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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.
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Chapter 2

The NYPD precinct smelled of floor wax, stale coffee, and the kind of desperation that clings to the walls like humidity. My lungs felt like they were filled with glass shards, every breath a jagged reminder of the panic that had fueled my frantic dash from the subway. I ignored the officer at the front desk, my eyes scanning the chaotic hum of the room until they snagged on a small, familiar figure in an oversized hoodie sitting on a bench near the back.

“Junior!”

My voice tore through the room, raw and trembling. He looked up, his eyes widening, but he didn’t run to me. He stayed rooted to the spot, his gaze flickering to the man sitting in the plastic chair beside him.

That was when the world stopped spinning and simply shattered.

Johnny Ross didn’t belong here. He belonged in glass towers and leather-bound boardrooms, not under the flickering fluorescent lights of a precinct. He was leaning forward, his elbows on his knees, watching my son with an intensity that made the air turn cold. When he stood up, the movement was slow, predatory, and perfectly controlled. The tailored charcoal wool of his suit was a jagged contrast to the grimy surroundings.

“Everlee.”

He spoke my name like a verdict. His eyes, dark and unreadable, swept over me—taking in my frayed coat, my messy hair, and the way I was shaking. Then his gaze snapped back to Junior. The resemblance was a physical blow to my chest. The same stubborn set of the jaw, the same deep-set eyes, the same aura of quiet, unnerving observation.

“You should have stayed in the lobby,” I managed to choke out, stepping between them to shield Junior. My son reached out, clutching the hem of my shirt.

“Six years,” Johnny said. His voice was a low vibration, the kind that precedes a landslide. He took a step closer, invading my space until I could smell the expensive sandalwood and cold air clinging to him. “Six years of silence. Six years of watching you marry another man while you carried a part of me.”

“He isn’t a part of you,” I hissed, my knuckles whitening as I gripped Junior’s hand. “He’s mine. You lost the right to ask questions the day you let me walk away.”

“I didn’t let you walk, Everlee. You ran.” His jaw tightened, a muscle leaping in his cheek. The fury in his eyes was a living thing, tempered by a shock he was trying desperately to bury. “And now I find him here? Handing a letter to my security team? Do you have any idea what kind of leverage you’ve handed me?”

“Is that all he is to you? Leverage?” I stepped back, pulling Junior with me. “We’re leaving.”

“You aren’t going anywhere with him in a taxi or on a train,” Johnny commanded, his hand shooting out to catch my arm. His grip wasn’t painful, but it was absolute. “My car is outside. We’re going to your home. We’re going to sit down, and you are going to tell me every single lie you’ve told yourself to justify this.”

I wanted to scream. I wanted to claw at his perfect face. But Junior was watching us, his eyes wide and analytical, and I couldn't let him see me break. I let Johnny lead us out, his hand a heavy weight on my shoulder, claiming a territory he hadn’t touched in half a decade.

The ride to the apartment was a tomb of silence. Johnny sat in the back of the sleek black SUV with us, his presence filling the cabin, making the air feel thin. He didn't look at the window; he looked at Junior. And Junior, with the terrifying bravery of a child who doesn't know better, looked right back.

When the driver pulled up to our building—a pre-war walk-up with peeling paint and a flickering streetlamp—Johnny’s expression shifted from fury to something sharper. Contempt? Pity? He looked at the rusted fire escapes as if they were personal insults.

“You live here,” he stated. It wasn't a question.

“It’s a home, Johnny. Something you wouldn't understand,” I snapped, sliding out of the car the moment the door opened.

We didn't even make it past the threshold of the apartment before the storm hit. Teresa was standing in the narrow hallway, her arms crossed over her chest, her face a mask of carved granite. She looked at me, then at Junior, and finally, she fixed her gaze on Johnny.

“Who is this suit?” she demanded, her voice like a serrated blade.

“Teresa, please—” I started, but she stepped past me, planting herself directly in Johnny’s path.

“I know who you are,” she spat, her eyes raking over his expensive watch and polished shoes. “You’re the one who let her bleed out in the cold six years ago. You’re the billionaire who couldn't be bothered to check if his wife was starving while he was busy counting his gold.”

Johnny went very still. It was the stillness of a predator deciding where to strike. “I’m the father of that boy,” he said quietly.

“You’re a donor with a high credit limit,” Teresa countered, her lip curling. “Junior has a father. His name was Emir. He was the one who changed the diapers you were too busy for. He was the one who stayed up through the fevers while you were probably signing away someone’s livelihood. You think you can walk in here with your shiny car and buy a family? You’re six years too late and several souls short, Mr. Ross.”

Johnny’s eyes flickered to the cramped living room—the mismatched furniture, the stack of bills on the counter, the small wooden box Junior kept his treasures in. I saw the flash of wounded jealousy in his eyes, a raw, ugly thing. He looked at me, and for a second, the mask slipped. He looked like he’d been gutted.

“Get out,” I said, my voice barely a whisper. “You’ve seen where we live. You’ve seen that we’re fine without you. Just go.”

He didn't move for a long moment. The tension in the room was so thick I could taste the copper of it. Finally, he turned, his coat sweeping against the doorframe.

“This isn't over, Everlee,” he said, his voice dropping to a dangerous, icy register. “I’ve seen how you live. I’ve seen what you’ve settled for. I won't let my son grow up in the ruins of your pride.”

He vanished into the dark hallway, the heavy thud of his footsteps echoing like a countdown. I collapsed onto the sofa, my strength vanishing with him, while Teresa slammed the door and bolted it with a finality that felt like a lie.

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