Every morning, Sloane Wyatt parks her blue Subaru in the third row of Willowbrook Elementary's parking lot, near the oak with the split trunk. She watches a three-year-old boy hold pinecones against the sky. She counts the seventy-two feet between her car and the school entrance. She never crosses them. Eli is her son. He doesn't know she exists. Three years ago, Sloane was a bookstore clerk and single mother seeing a therapist named Dr.
Marcus Caulfield for anxiety. Marcus was patient, professional, and precise. He was also building a case - not for her recovery, but for her removal. When Sloane suffered a postpartum crisis after Eli's birth, Marcus had her committed to Silver Hill, a psychiatric facility in New Canaan. While she was sedated, someone signed consent forms in her name. Her nine-day-old son was placed for adoption through a private agency.
The adoptive mother was Marcus's own wife. Dina Caulfield is a forensic accountant, a divorced mother, and the woman who has raised Eli since he was an infant. She is methodical, precise, and deeply protective. When she notices a stranger watching her son from the school parking lot - watching with hunger, with grief, with the unmistakable intensity of loss - her instincts fire before her logic catches up.
Six words change everything: "I wanted to make sure he's okay."What follows is a collision between two women who should be enemies but who share something no one else can understand - a love for the same child, and a history shaped by the same man. As Sloane and Dina piece together the truth, they uncover a pattern far larger than one forged signature. Marcus Caulfield used his therapy practice to identify, isolate, and exploit vulnerable mothers, manufacturing psychiatric crises to separate them from their newborns and placing the children through a private adoption agency.
Seven women. Nine children. Years of institutional betrayal hidden behind a therapist's credentials and a husband's smile. Set in the quiet, manicured suburbs of Connecticut, The Mother at the School Gate is a literary psychological thriller about the lies we build families on, the mothers who refuse to disappear, and the terrible arithmetic of trust - who earns it, who exploits it, and what remains when it is finally, irreversibly broken.
This is not a story about good mothers and bad mothers. This is a story about what happens when motherhood itself is stolen - and what two women will do to get it back.
Every morning, Sloane Wyatt parks her blue Subaru in the third row of Willowbrook Elementary's parking lot, near the oak with the split trunk. She watches a three-year-old boy hold pinecones against the sky. She counts the seventy-two feet between her car and the school entrance. She never crosses them. Eli is her son. He doesn't know she exists. Three years ago, Sloane was a bookstore clerk and single mother seeing a therapist named Dr.
Marcus Caulfield for anxiety. Marcus was patient, professional, and precise. He was also building a case - not for her recovery, but for her removal. When Sloane suffered a postpartum crisis after Eli's birth, Marcus had her committed to Silver Hill, a psychiatric facility in New Canaan. While she was sedated, someone signed consent forms in her name. Her nine-day-old son was placed for adoption through a private agency.
The adoptive mother was Marcus's own wife. Dina Caulfield is a forensic accountant, a divorced mother, and the woman who has raised Eli since he was an infant. She is methodical, precise, and deeply protective. When she notices a stranger watching her son from the school parking lot - watching with hunger, with grief, with the unmistakable intensity of loss - her instincts fire before her logic catches up.
Six words change everything: "I wanted to make sure he's okay."What follows is a collision between two women who should be enemies but who share something no one else can understand - a love for the same child, and a history shaped by the same man. As Sloane and Dina piece together the truth, they uncover a pattern far larger than one forged signature. Marcus Caulfield used his therapy practice to identify, isolate, and exploit vulnerable mothers, manufacturing psychiatric crises to separate them from their newborns and placing the children through a private adoption agency.
Seven women. Nine children. Years of institutional betrayal hidden behind a therapist's credentials and a husband's smile. Set in the quiet, manicured suburbs of Connecticut, The Mother at the School Gate is a literary psychological thriller about the lies we build families on, the mothers who refuse to disappear, and the terrible arithmetic of trust - who earns it, who exploits it, and what remains when it is finally, irreversibly broken.
This is not a story about good mothers and bad mothers. This is a story about what happens when motherhood itself is stolen - and what two women will do to get it back.