At our penthouse, I mechanically helped him with his volcano, my hands moving while my thoughts spiraled.

After tucking Andrew into bed, I ordered a home paternity kit online, paying extra for overnight delivery. The next day, while Marcus was at work and Isabella—our live-in nanny—was shopping, I swabbed the inside of Andrew's cheek as he napped.

Three days later, the results arrived in a plain envelope. I locked myself in Marcus's study to open it, hands shaking so badly I nearly tore the paper inside.

Negative match. 0% probability of maternity.

A strangled sound escaped my throat. I wasn't Andrew's mother. The child I had carried, given birth to, nursed, and raised for seven years wasn't mine.

How? Why?

Isabella. The thought struck like lightning. Our beautiful, devoted nanny who had been with us since Andrew was born. Who sometimes looked at my son with an intensity that I'd dismissed as affection.

I found her in her quarters, folding laundry with practiced efficiency. She looked up when I entered, her dark eyes widening slightly at whatever she saw in my face.

"Mrs. Harrison? Is everything alright?"

I held up the test results, my voice barely controlled. "He's not my son, is he?"

Something shifted in Isabella's expression—surprise, then something harder, colder. The mask of the dutiful nanny slipped, revealing a stranger beneath.

A smile curved her lips, small and cruel. "You were just the convenient mother figure."

In that moment, I knew. This woman—this stranger in my home—was Andrew's real mother. And somehow, she had stolen my child and replaced him with her own.

You may also like

After My Husband Slept with My Best Friend Novel Cover
8.1
I woke to unfamiliar weight. Longer limbs. A heavier frame pressing into silk sheets that felt wrong against my skin. My eyes fluttered open to the Manhattan skyline through floor-to-ceiling windows—our penthouse view, but everything else was... off. The first thing I saw made my heart stop. Beside me, naked and curled against what I now realized was *me*—was Aleyna. My best friend of fifteen years. Her bare shoulder rose and fell with each breath, her dark hair spilling across the pillow. And there, glinting on her wrist, was the diamond tennis bracelet I thought Emilio had bought for *our* anniversary last month.
BEYON  Novel Cover
8.6
“I hate you!” I sneered as I wiped a stubborn tear that slipped past my eyes. “I am glad we are on the same page” he smirked. I wanted him to feel pain. Excruciating pain I clenched my teeth “ I promise you, I will get back at you”. He looked me up and down and snorted. “ You are poor, your anger can't even get you food to eat” I swallowed as I fought back tears. Andre Luster will pay for making me cry. I will make sure of it, even if it's the last thing I do before I die. *** Lisa Kay is the daughter of the richest man in Denmark. She is a runaway heiress who went to find love. She got married to her college sweetheart , who is also a billionaire. She didn't see the need to tell him her true identity until he stepped on her tail. She has sworn to deal with him but to do that, she has to marry the one man, who is her father’s sworn enemy and rival in business.
CLAIMED BY THE MAFIA DON  Novel Cover
7.9
Rose was so naive that she didn't know Jonah, her ex-fiancé, was cheating on her even before her wedding day. On the night before her wedding, she caught him cheating on her with the last person she would ever expect him to be with, Rebecca. Out of anger and spite, she cursed at them and left, then went and got herself drunk and made out with a mafia don, who, oblivious to her, was her fiancé's stepbrother and his boss. On the day of the wedding, she stormed in and canceled it, calling Jonah out. After the embarrassment, Jonah vowed to make her life miserable. She tried to get a job, but it was almost impossible because of the influence Jonah had. So she went to the greatest mafia don that her friend Lucy recommended to her. When she went to ask for his help, the don turned out to be the mysterious man who had been showing interest in her, but she had kept declining. Unbeknownst to her, he was her ex-fiancé's boss and stepbrother. She asked for his help, and he offered it, of course, but on one condition.that she would be his mistress !.
Husband Stole Mom's Fund Novel Cover
9.4
The morning sun filtered through our kitchen window as I spread cream cheese on my toast, the Labor Day weekend stretching before us like a rare gift of time. Hayes had been distant lately—military duties, he'd said—but today was supposed to be different. Today was supposed to be ours. I glanced at the clock. Eight-thirty. Hayes would be up soon, and I'd planned a picnic by the lake, just the two of us. Three years of marriage, and these stolen moments still felt precious. My phone buzzed with an email notification. Probably spam, but I opened it anyway. "Bank Statement Available." My finger hovered over the screen.
Husband's Betrayal Costs Her All Novel Cover
8.4
I needed to check tomorrow's court schedule, and my phone was dead. Nothing unusual about borrowing my husband's phone on a Tuesday night after ten years of marriage. "Stet, can I use your phone? Mine's charging," I called out from our home office, already reaching for his device on the desk. "Sure, go ahead," Stetson's voice floated in from the living room, casual and unconcerned. That should have been my first clue. My husband, the man who once password-protected his fantasy football accounts, had left his phone unlocked. As I opened his calendar app, a notification slid down from the top of the screen. Cleo: *Can't wait to see you tomorrow. Wearing that thing you like...* My finger hovered over the message.
My Ex Wrote Our Broken Marriage Into a Movie Novel Cover
9.2
The flashbulbs hit me like physical blows, a strobe-light barrage that turned the crisp New York City night into a fractured, blinding day. The November wind off the Hudson bit into my bare shoulders, but beneath the silk of my emerald gown, my spine was forged of steel. I was not the same woman who had died in a suffocating, cramped Los Angeles apartment. That Haisley Garza—the pathetic, forgotten wife who had withered away in the shadows of a loveless marriage—was a ghost I had left behind in a past life. Tonight, two years after I woke up on the eve of our secret wedding and walked out with nothing but a breakup letter, I was the rising star. I belonged on this sprawling crimson carpet. "Chin up, Haisley. Look to your left," Margot, my agent, murmured from just outside the camera's firing line. I shifted my weight, letting the slit of my dress fall perfectly over my thigh, and offered the press a razor-thin, untouchable smile. Then, the atmosphere in the plaza shattered.