Follow
Chapters
Share
Two Sons, A Mother's Divided Heart Novel Cover

Two Sons, A Mother's Divided Heart

For five years, I built a new life from the ashes of my old one. I was a mother to Cale, the kindest boy in the world, and the woman who was destroyed by Congressman Hampton Garner was just a ghost. Then a schoolyard fight brought it all crashing down. The boy Cale fought was Ignatius-my son, the one Hampton stole from me at birth. To protect Cale, I knelt on the principal's office floor and begged for his forgiveness, just as Hampton himself walked through the door. He warned me to stay away, but then used our sick son to drag me back into his world, threatening Cale's life to ensure my compliance. I was trapped between the son I raised and the one I was forced to abandon, a pawn in their cruel games all over again. Then Hampton's brother appeared, offering me a chance for revenge, but only if I played his game and put my family in the crossfire. I was a pawn once. Never again.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 5

Josephine Jackson POV:

The Garner mansion was just as I remembered it: a cold, opulent mausoleum suffocating under the weight of its own history. Arthur led me through silent, cavernous hallways to Iggy's bedroom suite. The air outside his door was thick with the scent of antiseptic and hushed panic. A small crowd of expensive-looking doctors stood clustered together, murmuring in low tones.

From inside the room, I could hear a woman's voice, syrupy sweet and laced with frustration. "Iggy, darling, just one more sip for Mommy. Please?"

Then, Hampton's voice, sharp and impatient. "Christabel, this is getting us nowhere. If he won't take it willingly, we'll force it down."

"Hampton, you're scaring him!" the woman's voice replied, a practiced pout in her tone.

Arthur cleared his throat and pushed the door open. "Sir. Mrs. Byrd is here."

The room fell silent. Hampton stood by the large four-poster bed, his shoulders tense. And sitting on the edge of the bed, dabbing Iggy's forehead with a cloth, was Christabel Fitzpatrick. She turned, and her perfectly made-up face hardened into a mask of pure contempt.

"Well, well," she said, her voice dripping with venom. "Look what the cat dragged in. I thought it would take an act of God to get you here."

Hampton shot her a warning look. "Christabel, perhaps you should get some rest. You've been up all night."

"I'm perfectly fine, darling," she cooed, placing a proprietary hand on his arm. "Besides, our wedding is just a few months away. I need to get used to taking care of our son." She emphasized the word 'our', a deliberate dagger aimed straight at me.

"Go," Hampton said. His voice was soft, but it held an unmistakable command, the tone of a man who was not used to being disobeyed.

Christabel's smile tightened. She stood up, smoothing down her silk robe. As she passed me, her eyes, cold and sharp as shards of glass, raked over me. It was a look that promised retribution.

The door clicked shut behind her, leaving just the three of us in the cavernous room. Hampton, me, and the small, feverish boy buried under a mountain of expensive duvets.

"Get him to take his medicine," Hampton ordered, his voice flat.

I approached the bed. Iggy was pale, his cheeks flushed with fever. He cracked open an eye, saw it was me, and immediately burrowed deeper under the covers, turning his back to me.

"Hampton, this isn't going to work," I whispered.

"You managed to charm my son's replacement easily enough," he said, his voice laced with a strange bitterness. "This one is your own blood. Figure it out."

The words stung, but he was right. I had a duty. A biological pull I couldn't deny, no matter how much pain it was attached to. I sat on the edge of the bed, the mattress sinking under my weight.

I felt a pang of memory, so sharp it stole my breath. In the brief weeks after Iggy was born, before they cast me out, I was kept in a secluded wing of this house. They told me I wasn't to see the baby, that it was for the best. But at night, I would sneak into the nursery. He never cried for me. He never even knew my name. But I would stand over his crib for hours, watching him sleep.

I picked up the bowl of medicine. The spoon felt alien in my hand. "Iggy," I said, my voice barely a whisper. "You need to drink this. It will make you feel better."

He didn't move.

"Please, Iggy."

Slowly, he turned over. He looked at me, his eyes glassy with fever and resentment. "You feed me," he mumbled, his voice hoarse.

I brought the spoon to his lips. He took a small sip and immediately recoiled. "It's hot! Blow on it."

