The door creaked open before Grant Ellison even stepped fully inside. His polished shoes touched the cool tiles of his private foyer, the wheels of his sleek black suitcase trailing behind him with a soft, familiar rattle.

Grant looked exactly like the man who had just closed million-dollar deals across Europe—tailored white suit, violet dress shirt, designer watch catching the light with every movement. Everything about him radiated success and control. Yet nothing about him prepared him for what waited beyond that doorway.
He wasn’t supposed to be home until Friday. Business had wrapped up earlier than expected, and instead of extending the trip, he’d decided to return quietly. He wanted to surprise his little boy. A small smile tugged at his lips as he reached down and brushed his fingers over the teddy bear tied to his suitcase handle—Lucas’s favorite.
It had been over four weeks since he’d last seen his son. This was supposed to be a happy surprise. The kind that made up for lost time. He pictured Lucas running toward him, blue eyes lighting up, laughing and shouting, “Daddy!”
But the moment Grant stepped into the kitchen doorway, his heart stopped cold.
A woman stood at the sink—someone he didn’t recognize. A young Black woman wearing a gray apron tied around her waist, a dark short-sleeved top beneath it. Her hands gripped the edge of the counter. Her head was bowed. Her shoulders shook.
She was crying—not quietly, not discreetly. This was the kind of silent breakdown that settled deep in the chest and made the air feel heavy.
And wrapped tightly around her back, legs locked around her waist, arms clinging like vines, was Lucas.
His son. His only son.
Grant’s breath caught. “Lucas?” The word cracked as it left his mouth.
The boy’s blond head turned slightly, tear-streaked cheeks pressing harder against the woman’s shoulder. Lucas clung to her as if she were the only thing keeping him standing.
The woman startled and spun around. Her eyes—red, swollen, filled with fear and shame—met Grant’s.
For a long, fragile second, no one spoke.

