
Hiding My Son from My Billionaire Ex-Husband
Chapter 1
The airport terminal buzzed with the familiar chaos of departing flights, but I felt like I was trapped in a bubble of anticipation that made everything else fade into background noise. I smoothed my cream-colored silk dress for the hundredth time, the fabric expensive and carefully chosen for this moment—our long-overdue honeymoon to Paris. Three years. Three years of marriage, and this was supposed to be our fresh start.
I clutched the boarding passes in my manicured hands, the paper slightly damp from my nervous grip. First class tickets to the City of Light, booked months ago when Julian had finally agreed we needed time away together. Away from the Sinclair empire, away from board meetings, away from... her.
My phone screen lit up: 6:47 PM. Julian was thirty-seven minutes late.
Around me, couples moved through the terminal with easy intimacy—hands intertwined, shared laughter, stolen kisses before departure. I watched a woman my age lean into her husband's shoulder as he checked their gate information, and something twisted painfully in my chest. When was the last time Julian and I had looked like that? When was the last time he'd touched me without it feeling like an obligation?
I dialed his number again. Straight to voicemail.
"Julian, it's me. Our flight boards in twenty minutes. Where are you?"
The boarding announcement crackled over the intercom: "Ladies and gentlemen, we are now beginning pre-boarding for Flight 447 to Paris Charles de Gaulle."
My heart hammered against my ribs. I stood, scanning the crowd for Julian's familiar tall frame, his dark hair, his confident stride. Nothing. Just strangers rushing past with their lives, their plans, their functioning relationships.
Then I saw him.
Julian Sinclair burst through the security checkpoint like a man possessed, his usually immaculate appearance disheveled. His tie was loosened, his jacket wrinkled, and there was something wild in his eyes that made my stomach drop. He was running—actually running—toward me, but his phone was pressed to his ear.
Relief flooded through me so intensely I nearly stumbled. He came. He actually came.
"Julian!" I called out, waving our boarding passes.
He reached me just as the gate agent announced first-class boarding, but he didn't look at me. His face was pale, almost gray, and his free hand raked through his hair in the way it did when he was deeply agitated.
"What?" he barked into the phone. "How bad is it?"
I touched his arm gently. "Julian, we need to board. They're calling—"
He held up a finger, silencing me without even glancing my way. The gesture was so dismissive, so automatic, that heat flushed my cheeks. Three years of marriage, and I was still being shushed like an interrupting child.
"I'm coming right now," he said into the phone, his voice thick with an emotion I rarely heard from him. Panic. "Don't move. Don't do anything until I get there."
The color drained from his face completely as he listened to whoever was on the other end. His jaw clenched, and I saw his Adam's apple bob as he swallowed hard.
"Julian?" My voice came out smaller than I intended. "What's happening?"
He finally looked at me, but it was like he was seeing through me, past me, to something far more important. "Emergency. I have to go."
"Go? Go where? Our flight—"
"Sophia's been in an accident." The words hit me like a physical blow. "A car accident. She's... she's hurt badly."
Sophia. Of course it was Sophia.
The boarding announcement continued cheerfully in the background: "We are now boarding all first-class passengers for Flight 447 to Paris."
"Julian, we can call the hospital from Paris. We can—"
"No." His voice was sharp, final. "I have to be there. She needs me."
The words hung between us like a blade. She needs me. Not we can help from Paris, not we'll send flowers and call when we land. She needs me, and apparently, that trumped everything else. Including his wife. Including our marriage. Including this one chance we'd planned to rebuild what we'd lost.
"What about us?" The question slipped out before I could stop it, small and pathetic.
Julian was already backing away, his phone pressed to his ear again. "Handle the luggage. Cancel the reservations. I'll... we'll reschedule."
And then he was gone, jogging toward the exit without a backward glance, leaving me standing at the gate with two boarding passes and the crushing weight of my own foolishness.
The gate agent looked at me expectantly. "Ma'am? Are you boarding?"
I stared at the boarding passes in my trembling hands. Mr. and Mrs. Sinclair. What a joke.
"No," I whispered. "No, I'm not boarding."
I sank into one of the uncomfortable airport chairs, our carry-on bags scattered around me like the remnants of a dream. Other passengers filed past, chattering excitedly about their romantic getaway to Paris. I pulled out my phone and called Julian again.
Voicemail.
I called again an hour later.
Voicemail.
The airport gradually emptied as the evening flights departed. I sat in the increasingly quiet terminal, watching janitors push their carts past me, watching late-night travelers hurry to their gates. My silk dress was wrinkled now, my carefully styled hair falling flat.
Two hours. I'd been sitting here for two hours.
Then I saw him approaching—a man with a camera and a predatory smile that made my skin crawl. I recognized him immediately: Marcus Webb, one of the more aggressive paparazzi photographers who made a living stalking wealthy families like the Sinclairs.
"Mrs. Sinclair," he said, sliding into the seat across from me uninvited. "Rough night?"
I started to stand, but he held up a tablet, the screen glowing with an image that made my blood freeze.
Julian. Carrying Sophia in his arms like a bride, her head nestled against his chest, his face etched with tender concern. The hospital entrance was clearly visible behind them, but Sophia looked far from critically injured. In fact, she looked almost... peaceful. Content, even.
The timestamp showed it was taken thirty minutes ago.
"Thought you might want to see this before it hits the morning papers," Marcus said with mock sympathy. "Quite the romantic rescue, wouldn't you say?"
My hands shook as I stared at the photo. This was what Julian had run to. This was what had been more important than our marriage, our honeymoon, our last desperate attempt to save what we'd built.
Sophia Sterling, wrapped in my husband's arms like she belonged there.
Like she'd always belonged there.
And I was here, alone in an airport terminal, holding boarding passes to a honeymoon that would never happen.
You may also like





