
My Son Died While They Tested My Love
Chapter 2
“Have you lost your mind?” Lucian snapped.
He stood in front of Livia with his shoulders squared, every inch the DeLuca heir, every inch the man I had once loved hard enough to break myself on.
Livia covered her throat and let the tears come on cue. “I only asked where Leo was. Evelyn can live in a place like this if she wants, but a child can’t. I said he should come back somewhere safe, and she tried to kill me.”
“You liar.” My voice shook. “You know exactly—”
“That’s enough.” Lucian cut me off without even looking at me. “If you have any conscience left as a mother, you will bring Leo back to the estate. If you don’t, we’re done.”
We’re done.
I stared at him, and something in me went cold and hollow all at once.
Even now, he would rather believe one polished lie from Livia than one ugly truth from me.
“Fine,” I said. “Send the papers. I’ll sign.”
I walked away before either of them could answer and went back to the old house I had been hiding in.
Calling it a house was generous. It was one of the older Moretti safe properties on the edge of the city, abandoned on paper and buried under shell companies. After I lost everything, I slipped in through a side entrance and stayed there like a trespasser. After Leo died, I carried his ashes from one cheap room to another until I finally brought him back there. Even a ruined place was better than the street.
I sat at the table and touched the photograph on the box with one finger.
“I’m sorry,” I whispered. “Mom couldn’t protect you.”
I laid the divorce papers beside the box and reached for it just as the front door flew inward.
Livia came in first, a strip of gauze at her temple and a wounded look on her face.
My parents followed right behind her—Vito Moretti and Sophia Moretti.
Alive. Healthy. Dressed like the last three years had been one long vacation.
For a second, I couldn’t breathe.
Over the years, I had caught blurred reflections in other people’s posts—a yacht railing in the south of France, a terrace in Florence, a shadow that looked like my mother’s profile in Paris. I had sat in a basement room with Leo burning up in my lap, zooming in on those photos until my eyes swelled shut, and still I told myself I had to be mistaken.
I wasn’t.
They had not been missing. They had not been in danger. They had been touring Europe with my adopted sister while I was out in the cold trying to keep my son alive. They had walked away and called it a lesson.
My mother’s first words were, “Where’s Leo?”
I moved the ash box behind me on instinct. “What do you want?”
My father’s mouth twisted. “Livia’s hurt because of your kid. Our men said he came at her with a hammer.”
I stared at him. “What?”
Livia pushed up her sleeve and showed off a bruise on her wrist. “Don’t play dumb. At the harbor, he jumped out and swung at me. He said he was getting revenge for you. If Mom and Dad’s security team hadn’t stepped in, he could have killed me.”
Leo had been dead for a year, and she was still using him.
My mother’s face hardened. “Maybe we should have taken that child away from you three years ago. You passed Lucian’s test, and you still raised Leo into a violent little thug. You are not fit to be his mother. Hand him over. Lucian and Livia will do a better job than you ever did.”
I said nothing.
I lifted Leo’s ash box and set it in front of them.
“Then teach him,” I said.
For the first time, both of them froze.
The black-and-white memorial photo on the front of the box was impossible to miss.
Then my father snapped.
He ripped the urn from my hands and smashed it against the floor.
The lid split open. Ash scattered across the wood.
“Fake ashes,” he spat. “You’d even use your own son’s remains for pity?”
“No!”
I lunged for it. He got there first.
That little box was all I had left. It was the last place in the world where Leo still felt close enough to touch.
My father crouched, scooped up a fistful of ash, and jammed it into my mouth.
“Go on,” he said, eyes blazing. “If it’s fake, what’s the problem?”
I choked. I gagged. My throat burned raw. There was blood in the taste of it, and still he kept his hand locked against my jaw while my mother stood there and watched.
By the time he let go, I was on my knees in the middle of Leo’s ashes, coughing so hard I could barely see.
I tried to gather him back together with shaking hands, but the ash mixed with tears and blood and dirt from the floorboards. I was ruining the last thing I still had.
Lucian stood a few steps away, looking down at me like I disgusted him.
“Did you ever stop to think,” he said coldly, “what Leo would say if he grew up and found out you used his death like a bargaining chip?”
I couldn’t answer.
Then my mother spoke, calm and decisive, like she was negotiating a shipment.
“I’m done arguing. If you won’t hand over the child, then you can make this right another way.”
Her gaze pinned me where I knelt.
“Livia’s in renal failure. You’re a match. Give her your kidney.”
I looked up at the four of them.
My husband. My parents. My sister.
The people I had once loved most in the world.
And I smiled.
“Sure,” I said.
The answer came too easily, and for once that unsettled them.
They had expected pleading. Bargaining. Tears. They still thought they could use Lucian, Leo, marriage, family—all of it—to keep me obedient.
They didn’t know I had been diagnosed six months ago with an aggressive malignant tumor that had already spread.
I was dying anyway.