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My Mom's Cloud Album Exposed the Son She Hid From Me for Three Years Novel Cover

My Mom's Cloud Album Exposed the Son She Hid From Me for Three Years

Two thousand, three hundred and forty-one photos. That’s what seventeen-year-old Ian finds when he accidentally syncs his new tablet to his mother’s cloud account. The pictures aren't of family vacations or his high school milestones. They are of a boy he has never met—a teenager with his father’s chin, celebrating birthdays and holidays with Ian's parents just forty minutes away. Ian isn’t the beloved firstborn. He is the forgotten stand-in. For years, his parents have been secretly raising his father's illegitimate son, planning to formally introduce him to high society by secretly selling off the historic estate Ian's late grandmother left behind. They think Ian is clueless. They think he will quietly step aside. They are wrong. Before she died, Ian’s grandmother knew everything. She didn’t just leave Ian a secret key, a hidden $1.8 million trust, and the damning evidence of his parents' financial crimes. She left him a loaded gun. On the night his parents host a lavish gala to welcome their "real" son home, Ian isn't going to cry, and he isn't going to play the victim. He is going to walk in with a court order, emancipate himself, and methodically tear down the empire his mother built on deceit. My Mom's Cloud Album Exposed the Son She Hid From Me for Three Years is a gripping story of ultimate family betrayal, calculated revenge, and a young man's journey to reclaim his true name from the people who tried to erase him.
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Chapter 3

The whole ride home, I kept thinking: they're not hiding anymore. They're about to go public.

That's what the invitation meant. *Celebrating Our Son's Early Acceptance to Dartmouth.* Not a quiet dinner. Not a small thing. A declaration. They'd been running a parallel life for three years, and now they were ready to fold it into the main one — and the only piece still missing was my grandmother's house.

I got off the subway two stops early and walked the rest of the way in the rain.

By the time I got home, I'd decided how the evening would go.

---

I changed into clean clothes first. Dark jeans, a plain gray sweater. Normal. I checked my face in the mirror above my desk — eyes clear, jaw relaxed — and went downstairs.

The kitchen smelled like oxtail broth and star anise. My mother was at the stove, stirring something in the big clay pot she only brought out when she wanted the apartment to feel like a home. My father was already at the table, jacket off, sleeves rolled to the elbow. No laptop. No phone face-up beside his plate. He was just sitting there, present in the way he rarely was on weeknights, and the ordinariness of it hit me somewhere I wasn't expecting.

Nora was in her usual chair, textbook propped against her water glass, pretending to read. She looked up when I came in. Her eyes met mine for half a second before sliding away.

"Sit, sit," my mother said, already reaching for the ladle. "You look thin. Did you eat lunch today?"

"I ate."

"You always say that."

She set the bowl in front of me with both hands, careful and deliberate, the way she used to when I was small and sick and she'd bring soup to my room. The broth was dark and rich. It smelled like every Sunday from my childhood.

She put the bowl down gently, like she was setting a trap.

I picked up my spoon.

We ate. My father asked Nora about her history project. Nora answered in full sentences, which meant she was nervous. My mother refilled everyone's bowls without being asked. The radiator clicked. Outside, a car alarm started and stopped.

It was the most normal dinner we'd had in months.

Then my mother set down her spoon and looked at me with that particular expression she uses when she's already decided something and just needs me to agree.

"Ian, you're not sleeping enough. I can tell." She tilted her head. "You know, I've been thinking — your grandmother's old house in Cambridge, it's just sitting empty. Paying taxes on it, paying the upkeep. What's the point? We could sell it, put the money in an account for your university fees. Give you a real head start."

I kept my eyes on my bowl. The broth was very good. She'd added ginger this time.

"That sounds fine," I said. "Whatever you think is best, Mom."

Across the table, I heard my father exhale — quiet, almost imperceptible. I didn't look up.

"You're sure?" my mother said. "We don't have to rush."

"I trust you."

