Follow
Chapters
Share
Justice for the Family Novel Cover

Justice for the Family

I jolted awake to the sound of Leo's ragged coughing. The digital clock on my nightstand glowed 2:17 AM, casting an eerie blue light across our sparse bedroom. Michael's side of the bed was empty—again. Probably at Amanda's, I thought bitterly, but I pushed the familiar ache aside as another harsh cough echoed from Leo's room. Throwing back the covers, I rushed down the hallway of our modest Fort Lewis housing unit. The worn carpet was rough against my bare feet, a constant reminder of how little Michael invested in our actual home. "Leo, baby?" I whispered, pushing open his door. My five-year-old son sat upright in bed, his small chest heaving with each labored breath. When he turned to me, his flushed face glistened with sweat in the glow of his dinosaur night light. "Mommy," he wheezed, "my chest hurts." I pressed my palm to his forehead and pulled back instantly.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 1

I jolted awake to the sound of Leo's ragged coughing. The digital clock on my nightstand glowed 2:17 AM, casting an eerie blue light across our sparse bedroom. Michael's side of the bed was empty—again. Probably at Amanda's, I thought bitterly, but I pushed the familiar ache aside as another harsh cough echoed from Leo's room.

Throwing back the covers, I rushed down the hallway of our modest Fort Lewis housing unit. The worn carpet was rough against my bare feet, a constant reminder of how little Michael invested in our actual home.

"Leo, baby?" I whispered, pushing open his door.

My five-year-old son sat upright in bed, his small chest heaving with each labored breath. When he turned to me, his flushed face glistened with sweat in the glow of his dinosaur night light.

"Mommy," he wheezed, "my chest hurts."

I pressed my palm to his forehead and pulled back instantly. He was burning up.

"We're going to the clinic, sweetheart," I said, trying to keep my voice steady as panic clawed at my throat. I grabbed his favorite blue blanket and wrapped it around his trembling shoulders.

Outside, rain pounded against the windshield of our aging sedan as I sped toward the base clinic, stealing glances at Leo in the rearview mirror. His head lolled against the car seat, eyes half-closed, lips slightly parted as he struggled for air.

"Stay awake for Mommy, okay?" I called back, my knuckles white against the steering wheel. "Tell me about the T-Rex you drew yesterday."

He mumbled something incoherent, and my heart raced faster than the windshield wipers slashing through the downpour.

The fluorescent lights of the emergency clinic were harsh after the darkness of the storm. The night medic, a young man with kind eyes and a perpetual five o'clock shadow, took one look at Leo and rushed us into an examination room.

"Pneumonia," he confirmed after listening to Leo's chest. "His left lung is significantly congested. We need to start antibiotics immediately."

My phone showed five missed calls to Michael. All unanswered.

"We'll keep him overnight for observation," the medic continued, hanging an IV bag. "But he should be able to go home tomorrow if his oxygen levels improve. He'll need complete bed rest for at least a week."

I nodded, swallowing the lump in my throat as I stroked Leo's damp hair away from his forehead. "I'll take care of him," I whispered, more to myself than anyone else.

By late afternoon the next day, we were back home. I'd transformed our living room couch into a makeshift hospital bed, propped up with every pillow I could find. Leo was still weak, his breathing shallow, but the medication had started to work.

"How about some cartoons while I make you some soup?" I suggested, turning on our old television—the only luxury item in our sparse living room. Leo's eyes lit up as the colorful characters filled the screen, providing a momentary distraction from his discomfort.

I was stirring chicken broth in the kitchen when I heard the front door open. Michael walked in, still in his uniform, his face unreadable as he surveyed the living room setup.

"What's all this?" he asked, not bothering to lower his voice despite Leo's condition.

"Leo has pneumonia," I replied, keeping my tone even. "He needs to rest."

Michael glanced at our son without moving closer. "He looks fine to me."

Before I could respond, he walked purposefully toward the television, reaching behind it to unplug the cables.

"What are you doing?" I gasped, the wooden spoon clattering against the pot.

"Amanda just moved into her new place," he stated matter-of-factly. "She doesn't have a TV yet. She needs this more than we do right now."

Leo's face crumpled as the screen went black. "But Daddy, I'm sick," he whispered.

Michael didn't even look at him as he lifted our only television. "You'll survive without cartoons for a few days," he said, already heading for the door. "Amanda has nobody to help her settle in."

The door slammed behind him, leaving a silence broken only by Leo's soft sniffles. I stood frozen, watching through the window as Michael carefully placed our television in his car—the same car he'd claimed was "too busy" to drive us to the clinic last night.

Something inside me hardened like concrete.

Later that night, after Leo had finally fallen asleep, I sat at our kitchen table waiting. The single overhead light cast harsh shadows across the scratched surface where I'd laid out our past-due medical bills.

When Michael finally returned around midnight, I didn't move.

"We need to talk," I said, my voice steadier than I felt.