I blew on the spoonful of dark liquid until it was cool. He took another sip. "It's bitter," he whined. "I want honey."

It took nearly half an hour of this frustrating dance-blowing, adding honey, coaxing-before the medicine was finally gone. I felt a wave of exhaustion wash over me. Cale was never like this. When Cale was sick, he was quiet and sweet, thanking me after every spoonful.

I placed the empty bowl on the nightstand, my shoulders slumping with relief. I could go home now. I could go back to Cale.

"Sing to me," Iggy demanded, his voice weak but imperious.

"What?"

"Sing me the song. The one you used to sing to put me to sleep."

My blood ran cold. "I... I don't know any songs."

"Yes, you do," he insisted, his voice growing stronger with agitation. "The one about the moon and the water. You sang it to me."

Hampton, who had been watching silently from the corner, straightened up, his gaze sharp and questioning. He was looking at me, really looking at me, as if for the first time.

My heart hammered against my ribs. He couldn't know. No one could know about my secret, nighttime visits to the nursery. I had sung to my son in the dark, my voice a broken whisper, a lullaby about a little boat crossing a wide ocean to find its way home. A lullaby for a journey we would never take together.

And he remembered. This angry, spoiled boy, he remembered my voice in the dark.

"You must be thinking of someone else," I lied, my voice trembling. "It wasn't me."

"Liar!" he shrieked, his face contorting with a sudden, violent rage. He sat bolt upright, his small hands balled into fists. "It was you! It was always you!"

He shoved me, hard. The force was unexpected. I lost my balance, tumbling backward off the bed. I threw my hand out to catch myself, but it landed directly on the ceramic medicine bowl I had just set down.

It shattered under my weight.

A searing, white-hot pain shot up my arm. I looked down. A large shard of porcelain was embedded in the palm of my hand. Blood, dark and shockingly red, welled up around it, dripping onto the pristine white rug.

