She smiles, tucking Liam’s hair behind his ear like she’s known him forever. "Of course, baby. Anything for you."
Liam beams at her. At her.
I choke. I press a hand to my mouth, shaking as the video continues. Liam—my son—leans into her, lets her kiss his forehead. Like she’s his real mother.
I let out a strangled scream and hurl the phone across the room. Everything inside me shatters into pieces. Ethan didn’t just take Liam. He erased me from his life completely.
I stumble to the bathroom, gripping the sink as I stare at my reflection. Hollow eyes. Chapped lips. A ghost of the woman I used to be.
I grip my hair, tugging hard, my breath coming out in ragged sobs. "I can’t do this," I whisper. "I can’t—I can’t—"
The walls close in. My legs give out.
And then everything fades to black.
I don’t remember how I end up on the streets. One moment, I’m in that motel. The next, I’m wandering through the city, numb and empty.
The money ran out days ago. I stopped eating. Stopped sleeping. Stopped caring.
I sit on a cold pavement, my arms wrapped around my legs, watching people pass by like I don’t exist. Because I don’t. Not anymore.
"Life is funny, isn’t it?"
The voice comes from beside me. I turn my head slightly and see an old man sitting next to me, his gray beard long, his clothes ragged.
I say nothing.
He chuckles. "You’re young. Pretty. You look like someone who lost everything."
I scoff. "And you look like someone who has nothing to lose."
"Ah, but that’s where you’re wrong," he says, smiling. "I had everything once."
I don’t know why, but I keep listening. Maybe because he’s the first person to talk to me in days. Maybe because I just need someone—anyone—to distract me from the unbearable pain.
He tells me stories. About life, love, betrayal. And I tell him nothing.
Until one night, when I finally break.
"I lost my son," I whisper.
The old man goes silent.
I swallow hard, staring at the empty coffee cup in my hands. "My husband—ex-husband—took him. He… replaced me." The words feel foreign in my mouth, like they belong to someone else.
The old man studies me for a long moment. Then, he pats my shoulder. "You want him back?"
I let out a broken laugh. "What kind of question is that? Of course, I do."
"Then get up."
I blink. "What?"
He gestures at me. "Get up. You won’t get him back by sitting here feeling sorry for yourself."
Anger flares in my chest. "You don’t understand—"