Follow
Chapters
Share
My Son Ran to the Billionaire Who Abandoned Us Novel Cover

My Son Ran to the Billionaire Who Abandoned Us

I'm wiping down the kitchen counter when I realize Junior isn't making noise. That's the thing about raising a six-year-old alone—you learn to hear the shape of their silence. There's the good kind, the absorbed-in-Legos kind, where his breathing goes shallow and his world shrinks to whatever he's building. Then there's the other kind. The holding-his-breath kind. I dry my hands and move toward his room, my socks quiet on the worn hardwood. "Junior? You okay, baby?" Nothing. His door is cracked open. I push it wider and find his bed neatly made—too neatly, the corners tucked with a precision that makes my chest tighten.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 1

I'm wiping down the kitchen counter when I realize Junior isn't making noise.

That's the thing about raising a six-year-old alone—you learn to hear the shape of their silence. There's the good kind, the absorbed-in-Legos kind, where his breathing goes shallow and his world shrinks to whatever he's building. Then there's the other kind. The holding-his-breath kind.

I dry my hands and move toward his room, my socks quiet on the worn hardwood. "Junior? You okay, baby?"

Nothing.

His door is cracked open. I push it wider and find his bed neatly made—too neatly, the corners tucked with a precision that makes my chest tighten. His backpack is gone. The small wooden box where he keeps his treasures—rocks from the park, a keychain from Emir, that tooth he lost last month—sits open on his desk.

Empty.

I'm already moving, checking the bathroom, the living room, calling his name with an edge that brings Teresa out of her bedroom, her reading glasses still perched on her nose.

"What's wrong?"

"Junior's not here."

Her face hardens instantly, that shift from resting suspicion to active alarm. "Did you check—"

"Everywhere." My voice cracks. I hate that it cracks. "His backpack's gone. Teresa, he planned this."

She's already reaching for her phone, but I'm faster, my fingers shaking as I pull up the school's number. It rings four times—four lifetimes—before the secretary's bright voice answers.

"Maple Grove Elementary, how can I—"

"This is Everlee Garcia, Junior Andrews's mother. Is he in class?"

A pause. Keyboard clicks. "Let me check with his teacher... Mrs. Garcia, it looks like Junior was marked absent after recess. We assumed—"

I hang up.

Teresa is watching me with that look, the one that could be anger or fear or both, her mouth a tight line. "Where would he go?"

I don't answer because I don't know, and not knowing is a fist closing around my lungs. Junior is careful. Junior is smart. Junior doesn't run away. Except he just did, with a packed bag and a plan, and I have no idea what I missed.

My phone buzzes. Unknown number. I answer before the first ring finishes.

"Ms. Garcia?" A woman's voice, professional and uncertain. "This is Amanda Reese from Ross Corporation security. We have a... situation. A child showed up in our lobby about twenty minutes ago claiming to be Mr. Ross's son. He has your name listed as his mother in his backpack. We're trying to verify—"

The rest of her words dissolve into static.

Ross Corporation.

Johnny.

I'm going to be sick.

"I'm coming," I manage. "Don't—don't let him leave. I'm coming right now."

Teresa is already grabbing her coat, her face carved from stone. She doesn't ask questions. She knows. Of course she knows—Emir knew, which means Emir told her, which means she's been sitting on this secret for six years, watching me, waiting.

I don't have time to unpack that betrayal.

The subway ride is a blur of fluorescent lights and strangers' faces. I grip the pole so hard my knuckles go white, Teresa silent and rigid beside me. My mind is racing, spinning out every worst-case scenario. Junior in a building full of strangers. Junior face-to-face with a man who doesn't know he exists. Junior holding up whatever truth he found—because he must have found something, some piece of the past I buried so carefully—and detonating it in the middle of Johnny Ross's pristine corporate empire.

I should have told him.

I should have burned Emir's letter.

I should have done a thousand things differently, but I was so tired, and it was easier to let sleeping ghosts lie.

When we surface at Midtown, the Ross Corporation tower punches into the sky like a glass blade, all sharp edges and reflected clouds. I've avoided this building for six years. Crossed the street when I saw it. Took longer routes home.

Now I'm walking straight through its revolving doors, my heart a drum, my son somewhere inside.

The lobby is all marble and echoes, the kind of space designed to make you feel small. A security guard intercepts us immediately, his hand raised.

"Ma'am, I need to—"

"My son," I say, and my voice doesn't shake this time. "Where is my son?"

He exchanges a glance with someone behind the desk, then nods toward the elevator bank. "Executive floor. Mr. Ross is with him now."

The world tilts.

Of course he is.

Of course Johnny didn't wait, didn't call me first, didn't hesitate before stepping into the life I built without him and claiming the one thing I have left.

Teresa's hand closes around my elbow, steadying me. Her grip is iron.

"Then let's go get him," she says.

And we do.