Three years of that boy in the cloud, and she still had the nerve to ask me if I trusted her. I do, Mom. I trust you completely. I trust you to do exactly what you've been doing.

My father cleared his throat. "Ian, you have any free time this week? The attorney needs you to sign an authorization form. Routine thing, just to get the paperwork moving."

"I can't do it this week," I said. "School's running mock exams Wednesday and Thursday. I'll be at the library every night."

"What about Friday?"

"Friday I have a group project. Next weekend works better."

He nodded, picked up his chopsticks. "Next weekend it is."

I let the silence settle for a moment. Then I looked up at my mother and made my voice curious, light.

"Hey, Mom — Nora said to dress up for tomorrow night. What's the occasion?"

The ladle hit the rim of the pot. A small sound, ceramic on clay, but in the quiet of the kitchen it was sharp. My mother laughed and waved her hand.

"It's nothing formal. Some old friends of your grandfather's, people your father and I haven't seen in a while. Very casual. Don't worry about dressing up, Nora exaggerates."

Nora said nothing. She was staring at her textbook with the fixed attention of someone who wasn't reading a single word. The tips of her ears had gone pink.

"Got it," I said. "Casual. Sure."

I finished my soup.

---

After dinner I told them I needed a book from the study. My father had already moved to the living room. My mother was running water in the kitchen. The hallway was dim, the study door half-open, and I could see the edge of my father's desk chair, the glow of his phone screen.

I stopped just outside the door.

"— yes, the Westin, top floor, seven o'clock." His voice was low, the particular register he used on calls he didn't want to carry through walls. "Your mom already talked to the school. Just tell them it's for a speech event. Once Ian signs the authorization and the Cambridge property transfers, we can make it official next month. You've been patient. Three years is a long time." A pause. "I know. I know. I'm proud of you too, son."

Son.

The word was so ordinary. The way he said it — easy, warm, automatic — like he'd been saying it for years. Because he had been.

I stood in the hallway and did not move. My recorder app had been running since I sat down at the dinner table. I reached into my pocket and pressed stop.

Then I went back to my room.

---

I sat on the edge of my bed for a moment, not moving. The apartment sounds continued around me — my mother's television program starting up, Nora's chair scraping in her room, the radiator doing its thing. All of it normal. All of it the same as every other Sunday night.

I pulled out my phone and opened a text to Halverson.

*Westin Hotel, top floor. Tomorrow, 7 PM. I need an emergency asset preservation order.*

His reply came in ten seconds.

*Already contacted the judge. You only need to show up.*

I set the phone face-down on my desk. Then I went to the closet.

The suit was in the back, still in the dry-cleaning bag my grandmother had sent it home in. Dark charcoal gray, single-breasted, the kind of thing she'd pressed into my hands two Christmases ago and said *for when it matters, Ian, not before*. I'd never worn it. I'd been saving it without knowing what for.

I hung it on the outside of the closet door and stepped back.

My phone buzzed. Nora.

*hey, just making sure you know tomorrow is actually for you. mom promised. it's your birthday thing. she said she's been planning it for weeks. you're going to be surprised :)*

I read it twice. Then I read the screenshot she'd attached — a screencap of her own conversation with our mother, the texts small and earnest: *Mom, Ian's birthday surprise is still on right? You promised me. Tomorrow is really for him?* And my mother's reply, smooth and immediate: *Of course, silly. When have I ever broken a promise to you.*

I looked at that for a long time.

Then I typed back: *I know, Nora. I'll be there. See you tomorrow.*

I put the phone down and opened the tablet. The cloud album loaded automatically, syncing the last few minutes. A new photo had come in — timestamped eleven minutes ago. A boy in a fitted navy suit, standing in front of a fitting room mirror, fingers up in a V, grinning at whoever was behind the camera. Easy. Unbothered. The kind of smile that comes from never having had much to worry about.

The location tag read: *Westin Hotel — Skyline Suite, 47th Floor.*

I closed the album.

I looked at the gray suit hanging on the closet door.

Tomorrow at seven, we'd all be in the same room.

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