The first time my grandfather met my son, his eyes lingered on the worn blanket wrapped around the baby before he even looked at his face.His expression tightened, as if I had brought disgrace into his polished, marble home.Rain streamed down the glass walls of Holloway House, blurring the city behind him into streaks of silver. I stood near the entrance in a faded coat, my newborn pressed close to my chest, his tiny fingers gripping a loose thread on my sleeve.My grandfather, Victor Holloway—a billionaire and the unquestioned head of the family—looked me over with cold precision.“Wasn’t $582,000 a month enough?” he asked.The room fell silentMy aunt Patricia froze. My cousin Celeste lowered her glass. My mother-in-law Elaine forced a quick, uneasy smile.I met my grandfather’s gaze calmly.I never received a single dollar.”His expression didn’t explode—just cracked slightly, like stone under pressure.“What did you say?”
“I said I never received anything.”Behind him, Patricia and Elaine exchanged a glance. Celeste’s grip tightened. My husband Adrian stepped forward, wearing that same charming but poisonous smile.“Lena is exhausted,” he said smoothly. “Postpartum confusion can be overwhelming.”I almost laughed.Three weeks earlier, I had delivered my baby in a public clinic after a hospital payment failed. Two weeks earlier, I’d received an eviction notice. One week earlier, Adrian had told me I should have been “more grateful.”Now they stood under a chandelier worth more than everything I owned, pretending concern.Grandfather turned to Adrian. “I sent support every month.”Adrian nodded. “Of course. Through the family trust. My mother handled it.”Elaine touched her necklace. “Victor, this isn’t the moment.”I kissed my baby’s forehead.“It is exactly the moment,” I said quietly.Adrian’s eyes sharpened. He had always hated that tone—calm, controlled, and impossible to dismiss.