You may also like

Craving For My Divorced Wife Novel Cover
9.8
PROLOGUE WARNING: THIS BOOK CONTAINS MATURE AND EXPLICIT CONTENT, READ AT YOUR OWN DISCRETION “You are barren and worthless. I want nothing to do with an infertile woman like you. Sign these divorce papers and get the bloody hell out of my house and my life!!!” He yelled, and that was all I needed to wake up from my foolish and stupid dream, coming to the realization that my husband despised me and there was no way I could make this work anymore. With shaky hands, I took a pen and signed the divorce papers. It was all over now. ***** She dedicated all her life to loving him, he was like a god to her and despite the obstacles she faced in their marriage, she was happy because loving him was enough for her, but what she didn’t expect was to be thrown out by the same man she dedicated all her life to. After getting cheated on and thrown out, Janette started her life anew, unknown to everyone that she was pregnant. She fought her way to the top and six years later, she is back with a handsome baby boy and her new lover. She thought her life was now on track, not until her ex-husband showed up and claimed he wanted her back. With his eyes filled with longing and regret, he muttered under his breath. “Dear Ex-Wife, Let Us Restart.” But is she ready to forgive and get back together with him when she now has someone, who loves her dearly? And what about her son, who now wants her to be with his daddy? What is she going to do about that?
From Betrayal to New Love Novel Cover
8.1
The fluorescent lights buzzed overhead as I stared at the proposal on my computer screen, my eyes burning from hours of proofreading. The Sterling Tech subsidiary office had emptied hours ago, leaving me alone with the gentle hum of the air conditioning and the occasional ping from the security guard's desk downstairs. I glanced at my watch—11:43 PM. Michael should have been done with the corporate gala by now. He'd promised to call when it ended at ten, but my phone remained silent, its screen dark and accusatory on my desk. "Just one more page," I whispered to myself, massaging my temples. I'd been doing this for seven years—polishing Michael's presentations, fixing grammatical errors in his proposals, making sure every comma was in place so he could shine in front of the board. Tonight was no different, except for the heaviness in my chest that had been growing over the past few months. I saved the document and sent it to Michael's email, adding a simple note: *All done. Hope the gala went well.* No kiss emoji, no terms of endearment.
He Rejected Me, So I Married the Lycan King Novel Cover
7.9
For ten years, I was the invisible backbone of the Silver Creek Pack. I cooked the books to hide Alpha Ethan's gambling debts. I ghostwrote the peace treaties that kept our borders safe. I warmed his bed every night, waiting for the bite that would mark me as his Luna. On the night of our tenth anniversary, I didn't get a ring. I got replaced. Ethan walked into the gala with Ashley, a wealthy heiress dripping in gold, clinging to his arm. When I tried to speak to him, he didn't just ignore me. He used an Alpha Command—a biological weapon that hijacked my free will. "Go to the kitchen," he ordered, forcing my knees to hit the floor in front of the entire pack. "Ashley is sensitive to the smell of stress. You're ruining her night." He humiliated me in the house I helped build. He wore the crown I polished for him, thinking I was nothing more than a glorified housekeeper he could discard at will. He forgot that while he held the title, I held the passwords. I didn't go to the kitchen. I went to the office. I initiated a permanent wipe of the cloud backups, reformatted the local servers, and deleted ten years of financial strategies. Then, I snapped the mate bond and walked out into the rain. Three days later, I walked back into the conference room. Ethan laughed, thinking I was there to beg for my job back. I threw a foreclosure contract onto the table. "I'm not here to serve drinks, Ethan. I'm the new owner of your debt. Get out of my chair."
Mistress Meets Her Match Novel Cover
8.2
The soft afternoon light filtered through the floor-to-ceiling windows of our penthouse living room, casting gentle shadows across the cream-colored marble floors. I sat curled in my favorite armchair, a leather-bound novel resting in my lap while Whiskers purred contentedly against my thighs. His gray fur was warm beneath my fingers as I absently stroked behind his ears, finding comfort in the rhythmic vibration of his purring. The silence of our home wrapped around me like a familiar blanket—a peace I'd learned to treasure in these quiet moments. The sharp beep of the security system shattered that tranquility. I looked up from my book, my hand stilling on Whiskers' fur. The front door's electronic lock disengaged with a soft click, and I heard the distinctive tap of designer heels against marble. My stomach clenched with a familiar dread, though my expression remained perfectly composed. Only one person besides Kane had access to our home's security code. Nyomi Grant swept into the living room as if she owned it, her pregnant belly prominently displayed beneath a form-fitting designer dress that probably cost more than most people's monthly salary.
Pregnant & Rejected_ The Billionaire's Thanksgiving Surprise Novel Cover
9.1
"Four years ago, on Thanksgiving Eve, Julian Thorne threw me out into the snow... He’s staring at the little boy hiding behind my legs—a boy with his exact same ice-blue eyes. 'Harper,' he whispers, 'Who is that?' I smile, cold and sharp. 'Meet Leo. And don't worry, Julian. We’re just passing through.'"
Shattered Vows: Falling For His Worst Enemy Novel Cover
7.6
For three years, I played the perfect, docile wife to Brendon Jimenez, desperate for the real family I never had as an orphan. But during a high-society gala, I peeked through a cracked door and caught him sleeping with my best friend. When I packed my cheap canvas bag to leave the penthouse, my mother-in-law blocked the door. She dumped my clothes on the marble floor, called me a stray dog, and slapped me so hard my mouth bled. Brendon just stood there, watching his mother humiliate me. To keep me trapped as his perfect public prop, he even faked his mother's heart attack in a VIP hospital suite. "Get on your knees. Kneel down right now and beg my mother for forgiveness until she decides to accept it." I gave them my youth and unconditional loyalty, only to realize this prestigious old-money family was nothing but a rotting corpse built on dirty secrets. I didn't cry, and I certainly didn't drop to my knees. Instead, I pulled out my phone right in front of him and called my lawyer. "File for an at-fault divorce. I have proof of his infidelity with Kaelynn Hudson. I want him ruined." Then, I touched the matte black card hidden deep in my clutch. It belonged to Kile Barrett, the ruthless billionaire shark my husband feared most, and I was going to use him to tear the Jimenez family apart.