Six Days Postpartum, She Brought A DNA File To Custody Court-lequyen994 - Chainityai

Six Days Postpartum, She Brought A DNA File To Custody Court-lequyen994

The morning Harper Lowell walked into Courtroom 6C, the city outside was still bright with ordinary life. People were buying coffee. Elevators were opening. Lawyers were checking their phones and complaining about traffic. Nobody outside that courthouse knew a six-day-old baby was about to become the center of a fight that had started long before he was born.

Harper knew.

She felt it in the slow burn across her abdomen every time she moved. She felt it in the damp heat behind her eyes from six nights without real sleep. She felt it in the way her arms tightened around Nolan whenever someone in the hallway looked too long at the blanket.

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Nolan made a soft sound against her chest. Not a cry. Just a small newborn sigh, the kind that should have belonged to a quiet room, a rocking chair, and a mother who was allowed to heal.

Instead, he was in court.

Six days earlier, Harper had given birth after twenty-one hours of labor. Callum Prescott had not held her hand. He had not counted her breaths. He had not cut the cord. He arrived at the hospital nearly four hours after Nolan was born, carrying flowers chosen by an assistant and speaking to the nurse like he had a meeting in ten minutes.

He looked at the baby, smiled for the photo his mother wanted, and then left to take a call.

Harper remembered watching the door close behind him and feeling something colder than loneliness settle in her chest.

By the next morning, the lawyers came.

They did not call themselves a threat. Rich people rarely do. They called it support. They called it temporary stability. They called it a sensible arrangement while Harper recovered. One of them set a folder on the tray beside her untouched soup and explained that Callum could take Nolan home to the Prescott estate for a few weeks. Harper could visit when her doctor approved. The staff would handle feedings. A night nurse would be hired. Everything would be efficient.

Harper asked whether Callum had requested this.

The lawyer smiled too quickly.

That was when she refused.

From that moment, the kindness vanished.

A nurse who had been warm the day before became careful. A hospital administrator appeared and asked whether Harper felt anxious. Her bank card stopped working at the pharmacy. Her mother received a call from Callum’s office saying Harper needed rest and no visitors. Two friends texted that they had tried to come by, but security said family only.

Family.

That word had become a locked door.

Harper had married Callum three years earlier in a ceremony that took over the society pages for an entire weekend. To the outside world, she had stepped into a dream. The Prescotts had old money, newer money, and the kind of influence that made people laugh at Callum’s jokes before they were finished. Their estate sat behind iron gates. Their name was on hospital wings, scholarship funds, biotech buildings, and a private foundation that never released enough details for anyone to ask useful questions.

At first, Callum treated Harper like proof that he could be gentle.

Then he treated her like property that needed training.

He did not shout often. He did not have to. He corrected. He managed. He suggested. He asked why she needed lunch with friends when his mother found them tacky. He wondered why her old job mattered when the Prescott name had already lifted her above it. He moved money into accounts she could see but not touch. He made decisions and called them protection.

Marjorie Prescott did the rest.

Marjorie never entered a room. She took possession of it. She wore pale colors, pearls, and an expression that made every person nearby aware of their price. She told Harper early that Prescott wives did not embarrass the family. They did not complain. They did not question legal documents. They did not confuse motherhood with authority.

When Harper became pregnant, the control sharpened.

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