
Replaced By His First Love: My Son Wants A New Mommy
Chapter 3
“Mom… what’s an illegitimate bastard?”
Jason’s question came out of nowhere one lazy afternoon while he sat at the dining table doing his homework. I was folding laundry nearby and the words hit me like ice water. I gasped sharply, nearly dropping the shirt in my hands.
“Jason!” My voice came out higher than I intended. “Where did you hear that word from?”
He looked up at me with those innocent yet far-too-perceptive eyes, Malcom’s eyes. “Simon’s grandma came to school today. She and his mom had a big argument outside the gate. She called Simon that. Everyone heard it.”
*Heavens.* Could people not be more careful with the things they said around children? I pressed a hand to my chest, trying to steady my breathing. Jason was only seven, but he was sharp. Scarily intelligent. There was no point lying to him — he would only dig deeper until he found the truth.
I knelt down beside his chair so we were eye-level. “Sweetheart, that’s a very bad word. It’s cruel and hurtful, and no one should ever use it. It’s not something nice people say.”
That’s not it," he says, his small brow furrowing with impatience. He looks so much like Malcom in that moment it makes my chest ache. "Simon said it’s because his dad got married to someone else and not his mom. He said it means you don't belong."
My throat tightened. I could see the wheels turning in his young mind, connecting dots I had desperately hoped would stay hidden for a few more years. I took a slow breath and chose my words carefully.
“An illegitimate child… is a child whose parents weren’t married when they were born. Some people use it as an insult, but it’s not the child’s fault. It’s complicated adult stuff. But it doesn't change who the child is. It doesn't make them any less loved or important."
Jason was quiet for a moment, processing. Then his small face twisted with sudden realization.
“So… how do we avoid it?”he asked his voice dropping by an octave.
“Well,” I said gently, “mom and dad have to be married before the baby comes.”
His expression changed instantly. His brows drew together, and his mouth turned down. Without warning, he pushed his chair back with a loud scrape and bolted from the room.
“Jason!”
I followed him quickly, heart hammering. He had climbed onto the window seat in the living room, curling into himself, arms wrapped tightly around his knees.
“It’s all my fault!” he cried, voice cracking. “I would have been illegitimate too, wouldn’t I?”
“Jason…” I whispered, moving closer but stopping when he flinched.
“That’s why Dad married you, isn’t it?” His words tumbled out faster, laced with pain. “He didn’t want to be separated from the woman he loved, but he had to because of me. Because he didn’t want me to be like Simon! "
The room seemed to tilt. I felt the blood drain from my face. Where had he heard these things? Who had been feeding my child these poisonous ideas?
“Jason, come down from there right now,” I said, trying to keep my voice steady even as my hands trembled.
“I wish I’d never been born!” he shouted, tears spilling down his cheeks. “That way Dad could be with the woman he loved! Monica! She’s the one he really loves, right? If I wasn’t here, he wouldn’t have had to marry you!”
I stood frozen in horror, staring at my seven-year-old son as he broke apart in front of me.
*What had they been feeding my own child?*
The woman he loved. Monica. The words echoed in my head like a curse.
“Jason, please…” My voice broke as I took another step toward him. “You are so loved. You are wanted. Never doubt that.”
But he turned his face away, pressing it against his knees, and whispered again, “I wish I’d never been born.”
****
You and Monica must have said something," I told him, my voice barely a whisper, though it felt like a scream in the stillness.
"You acted in a way that was improper. You let him see it. My heart was shattering, Malcom. It’s shattering now."
I looked at him, searching for a flicker of guilt, but his face was a mask of cold indifference. There had to have been nuances—stolen glances, a lingering touch, a certain softness in his voice when he spoke to her that he never used with me. There must have been something that showed they were still in love.
This whole time, I had been deceiving myself, building a home on a foundation of lies.
My heart was hurting with a physical, stabbing intensity, and I couldn't even cry. I had no one to turn to.
To the world, this was well-deserved. I was the girl who had "trapped" a Grayson. Even Malcom’s sister had cornered me at the last gala, whispering with a sharp, venomous smile that my time was "rounding up for good."
