
My Son Ran to the Billionaire Who Abandoned Us
Chapter 3
The vacant brownstone on East 73rd smelled like old varnish and broken promises. I stood in the center of the empty living room, my heels echoing on the scuffed hardwood, while Marcus Webb circled me like I was something he'd already purchased.
"Beautiful space, isn't it?" His voice was too close, his breath carrying the sour tang of expensive scotch consumed too early in the day. "High ceilings. Original moldings. Very... private."
I kept my clipboard raised between us like a shield, my professional smile locked in place even as my pulse hammered against my throat. "The owner is motivated to sell. If you'd like to schedule a second viewing with your—"
"I don't need a second viewing." He stepped closer, cutting off my angle to the door. His hand landed on the wall beside my head, caging me in. "I need you to stop pretending you don't know why I keep requesting you specifically."
The clipboard was shaking. I forced my voice to stay level. "Mr. Webb, I'm here in a professional capacity. If you're serious about the property, we can discuss terms at the office—"
"I'm very serious." His other hand reached for my waist.
The door exploded inward.
The sound was so sudden and violent that Marcus jerked backward, his face draining of color. Johnny Ross filled the doorframe like a stormfront, his coat still swinging from the force of his entrance. He didn't run. He didn't need to. He crossed the room in three measured strides, seized Marcus by the collar of his custom shirt, and slammed him against the exposed brick wall hard enough to rattle the windowpanes.
"She said no." Johnny's voice was a blade wrapped in silk. "Which part of that required translation?"
Marcus sputtered, his hands clawing uselessly at Johnny's wrists. "I—this is assault—I'll have you arrested—"
"You'll do nothing." Johnny leaned in, his tone dropping to something colder than I'd ever heard from him. "Because if you so much as breathe her name again, I will personally ensure that every bank in this city knows exactly what kind of liability you are. Your credit lines will evaporate. Your club memberships will be revoked. Your wife will receive a very detailed account of how you spend your Tuesday afternoons."
He released Marcus with a shove that sent the man stumbling toward the door. Marcus didn't look back. The sound of his footsteps clattering down the stairs was the only proof he'd been real.
I was still pressed against the wall, my breath coming in shallow gasps, my hands numb around the clipboard. Johnny turned to face me, and the fury in his eyes wasn't gone—it had simply redirected.
"How long?" he demanded.
"What?"
"How long has that been happening?" He gestured sharply toward the door. "How many times have you smiled through it because you needed the commission?"
I straightened, forcing my spine to lock even though my legs felt like water. "That's none of your business."
"It became my business the second my son's mother started selling herself by the hour to men like that."
The words landed like a slap. I shoved past him, my shoulder colliding with his chest, but he caught my wrist and pulled me back around. His other hand withdrew something from his coat pocket—a slim leather checkbook, the kind that cost more than my monthly rent.
He flipped it open, clicked a pen, and signed his name across the bottom of a blank check with sharp, deliberate strokes. Then he tore it free and held it out to me.
"Take it," he said.
I stared at the check like it was a live grenade. "I'm not taking your money."
"Then take my terms." His jaw tightened, the muscle leaping beneath the skin. "You have two choices, Everlee. You surrender full custody of Junior to me, effective immediately. Or you quit this job, remarry me by the end of the week, and let me handle the things you clearly can't."
The room tilted. "You're insane."
"I'm done watching you drown." He pressed the check into my hand, his fingers closing over mine with a grip that was almost gentle. Almost. "Choose."
I threw the check at his feet. It fluttered to the ground like a wounded bird, his signature stark against the pale paper. "Go to hell, Johnny."
I walked out before he could see my hands shaking.
---
The lawyers arrived at eight o'clock the next morning.
I was still in my bathrobe, Junior's lunchbox half-packed on the counter, Teresa's coffee brewing in the ancient percolator. The knock was too sharp, too professional, too early. When I opened the door, three people in immaculate suits stood in the hallway, their expressions carved from marble.
The woman in front extended a manila envelope. "Ms. Garcia? You've been served."
I took it on autopilot, my fingers numb. The letterhead was embossed, expensive, unmistakable: *Ross Family Legal Trust*. The words inside blurred together—*petition for full custody*, *material concerns regarding living conditions*, *best interest of the minor child*—but the signature at the bottom was perfectly clear.
Johnny hadn't been bluffing.
He was going to take my son.
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