
When My Ex Declared War Over Our Daughter
Chapter 5
Central Park smelled like cut grass and pretzel carts. Maya chased pigeons near Bethesda Fountain, her laughter cutting through the afternoon haze. Jefferson sat beside me on the bench, his hand resting on my knee—a casual touch that still felt like a miracle.
"Mommy, look!" Maya spun in circles, arms outstretched. The sun caught her dark hair, turning it copper at the edges.
Then I felt it. That prickle at the base of my skull. The sensation of being watched.
I scanned the crowd. Tourists. Joggers. A man in a gray suit standing too still beneath an oak tree, his gaze locked on Maya.
Sam.
My breath stopped. Jefferson's hand tightened on my knee. He'd seen him too.
Sam moved closer, his steps measured. He wasn't looking at me. His eyes tracked Maya's every movement—the tilt of her head, the shape of her smile. I watched his expression shift from observation to certainty, his jaw setting in that way that meant he'd made a decision.
"She has your eyes," he said when he reached us. Not a greeting. A claim.
I stood, positioning myself between him and my daughter. "Leave. Now."
"How old is she?" His voice was too calm. Too controlled.
"That's none of your concern."
"Four?" He did the math in his head. I could see it happening—the timeline of my disappearance, the months of pregnancy. "She's mine."
Jefferson rose, his hand finding my elbow. "You need to go."
Sam's gaze finally shifted to Jefferson. "Does she know? Does your daughter know her real father is standing right here?"
"Her real father," Jefferson said, his voice dropping to something dangerous, "is the man who was there for her first word. Her first step. Every nightmare and every triumph." He pulled his phone from his pocket. "Leave, or I call my attorney. We'll have a restraining order filed within the hour."
Sam's hands clenched at his sides. For a moment, I thought he might lunge. Then Maya ran over, crashing into my legs.
"Mommy, can we get ice cream?"
Sam stared at her. At the curve of her cheek, the stubborn set of her chin. Looking for pieces of himself in a child who'd never known his name.
"Yes, sweetheart." I lifted her onto my hip, turning my back on him. "Let's go."
We walked away. I didn't look back. But I felt his eyes on us until we disappeared into the crowd.
---
Lilliana's penthouse overlooked the Hudson. Sam stood at the window, his reflection ghostly in the glass.
"You knew." Not a question.
Behind him, Lilliana's teacup clinked against its saucer. "I suspected."
"You suspected she was pregnant with my child, and you said nothing?"
"I was protecting you." Her voice carried that familiar sweetness, the one that used to work. "She was using you, Sam. The pregnancy was probably a trap—"
"She left." He turned. "If it was a trap, why did she leave?"
Lilliana's fingers found the pendant at her throat—her sister's pendant. "Because she knew you'd see through her eventually. She ran before you could expose her."
Sam's jaw clenched. The math was simple. Brutal. Kenna had been six weeks pregnant when she left. Maya was four years old. The timeline fit perfectly.
"That child is yours," Lilliana continued. "And she's raising her with another man. Letting him play father to your daughter." She stood, crossing to him. "You have rights, Sam. Legal rights. Fight for them."
"She'll never agree—"
"Then don't ask for agreement." Lilliana's mask slipped, revealing the calculation beneath. "Make her understand what she's stolen from you. Sue for custody. For paternity fraud. Make her pay for every year she kept your daughter from you."
Sam stared out at the city. At the lights beginning to flicker on as dusk fell. Somewhere out there, Kenna was tucking his daughter into bed. Reading her stories. Giving her a life that should have included him.
"Call my lawyers," he said.
---
The email arrived at 9 AM. Phoenix Capital's accounts—frozen. Three of our largest investment portfolios, locked pending legal review.
I stared at the screen, my coffee going cold in my hand.
Jefferson appeared in my office doorway. "What's wrong?"
I couldn't speak. Just turned the laptop toward him.
His face went hard. "Sam."
My phone buzzed. Unknown number. I knew before I answered.
"The St. Regis. Noon. Come alone, or I freeze everything else."
The line went dead.
Jefferson reached for the phone. "We'll fight this. Elena can—"
"He wants to meet."
"Then I'm coming with you."
"He said alone."
"I don't care what he said." Jefferson's hands cupped my face. "You're not facing him without me."
But we both knew I would. Because Sam had found the one weapon that still worked—my company. The thing I'd built from nothing. The proof that I was more than what he'd made me.
And he was holding it hostage.
The St. Regis lobby was all marble and old money. Sam sat in a corner booth, a folder on the table in front of him. He stood when I approached.
"Sit."
I remained standing. "Unfreeze my accounts."
"After we talk." He gestured to the folder. "Paternity test. Court-ordered. I've already filed the paperwork."
The words hit like a physical blow. "Maya isn't yours."
"The timeline says otherwise." His voice was flat. Factual. "You left six weeks pregnant. She's four years old. The math is simple, Kenna."
"The math is wrong."
"Then prove it." He pushed the folder toward me. "Submit to the test. Let the courts decide."
I opened the folder. Legal documents. Custody petitions. A lawsuit for paternity fraud that would drag my name through every tabloid in New York.
"You're insane."
"I'm a father who was denied his child." He leaned forward. "Leave him. Come back to me. Drop this charade, and I'll drop the lawsuit."
The audacity stole my breath. "You think I'd trade my daughter for your ego?"
"I think you'll do what's best for her. And what's best is having her real father in her life." His hand covered mine. "I can give her everything. The best schools. The best life. Can he?"
I pulled my hand away. "He already has."
"Then you have nothing to fear from a paternity test." Sam's smile was cold. "Unless you're lying."
I stood, the folder clutched in my shaking hands. "You'll regret this."
"The only thing I regret," he said, "is letting you go in the first place."
I walked out. Behind me, I heard him call my name. I didn't stop. Didn't turn.
But his words followed me into the street, into the cab, into the hotel where Jefferson waited with Maya sleeping in his arms.
Sam had declared war. And this time, he was fighting for something I couldn't let him win.
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