
Ex Threatens My Son
Chapter 3
My hands trembled as I clutched the folder containing printouts of the fake social media profile. The hallway leading to Principal Davis's office seemed longer than usual, each step requiring more effort than the last. Two days had passed since discovering Rebecca's malicious campaign, and the whispers had only grown louder, the stares more obvious. I couldn't let this continue—not when it affected Oliver.
Principal Davis greeted me with a professional smile that faltered slightly when he noticed my expression. "Mrs. Sterling, please come in."
I sat across from his desk, my back straight despite the weight pressing down on my shoulders. The office smelled of coffee and paper, comforting in its ordinariness while my life spun increasingly out of control.
"I'll get right to the point," I said, sliding the folder across his desk. "Someone is spreading malicious lies about me, and it's affecting Oliver."
He flipped through the printouts, his brow furrowing deeper with each page. The doctored photos showed me lurking outside Nathan's office building, peering through his apartment windows—places I hadn't been in five years.
"This is... concerning," he said finally, removing his glasses. "But Mrs. Sterling, I'm not sure what you expect the school to do about social media posts."
"The parents are talking. The children will follow." My voice remained steady even as anxiety clawed at my throat. "Oliver shouldn't have to face this."
Davis leaned back, steepling his fingers. "Without proof these are fabrications—"
"They're obviously manipulated," I interrupted, an edge creeping into my tone. "That's not even the same color coat I own."
He sighed, sympathy flashing across his face. "Mrs. Sterling, I believe you. But my hands are tied. I can't police what parents discuss or believe without concrete evidence of harassment occurring on school grounds."
The realization hit me like a physical blow. The school—this safe haven I'd carefully chosen for Oliver—couldn't protect him from Nathan's poison.
"Then I'll need to withdraw Oliver temporarily," I said, the words tasting bitter. "Until this situation is resolved."
Davis nodded, relief and regret mingling in his expression. "Perhaps that's best. We'll provide his coursework, of course."
I left with Oliver's things packed in his dinosaur backpack, each tiny shirt and drawing another reminder of what Nathan was stealing from us.
---
Three days later, I pulled into Mount Sinai's parking garage for Oliver's cardiology follow-up. The concrete structure amplified every sound—my heels against the pavement, my slightly ragged breathing, the distant slam of car doors. Oliver was with our housekeeper today; I'd decided to attend this appointment alone to discuss his treatment plan without him overhearing anything frightening.
I was fumbling for my parking ticket when a shadow fell across me. Before I could react, a hand slammed against my car roof, the sound reverberating through the garage like a gunshot.
"Running away from me again, Summer?"
Nathan's voice sent ice through my veins. I turned slowly, pressing my back against my car door, creating what little distance I could.
"What do you want?" I kept my voice low, controlled, even as my heart hammered against my ribs.
"What's rightfully mine." His eyes—those cold, calculating eyes I once mistook for passionate—narrowed as he leaned closer. "I want a DNA test."
"You have no right—"
"I have EVERY right!" His fist came down on my car roof again. "That boy is the right age. You disappeared right after we broke up. Do the math, Summer."
"You're delusional," I said, my hand inching toward my phone. "Oliver is not your son."
Nathan's laugh was ugly, sharp-edged. "We'll see about that. I'll prove that child is mine, and you can't stop me."
His face was too close now, that familiar cologne—the one I'd once found intoxicating—now suffocating me. I saw the security guards approaching in my peripheral vision, their pace quickening as they registered the confrontation.
"Step away from the lady, sir," one called.
Nathan's smile didn't falter as he straightened. "This isn't over," he murmured, just for me. "Not by a long shot."
I slid into my car with shaking hands, nodding my thanks to the guards as Nathan stalked away. Only when his silhouette disappeared did I allow myself a single, shuddering breath.
---
The envelope arrived two days later, its official seal and weight announcing its importance before I even opened it. I stood in our sunlit kitchen, Oliver's laughter drifting from the playroom where he was building a fortress of blocks, blissfully unaware of the storm gathering around us.
My fingers felt numb as I broke the seal and unfolded the papers inside. The legal language swam before my eyes, but certain phrases stood out in stark relief:
"Expedited petition for paternity testing..."
"Temporary custody pending results..."
"Court of New York, Immediate Hearing..."
The papers slipped from my fingers, scattering across the marble floor like fallen leaves. Nathan had done it. He'd actually done it.
My phone vibrated on the counter—Alexander's name lighting up the screen. He was still in Tokyo, still unaware of how quickly our world was unraveling. I reached for it, then hesitated.
How could I tell him that the past I thought I'd escaped was now threatening to tear apart our family? That the life we'd built together was balanced on a knife's edge?
The phone continued to vibrate as the court summons stared up at me from the floor, the black ink seeming to pulse with Nathan's malice. I had less than a week to prepare for a battle I never wanted to fight—a battle for my son.
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