You may also like

Bound To The Ruthless Wall Street Butcher Novel Cover
8.2
I was trapped in a velvet booth at Le Bernardin, Arthur Sterling’s hand crawling up my knee as he whispered that my father would be in handcuffs by morning if I didn't spend the night with him. Desperate to escape, I lunged at the only man more dangerous than Arthur—Gunnar Kirk, the "Butcher of Wall Street"—and kissed him in front of every camera in the room, thinking I was choosing the lesser of two evils. I was wrong; Gunnar didn't just play along, he took possession, forcing me into a cold-blooded contract to be his fake fiancée to save his corporate image from an SEC investigation. While my greedy stepmother and sister were busy fighting over the diamonds he sent, I was living in terror, trying to hide the one thing that truly mattered: my infant son, hidden away with a nanny in a cramped Queens apartment. When my baby suffered a febrile seizure and I rushed to the ER, I looked up to see Gunnar standing in the doorway, his glacial eyes boring into me as he realized the "ruined" socialite was hiding a child from her past. I tried to sabotage the wedding, setting up my fame-hungry stepsister as a decoy bride so I could flee to Switzerland with my son, but Gunnar caught me on the fire escape before I could take a single step toward freedom. He threw me over his shoulder like a sack of flour and told me that if I didn't walk down that aisle, he would personally ensure my father rotted in prison. We stood at the altar and exchanged vows in a ceremony built on blackmail and lies, but as we walked out as husband and wife, Gunnar didn't look at me with affection; he turned to his assistant and ordered a total deep dive into the medical records I had spent a year trying to erase. "Find out exactly what happened during those nine months in Switzerland, and tell me who that baby really belongs to."
Fifty Dollar Bet, Million Dollar Revenge Novel Cover
8.0
For fifty dollars, I sold a piece of my dignity to the school's golden boy. I was eighteen, starving, and desperate enough to take his bet. That single photo destroyed my life. I became "Fifty-Dollar Ella," the school slut, haunted by whispers and scorn. My stepmother and stepsister reveled in my public humiliation, ensuring my life was a living hell. I spent the next decade clawing my way to the top of Wall Street, but I died alone, filled with the bitter regret of a stolen youth. Until the end, I never understood why they all hated me so much. Then, I opened my eyes. I was eighteen again, back in that classroom, moments before the bet that ruined me. A shadow fell over my desk. It was him. "Meet me after school," Javier Mack whispered, a smug look on his face. But this time, the scared, hungry girl was gone. In her place was a shark. And I was ready to play.
His Bride Of Revenge Novel Cover
7.9
He tilted her chin up, his touch deceptively gentle. "You're trembling," he whispered, brushing his thumb over her lips, slow enough to make her shiver. "Is it fear..." His gaze lingered on her mouth. "Or me?" Her pulse stuttered, betraying her. He was too close, and her body didn't seem to remember which feeling came first, terror or desire. **** Elena Castellano never thought her father would trade her freedom to keep her safe. But after a violent attack changes everything, she is forced to marry the one man she has every reason to be afraid of, Stefano Bernardo, the ruthless heir to one of Milan's most dangerous families. To the world, it's a union between two powerful families. To Stefano, it's the sweetest revenge. Stuck in a marriage built on deceit and danger, Elena must fight not only for her freedom but also for her life, because Stefano's revenge runs deeper than she ever imagined. And if she truly wants to live, she must face the truth: the real danger isn't her husband's revenge; it's falling for him. He married her to destroy her family. But she might become the death of him - literally.
Mated to My Intended's Enemy Novel Cover
9.5
She paid a stranger to take her virginity-unaware he already owned her. Victoria Howlthorne only has one night to destroy her value and escape a brutal fate-being sold as a virgin to the infamous Alpha Moretti. But the dangerous stranger she chooses in the shadows of Devil's Lair isn't what he seems.  "Buy a girl a drink?" "Shouldn't you be in college?" he smirks. "My birthday," she whispers. "I'm celebrating survival." She gives him her body. He gives her the most unforgettable night of her life. and takes her innocence with a hunger that feels destined. But Leo isn't just anyone-he's the dominant Alpha she was already promised to. She thinks she ruined the deal. He knows she just sealed her fate. When secrets unravel, desire turns to obsession. She tried to escape the monster. Instead, she gave herself to the devil who already owned her name. Will she run when she learns the truth, or surrender to the man who can never let her go?
My Marriage: A Million Lies Novel Cover
7.5
My marriage to the cold New York tycoon, Eli Drake, was supposed to be an impossible love story. I was the rebellious artist who had chased him across continents, believing I' d found my soulmate. Then I overheard a conversation that shattered everything. Our three-year marriage was a lie, a charade designed to protect his fragile sister-in-law, Kala. I was just the "lightning rod," strong enough to take the hits meant for her. The worst part? He' d secretly had a vasectomy, letting me endure his family' s scorn for being "barren" while he knew the truth all along. It all clicked into place: the public humiliations, the framed financial crimes, the "accidents" that left me scarred. They systematically broke me, forcing me to give a piece of my own skin to heal Kala and staging a car crash that landed me in prison. Eli' s justification was always the same: "Kala is delicate. Not like you." He thought I was strong enough to take it, that my defiance was a tool he could use. He exiled me, thinking I was broken and forgotten. He was wrong. I reinvented myself as the celebrated artist 'Lark.' And when he came crawling back, begging for forgiveness on a global stage, I knew my moment had come. My revenge would be a masterpiece.
The Moment I Broke Off the Engagement, My Ex's Uncle Claimed Me Novel Cover
9.6
My grandmother died in a car accident. Ethan Griffin forced me to operate on his mistress, Tessa Langley's dog. At the family banquet, he looked down on me like a king. "Kneel and apologize to Tessa," Ethan said coldly. "Then I might forgive you." I, Nina Sterling, said nothing. In front of everyone, I lit the engagement contract and dropped the burning paper into a champagne glass, watching it curl into ashes. Then I turned and walked toward the man sitting in the corner in a wheelchair, Adrian Griffin, the one the Griffin family treated like their greatest disgrace. "Adrian," I said, bending slightly to meet his eyes. "Do you have the guts to gamble on this with me?" Ethan exploded in rage and lunged toward me. With a sharp click, the lighter in Adrian's hand snapped shut. He caught Ethan's wrist in a firm grip. Adrian lifted those dark, brooding eyes and spoke to Ethan in a voice that cut through the room. "Watch your manners. She's my wife."