nurse was cheerful, telling me seven-year-old Jace had
lood run cold. "It's a good thing we h
I are both O-negative. It
truth. Jace was not my son. He was Christ
en years, I had been raising my husband's
hool, was a lie. The man I had spent years searching for after a car a
nipulated DNA test, Christian made a fatal mistake. He
onfirmed h
would find my son, and then I would
pte
vate school came on a Tuesday. The nu
ound. He's perfectly fine, just a scrape, but he'll need
my throat, but her
y? Can I t
he chirped. "It's a good thing we already had his blood type o
old, a sudden, sharp chill that had
ood type was?" I asked,
in her tone. "I thought you'd said you and your husban
t funny. It w
sitive child. It's basic biology, a simple
one, and stood frozen in the middle of my sun-drenched living room. My perfe
Either Jace was not my husband Ch
ths. I had endured twenty hours of labor. I had felt him k
ly devastating possibility.
ismatic tech CEO, the man who was publicly lauded as a devo
ded p
hile a gaping hole tore through my reality. I hired a private lab, using a toothbrush from Jace' s bathroom and one of my own hairs. I told
n Friday afternoon. The subject line
scanned the jargon until th
TY OF MAT
o percent. Jace, the boy I had rai
ty with Christian Norman at 99.99%. And then, the final, twisting knife. A secondary analysi
idy
ter Jace was born. The former physical therapist who had helped Chri
tilting. My entire marriage
and his mistress had swapped my baby at birth, placed
report had no information on tha
old against my skin. I called my best friend
's wrong? You
a strangled sob. "Bri
said, her tone sharpe
he's no
on the other end. "What the
The blood type. The D
up I made you sign. The infidelity clause. We'r
silly piece of paper between two people who would be together forever. He had s
her
otification popped up on my screen. I
NA test. A sample of your biological son's hair was used by
t me further, had accidentally given me
n was
Christian and Kassidy. The cold, hard facts were lai
e taking over. Tears I didn' t know I had
What had they don
hearts. He was the golden boy, I was the aspiring designer. We were inseparable. After college, he was in
flyers, hired private investigators, followed dead-end leads until I was thin a
iracle. He was found. He was alive, living in a small town, but he had amn
him back to health. She was older, plain, nothing like t
me away, his eyes cold and unfamiliar. It was Kassid
k him to our old haunts, showed him photos, told him stories. I
r, my own strength depleted from the years of searching. When I got pregnant w
se had burned down, that she had nowhere to go. I felt sorry for her. Christian had
her become
s so thick i