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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.
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Chapter 2

The morning sun streamed through the windows of Café Lulu, casting golden light across the pristine white tablecloth. I'd chosen this SoHo spot carefully—busy enough that two people in serious conversation wouldn't draw attention, but upscale enough that voices stayed hushed. Perfect for meeting a private investigator without raising eyebrows.

Leo Katz looked nothing like the PIs in movies. No rumpled trenchcoat or world-weary expression. Instead, he wore a crisp navy suit and carried a sleek leather portfolio. His eyes, though—those were exactly right. Sharp, assessing, missing nothing.

"Mrs. Harrison," he said, sliding into the seat across from me. "You mentioned this was a sensitive matter."

I glanced around, then reached into my handbag. My fingers trembled as I withdrew the envelope—thick with cash, all withdrawn in small amounts over the past week to avoid alerting Marcus. I'd told myself the shaking would stop once I committed to this path. It hadn't.

"I need names. Dates. Proof." My voice sounded stronger than I felt. "Everything about what happened seven years ago when I gave birth at Boston Medical Center."

Leo didn't reach for the envelope immediately. "That's specific. Mind telling me what you're looking for?"

"I was told my baby died." The words burned my throat. "I think that was a lie."

Something flickered in his eyes—surprise, maybe even compassion. Then it was gone, replaced by professional detachment. He took the envelope, tucking it away without counting.

"I'll need details. Dates. Names of attending physicians. Anyone who was in the room."

I slid a folded paper across the table. "Everything I remember is there."

As he scanned it, I sipped my untouched coffee, now cold. The world around us continued—waiters gliding between tables, the gentle clink of silverware, murmured conversations—while mine had stopped spinning the moment I'd seen those blood test results.

"This won't be easy," Leo said finally. "Records from seven years ago, possibly altered or buried..."

"I don't care what it costs." I met his gaze steadily. "Just find the truth."

* * *

Three days later, my phone buzzed with a text from an unknown number: *Have information. Your place?*

*No,* I replied immediately. The penthouse wasn't safe. Isabella might be there, or Marcus could return unexpectedly. *My apartment. 2PM.* I sent the address of the small pied-à-terre I maintained for interior design consultations—a space Marcus knew about but never visited.

Leo arrived precisely at two, a manila folder tucked under his arm. His expression told me everything before he spoke.

"You found something," I said, leading him to the small sitting area.

"More than something." He opened the folder, spreading several documents on the coffee table. "Birth records from Boston Medical Center. A male infant, registered as stillborn."

My breath caught. "My baby."

"Your name is on these files." He pointed to a signature I barely recognized as my own—written in grief and medication-induced fog. "But here's where it gets strange. There's no corresponding death certificate. No record of a burial or cremation."

"What does that mean?"

"It means," Leo said carefully, "that officially, your baby never died."

The room tilted. I sank to the floor, my legs suddenly unable to support me. The polished hardwood felt cool against my palms as I struggled to breathe.

"There's more," Leo continued, kneeling beside me. "A nurse who worked that night remembers a complication—you hemorrhaging, being rushed to surgery. During that time, your husband and a woman she thought was your sister took charge of the infant."

"I don't have a sister," I whispered.

"Exactly."

My mind raced to Isabella. Had she been there that night? Had she and Marcus...

"I need you to find my son," I said, my voice hollow. "My real son."

* * *

The next morning, I waited in the marble-lined foyer of Harrison Industries, the folder clutched in my hand like a weapon. Executives and assistants streamed past, some nodding in recognition of the CEO's wife making a rare appearance at headquarters.

Marcus emerged from the elevator, flanked by two board members. His stride faltered momentarily when he saw me, then resumed with practiced confidence.

"Sarah." He kissed my cheek, his cologne wrapping around me like a shroud. "This is unexpected."

I held up Leo's folder. "We need to talk."

His smile remained fixed, but his eyes hardened. "I'm heading into a board meeting, darling. Can this wait?"

"It's about our son," I said, my voice carrying just enough for the nearby receptionist to glance up. "Our *real* son."

Something dangerous flashed across his face. He gripped my elbow, steering me toward a side hallway.

"Whatever you think you know—" he began.

I cut him off, opening the folder to reveal the birth records. "I know enough."

Marcus glanced at the documents, then reached into his jacket pocket. He withdrew a small velvet box and pressed it into my hand.

"A gift," he said smoothly. "I was saving it for our anniversary, but perhaps you need a reminder of how much I value you."

I opened the box. Inside lay a diamond tennis bracelet, the stones catching the light in cold, brilliant flashes.

"You're making a scene," he continued, his voice dropping to that low, controlled tone that always preceded his worst moments of anger. "This is trivial. We can discuss your... concerns at home."

Before I could respond, he turned and strode toward the boardroom, leaving me holding a bracelet that suddenly felt as heavy as shackles.

In that moment, I realized the diamonds weren't a gift—they were a warning. And for the first time, I understood just how dangerous the path ahead would be.

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