The Hidden Paternity Test That Shattered His Restaurant Empire-congtien

The money hit Emily Carter’s cheek before she understood that her marriage had ended.

A thick stack of hundred-dollar bills burst against her face and scattered across the polished hardwood floor, some sliding under leather shoes, some landing near the fireplace, one sticking briefly to the wet sleeve of her coat.

The room smelled like bourbon, expensive candles, and rain on wool.

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Outside, the storm beat against the windows of the Carter mansion with a steady, punishing rhythm.

Inside, Daniel Carter stood in front of his wife and told her to get rid of their child.

“Get an abortion,” he said, his voice cold and flat. “I don’t need that bastard child.”

Emily was eight weeks pregnant.

She had found out two days earlier during a shift break in the ER, standing under buzzing fluorescent lights with her scrub top still damp from running room to room.

She had cried in the supply closet for three minutes, not because she was scared, but because for one brief second she had believed a baby might soften something inside Daniel.

She had been wrong.

Daniel had once been careful with her.

In the beginning, he picked her up outside the hospital after night shifts with coffee in the cup holder and a clean sweatshirt on the passenger seat.

He sat beside her in a diner at 2 a.m. while she ate pancakes because she had missed dinner.

He told her she was the only person in his life who made him feel ordinary in a good way.

Emily believed him because she wanted to believe there was a man under the Carter family name, not just a son trained to protect it.

She had married him in a small ceremony that his mother complained about for months.

Evelyn Carter wore ivory to the wedding and smiled at Emily like she was a temporary inconvenience.

She did not shout.

She did not need to.

Her disapproval sat in the room like furniture, polished and permanent.

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