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No Mother's Love: A Son's Fight

Chapter 3 

Word Count: 456    |    Released on: 17/06/2025

A few of Dad's old fr

ld English teacher

transfer, sending me books, encouraging me t

Your father was a good man

were a sma

y apartment. The silenc

gh Dad's papers, figur

ptance letter was

d I shared. He

even think a

he door. Sha

expecti

two large men

t look lik

" one asked, h

es

badge too quickly to see. "We need to ask you some quest

done well, really w

about

ather, an architect, helped you cheat.

them. This

ther would never do

aid, stepping inside. The other fol

suddenly fel

son. Confirming your father's involv

r? Fo

ming anything t

rsuasion," the second o

estigation. This w

s had to be h

edit me? To hur

you?" I

estions," the

me somewhere, they s

ss this p

go. But they were b

ut, not rough

ck sedan park

ook me to a small, dingy off

, a metal des

sat m

ather helped you cheat. You confe

n't. I

ed. Why thi

tanford? To ruin my future

ted to b

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No Mother's Love: A Son's Fight
No Mother's Love: A Son's Fight
“My father, David Miller, lay dying in our small living room, his every breath a struggle. His final whispered wish was for my mother, Victoria Hayes, the cold CEO who had abandoned us years ago for Richard Davenport and a life of immense wealth. When I called, pleading with her to see him one last time, her response was chilling. Over the faint sounds of a lavish party for her stepson, Ryan Davenport, she declared herself too "busy" to attend a dying man's bedside. My father died heartbroken, feeling her absence till the very end. But her cruelty didn't stop there. Days after the funeral, "investigators"-clearly hired by her or Davenport-accused me of cheating on my SATs and then brutally assaulted me, shattering my knee. My own mother, Victoria Hayes, not only refused consent for my emergency surgery, dismissing my critical injuries as "fabricated," but chillingly denied my father's death. The final blow came when I found my father's urn, emptied and desecrated, among the trash. How could a woman, my own mother, be so utterly monstrous? This wasn't just abandonment; it was a calculated campaign of psychological and physical destruction, aimed at erasing every trace of my father and me. Why this depth of malice? Why now? Lying broken, clutching the torn pieces of my Stanford acceptance – the dream they tried to crush – I felt a cold resolve ignite. If they wanted a war, they' d get one. I' d use the truth, an American principle they scoffed at, to expose every lie. I opened my laptop, ready to dismantle her empire piece by piece.”
1 Introduction2 Chapter 13 Chapter 24 Chapter 35 Chapter 46 Chapter 57 Chapter 68 Chapter 79 Chapter 810 Chapter 911 Chapter 10