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The Donor's Claim_ My Ex-Husband's Biggest Mistake Novel Cover

The Donor's Claim_ My Ex-Husband's Biggest Mistake

"Take the brat and get out!" David screamed, throwing my toddler's toy across the room. "He’s not even my blood anyway!" That was the final straw. David was the one who begged me to use a donor because he was sterile. Now that his mistress is 'pregnant' (a miracle, or a lie?), he’s discarding us like trash. I signed the divorce papers and left with nothing but my son, Leo. I thought we would be alone. I didn't expect a convoy of black SUVs to surround my rusty Honda. A man stepped out—a man with the exact same ice-blue eyes as my son. "I believe," he said in a voice that cost more than my life, "you have something of mine."
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Chapter 3

The lawyer's office smelled like old leather and broken dreams. I sat across from Mr. Henderson, a thin man with wire-rimmed glasses who kept glancing at his watch as if my life's destruction was keeping him from something more important. The custody agreement lay spread across his mahogany desk like a death sentence.

"Mrs. Patterson, I have to advise against this," he said for the third time, tapping his pen against the papers. "Walking away from all marital assets is... unprecedented. You're entitled to half of everything."

I shifted Leo higher on my lap, his small fingers tangled in my hair as he dozed fitfully. He'd been cranky all morning, sensing the tension that had been suffocating our house for the past week since David's ultimatum.

"I don't want his money," I said quietly. "I just want my son."

"But Mrs. Patterson, without financial support, how do you plan to—"

"I'll figure it out." The words came out sharper than I intended. Leo stirred against my chest, and I rubbed his back gently. "Just tell me where to sign."

Mr. Henderson removed his glasses and cleaned them slowly, a gesture I was beginning to recognize as his way of buying time when clients made decisions he considered foolish. "Your husband's attorney has made it clear that if you contest the custody arrangement or seek any financial support, he'll fight for full custody. Given that Leo isn't biologically his..."

"I know what he's threatening." My voice cracked despite my efforts to stay strong. "David made sure I understood."

The memory of last night's conversation still burned in my chest. David had cornered me in the kitchen after Leo's bedtime, his face cold and calculating as he laid out his terms. Take nothing and keep Leo, or fight him and risk losing everything.

"He really said he'd claim you're an unfit mother?" Mr. Henderson asked, his professional mask slipping slightly to reveal genuine concern.

I nodded, unable to trust my voice. David's words echoed in my mind: "Who's going to believe you can provide for a child when you haven't worked in three years? I'll tell them about your anxiety medication, your crying fits. I'll make sure they see you as the unstable woman who forced her husband into fertility treatments he never wanted."

"Mrs. Patterson," the lawyer continued gently, "I've seen cases like this before. Men who abandon their children and then use the legal system to avoid responsibility. But you have rights—"

"Not if I lose him." I looked down at Leo's peaceful face, his long lashes casting shadows on his chubby cheeks. "I can't risk it. He's all I have left."

Mr. Henderson sighed and slid the papers closer to me. "Then we'll need to make this official. You're waiving all claims to marital property, including the house, savings accounts, investment portfolios, and retirement funds. In exchange, you'll have full physical and legal custody of Leo, with no visitation rights granted to your husband."

The pen felt impossibly heavy in my hand. Twenty years of marriage, reduced to a signature on a piece of paper. I thought about the house David and I had bought as newlyweds, how we'd painted every room together, planned where we'd put the Christmas tree, imagined filling the bedrooms with children.

"There's one more thing," I said, my voice barely above a whisper. "I want his parental rights terminated completely. I don't want him to be able to change his mind later."

Mr. Henderson's eyebrows shot up. "That's... that's very final, Mrs. Patterson. Are you certain?"

I thought about David's face when he'd called Leo a bastard, the disgust in his voice when he'd said he was tired of pretending to love a child who wasn't his. "I'm certain."

The signing took less than ten minutes. Each page felt like another door closing, another bridge burning. When it was over, Mr. Henderson walked us to the elevator, his expression troubled.

"Mrs. Patterson," he said as the doors opened, "if you ever need help, if things become difficult..."

"Thank you," I managed, stepping into the elevator with Leo still sleeping in my arms. "But we'll be fine."

The doors closed on his skeptical expression, and I finally allowed myself to breathe. It was done. Leo was mine, completely and legally mine. Whatever came next, at least I knew David could never use my son as a weapon against me again.

The rain started as we pulled into our driveway—our former driveway. Dark clouds had been gathering all afternoon, and now they opened up in a torrential downpour that matched my mood perfectly. I sat in the car for a moment, watching water stream down the windshield, distorting my view of the house that was no longer mine.

Leo woke up as I lifted him from his car seat, blinking sleepily at the gray sky. "Rain, Mama," he said, pointing at the droplets hitting the car window.

"Yes, baby. Lots of rain."

Inside, David was waiting in the living room with Jessica. She sat perched on the edge of our—his—couch, her perfectly manicured hands resting on her still-flat stomach. She looked younger than I remembered, almost childlike in her uncertainty.

"Well?" David asked without preamble. "Is it done?"

I set Leo down, and he immediately ran to his toy box in the corner, oblivious to the tension crackling through the room. "It's done. You got what you wanted."

David's shoulders relaxed, and he actually smiled. "Good. Jessica and I can start fresh without any complications."

Jessica shifted uncomfortably, her eyes following Leo as he played. "David, maybe we should—"

"Should what?" David snapped, his mood shifting instantly. "Change our minds? Let her bleed us dry with child support for a kid that isn't even mine?"

Jessica flinched, and I felt an unexpected pang of sympathy for her. She had no idea what kind of man she'd gotten involved with, what he was capable of when things didn't go his way.

"I'll get our things," I said quietly.

It took me two hours to pack our lives into three suitcases and a handful of boxes. Leo's clothes, his favorite toys, the photo albums David had never wanted anyway. I left behind the wedding china, the expensive artwork, the furniture we'd chosen together. None of it mattered anymore.

The rain was still pounding when I loaded the last box into my car. Leo sat in his car seat, clutching his stuffed elephant and watching the water race down the windows. David appeared in the doorway as I closed the trunk, Jessica hovering behind him like a nervous shadow.

"That's it?" he called over the storm. "No dramatic goodbye speech?"

I turned to face him one last time, this man I'd loved and trusted and built a life with. Rain soaked through my jacket immediately, plastering my hair to my skull, but I didn't care.

"Goodbye, David."

His laughter followed me as I got into the car, harsh and mocking. "You'll be back!" he shouted as I started the engine. "You think you can make it on your own? You'll be begging me for help within a month! You and that kid will be living in your car!"

I didn't look back as I pulled out of the driveway. In the rearview mirror, I could see him standing in the doorway, Jessica's hand on his arm as if trying to pull him inside. But I kept my eyes forward, on the road ahead, on the uncertain future that was now entirely mine to shape.

"Where we going, Mama?" Leo asked from the backseat, his voice small in the storm.

I glanced at him in the mirror, my brave little boy who trusted me completely to keep him safe. "I don't know yet, sweetheart. But we're going together."

The windshield wipers beat a steady rhythm against the rain as we drove away from the only home Leo had ever known, toward whatever came next. Behind us, the house grew smaller in the darkness until it disappeared completely, swallowed by the storm.

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