"Oh, please stop it! Just stop it!" Malcom roared, slamming his palm against the mahogany desk. The sound made me flinch. "You just want to pin this on Monica. You want to blame her for every single thing that goes wrong in this house."
"Where else could he have picked it up from if not you?" I shot back, my voice rising. "My son is spending most of his free time with his father and his father’s ex-girlfriend. Where else would a child hear that he was a mistake? That his father belongs with someone else?"
"Anywhere!" Malcom spat, his eyes flashing with a cruel light. "It’s not really a secret, is it? Half of Knoxx City knows the truth. I bedded you by mistake, Emily. This marriage was what you wanted because you knew my family. You knew the Graysons would never let their own blood be born out of wedlock. You played your cards, and you won the ring. Don't act the victim now."
"Malcom," I whispered, the name feeling like ash in my mouth.
He didn't look back. He didn't take it back. He just turned to his monitor, dismissing me as if I were a servant who had overstayed her welcome.
And now it seems my own son has decided to play matchmaker between me and the woman my husband should have married. He talked about her constantly, dragging Malcom into conversations about "how pretty" she looked or "how fun" their walks were. I was being erased from my own family, one memory at a time.
Until Friday night.
"Can you not come back home early tomorrow, Mom?"he asked, trying and failing to hide his excitement.
My heart soared. For the first time in weeks, warmth bloomed in my chest. Tomorrow was my birthday. He remembered.
After everything, my little boy still wanted to do something special for me. A surprise, perhaps. Cake? A drawing? Maybe even a small family dinner where things felt normal again.
I smiled softly and brushed his hair back, my voice gentle. “Okay, sweetheart. I won’t come home early. I promise.”
He grinned, clearly pleased with himself, and snuggled deeper under the covers.
I kissed his forehead, hope flickering weakly inside me for the first time in a long while. Maybe this was the turning point.
Maybe my son was trying to make things better in his own childish way.
I was sadly, painfully mistaken.
I went to bed that night with a smile, dreaming of a birthday where I was finally seen again. I didn't know then that the surprise Jason was planning wasn't the kind a mother ever wants to receive.
I woke up with a quiet, fragile hope blooming in my chest that morning.
Neither Malcom nor Jason had wished me a happy birthday.
But I told myself it didn’t matter. Surely they were saving their affection for the evening surprise. Jason’s poorly hidden excitement had been obvious — the way he kept glancing at his father, the whispered conversations that stopped the moment I entered the room.
They had even gone shopping the day before. I had seen the bags they tried to smuggle into the house when they thought I wasn’t looking. My heart had felt lighter than it had in weeks.
I spent the entire day at The Grayson Luxe, one of the family’s upscale hotels in the city. I booked a quiet corner suite, spread out my sketches across the large desk, and worked on new designs while occasionally checking my phone.
Every hour that passed made my anticipation grow. I imagined walking into a warmly lit home, Jason running to hug me, Malcom pulling me close, maybe even a small cake with my favorite flowers. After everything we’d been through lately, this felt like a much-needed turning point.
By evening, I could barely contain my excitement. I drove home with butterflies in my stomach, carefully applying a fresh coat of lipstick in the rearview mirror before pulling into the driveway. The house lights were glowing warmly. Soft music drifted out. My smile widened as I stepped inside.
Mom? What are you doing here?!"
The voice wasn't a cheer. It was a sharp, furious demand. I stopped in the foyer, blinking at Jason. He was dressed in a tiny suit, his hair slicked back, looking every bit a Grayson. But his face was contorted with anger.
"I’m sorry, honey," I said with a small, nervous chuckle. "It was just getting late. I thought maybe we could start the party a little early so you could get to bed on time."
"You weren't supposed to be back yet!" he yelled, stomping his foot.
"It’s fine, Jason," I tried to cajole him, reaching out to touch his shoulder. "I’m here now. Just what are you hiding? Where is your dad?"
I laughed lightly, expecting him to break into a smile and reveal a cake. Instead, a voice drifted from the living room—a melodic, sophisticated sound that turned my blood to ice.
"Oh, Malcom, it’s absolutely perfect! Thank you so much for this."
Monica.
She was here. In my house. On my birthday.
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