My carefully constructed world was perfect, the epitome of the American dream.
My son, Sam, was graduating high school, Yale-bound, smart, kind-the culmination of everything I' d worked for.
Surrounded by loved ones in our sprawling Hamptons-esque garden, I handed him a substantial stock trust from his late father, a solid foundation for his brilliant future.
Then, Darlene Pickett, our former housekeeper, burst through the wrought-iron gates, her face contorted with grotesque rage.
She dragged a small, disheveled boy beside her, pointing a trembling finger at my son.
"He's not Eleanor's son!" she shrieked for everyone to hear. "He's mine! And this," she thrust the other boy forward, "this is Daniel Ainsworth! Your real son, Eleanor! I swapped them eighteen years ago, in that hospital!"
A collective gasp echoed across the stunned crowd as my beautiful day-and carefully curated life-shattered.