You may also like

Betrayed Wife's Escape Novel Cover
8.4
The leather chair in James Morrison's office felt cold beneath me as I shifted uncomfortably. The family lawyer had summoned me for what I thought was a routine meeting about my grandfather's estate. The morning sunlight streamed through the floor-to-ceiling windows, casting long shadows across his polished mahogany desk. "I've finalized all the paperwork, Ms. Hayes," James said, sliding a thick folder toward me. "Congratulations are in order. You're now the sole heir to the Hayes fortune." I blinked, momentarily stunned. "I'm... a billionaire?" "Indeed." His thin lips curved into what might have been a smile. "Just over twelve billion, according to our latest valuation." My grandfather had been wealthy, but I'd never imagined...
Bride of Revenge  Novel Cover
9.6
He made her a wife out of duty. She became his enemy out of necessity. ​When Eliza Thorne married a man in a coma, she did it to protect her family. When Damon Valerius woke up and ordered her out of his life with a single, cruel demand—“Sign the papers and get the f*ck out of my house!”—he sealed her fate. ​Damon thought he was rid of the desperate girl. He was wrong. ​Now, Eliza has returned as the head of a global conglomerate, using every ounce of her power to launch a hostile takeover of Valerius Capital. As the war for his empire rages, Damon finds himself battling a cold, stunningly beautiful woman who knows his weaknesses better than anyone. ​But the deeper Eliza digs into her revenge, the closer she comes to uncovering a conspiracy that proves Damon was also a victim. To achieve true justice, she must choose: complete the cold revenge she dedicated her life to, or risk her heart on the ultimate merger—forgiveness.
Captive Of The Ruthless Underground Boss Novel Cover
7.9
June was an ordinary architect struggling to pay rent, completely estranged from her high-society mother. But one night, she was kidnapped and beaten in an abandoned warehouse by Gage Becker, the city's most ruthless billionaire, who demanded payback for her mother's sins. Gage pointed a high-definition camera at June's battered face and video-called her mother, threatening to release the footage and ruin her upcoming billion-dollar wedding. "I will never throw away a billion-dollar marriage for a useless daughter." Her mother's cold voice echoed through the warehouse before the line went dead. From that moment, Gage systematically destroyed June's life. She was publicly humiliated and forced to hack off her own hair with a cigar cutter. She was blacklisted from every firm in the city, evicted by her landlord, and violently mugged in a freezing New York blizzard. Curled up in an icy tunnel waiting to die, June felt a suffocating despair. She hadn't spoken to her mother in months. Why did she have to endure this hell for a woman who didn't even care if she lived or died? Why was a monster like Gage so obsessed with driving her to the grave? When Gage's armored Maybach pulled up, he stepped into the snow to mock her, waiting for her to finally surrender and beg for his mercy. But the absolute humiliation snapped the last thread of June's sanity. Instead of crying, she lunged forward with feral energy and sank her teeth directly into the devil's flesh.
Discarded Wife: The Shadow Strategist Returns Novel Cover
9.5
I stood in the center of the ballroom, watching my husband accept credit for the massacre I had meticulously planned. To the underworld, Craig Snyder was the King, a strategic genius who had crippled the Russian mafia. To me, he was the man who had just re-gifted my anniversary present—a Patek Philippe watch—to match the diamond bracelet dangling from his mistress’s wrist. The Senator’s daughter, Chanel, laughed at a joke only he could hear, wearing a red dress and a look of naive adoration that used to be mine. When I confronted him, expecting an apology, Craig didn't just dismiss me. He slapped me across the face in front of the city's elite, the sound echoing like a gunshot. He yanked the wedding ring off my finger, drawing blood, and placed it into Chanel’s palm, calling me a hysterical, barren relic. Later, I found the forged documents. He had signed my name to transfer every asset we built together into his sole possession, leaving me with nothing but a hush-money check. He thought I was just a scorned wife. He forgot that I was the architect of his empire. So, I drove my car off a bridge. I let the world believe I was dead. I let him mourn the woman he destroyed while I watched from the shadows, erasing his existence from my accounts. Six months later, at the Global Crime Summit, Craig stood up with a diamond ring, ready to beg my memory for forgiveness. But the doors opened, and I didn't walk in alone. I walked onto the stage holding the hand of his deadliest rival, Felix Tyson. I wasn't there to take him back. I was there to take his kingdom.
He Chose Her, I Chose Us Novel Cover
8.2
On our tenth anniversary, I found the divorce papers my husband, Drake, had secretly filed a year ago. That same night, I watched him walk into our favorite restaurant, his arm wrapped around his pregnant campaign manager, Chelsea. I soon learned his plan was more monstrous than a simple affair. He had tricked me into signing the papers, intending for me to raise his mistress's child as my own-a perfect political cover for the wife who couldn't conceive. When Chelsea later faked a fall and blamed me, the hatred in Drake's eyes confirmed everything. "If anything happens to her or my child," he snarled, shoving me aside, "I will never forgive you." He didn't know my secret. After twelve agonizing rounds of IVF, I was finally pregnant-with twins. He had made his choice, and now I was making mine. I would disappear with my children, and he would never see us again.
Healing After His Betrayal Novel Cover
9.4
The courtroom fell silent as Matthew rose from his seat. I gripped the edge of the gallery bench, my knuckles white against the polished wood. My husband—the man who once promised to protect me at all costs—adjusted his tie with practiced precision before approaching my mother. "Mrs. Hayes," Matthew began, his voice carrying effortlessly through the packed room, "you claim you witnessed the defendant, Ms. King, arguing with the victim on the night of March 15th?" My mother nodded, her silver hair catching the harsh fluorescent light. "Yes, I did. I was walking my dog in the park when I heard raised voices near the fountain." "And you're certain it was the defendant you saw?" "I'm positive," my mother replied firmly. "I've known Genesis since she dated my son-in-law in college. I recognized her immediately." Matthew's lips curved into a smile that didn't reach his eyes.