
My Ex-Husband Tried to Claim My Billionaire’s Daughter
Chapter 3
My boots hit the pavement, the sound sharp and frantic, but I wasn't fast enough. Marcus was.
Before Damon’s fingers could graze the sleeve of Willa’s coat, a hand the size of a catcher’s mitt clamped onto his shoulder. Marcus didn't shove him; he simply immobilized him. It was the difference between a brawler and a professional—absolute, terrifying control.
Damon yelped, his spine twisting as he was forced to turn away from my daughter.
"Daddy!" Willa cried out, running past the frozen tableau not to Damon, but to the man stepping out of the Maybach behind me.
Giovanni didn't run. He moved with the fluid, inevitable force of a glacier calving into the sea. He scooped Willa up with one arm, pressing her face into the crook of his cashmere coat, shielding her eyes from the man who had once destroyed her mother. Then, he turned his gaze on Damon.
The temperature on the street seemed to drop ten degrees.
"Let him go, Marcus," Giovanni said. His voice wasn't loud, but it carried a frequency that made the hair on my arms stand up. It was the voice of a man who owned the pavement we stood on.
Marcus released his grip. Damon stumbled back, straightening his lapels with trembling hands. He looked from the towering security guard to Giovanni, and finally to me. The fear in his eyes was quickly replaced by a sneering, desperate bravado.
"You can't keep her from me," Damon spat, pointing a shaking finger at the bundle in Giovanni's arms. "I can do math, Madeleine. The divorce, the birth date—she’s mine. I have rights."
I stepped between them, my chest heaving. "You have nothing, Damon. You have delusions and a failing company. Go back to your thief of a wife."
"She's my blood!" Damon shouted, drawing stares from other parents. "I’ll get a court order! I’ll drag you through every tabloid in this city until I get what’s mine!"
Giovanni handed Willa to me, his movements gentle, before stepping into Damon’s personal space. He didn't shout. He leaned down, his voice a low, intimate rumble that only we could hear.
"Listen closely, Mr. Foster," Giovanni said, his tone devoid of emotion. "If you ever approach my daughter again—if you so much as look at a photograph of her—I will not sue you. I will dismantle your life brick by brick until you are nothing but a memory no one wants to recall."
Damon paled, the blood draining from his face, but his ego was a stubborn thing. He scrambled into his sedan and peeled away, tires screeching a chaotic retreat.
***
Two days later, the threat materialized in the form of a heavy envelope delivered by a process server.
I stood in the foyer of our penthouse, the marble cold beneath my feet. I ripped the seal open. The legal jargon swam before my eyes—*Emergency Motion for Paternity Testing*, *Visitation Rights*, *Custodial Interference*.
My breath hitched. The room began to spin. Suddenly, I wasn't the celebrated choreographer "S"; I was twenty-four again, standing in a lawyer’s office while Damon and Mia laughed at my tears. The walls felt like they were closing in. He was going to drag Willa into the mud. He was going to expose us, dissect us, ruin the sanctuary I had built.
"Maddy?"
I hadn't heard Giovanni approach. I was hyperventilating, clutching the papers so hard they tore.
He was there in an instant, his hands warm on my freezing arms. He guided me out to the terrace, into the biting winter air. "Breathe. Look at the skyline. You are here. You are safe."
"He won't stop," I choked out, the panic tasting like copper in my mouth. "He’s going to force a test. The press... Willa..."
"Let him try," Giovanni said, pulling me against his chest. I could feel the steady, powerful thrum of his heart. "I can make this go away. One phone call, and the judge buries the motion. One call, and Damon disappears from the docket."
I buried my face in his shirt, inhaling the scent of sandalwood and security. It was so tempting to let him erase the problem. But looking out at the city lights, I remembered the girl who had run away eight years ago. I couldn't be her anymore.
I pulled back, smoothing the crumpled papers. "No. If you bury it, he’ll just dig somewhere else. He needs to see the truth. He needs to see he has zero claim on her."
Giovanni studied my face, his dark eyes searching for cracks in my resolve. Finding none, he nodded once. "Then we fight. But we fight on my terms."
He kissed my forehead and turned toward his study. "Come with me."
I followed him into the darkened room, illuminated only by the glow of six monitors. He picked up his phone and dialed a number, putting it on speaker.
"Mr. Griffin," a voice answered instantly.
"Initiate Operation Icarus," Giovanni commanded. He sat in his leather chair, watching the screens where stock tickers scrolled in endless streams of red and green.
"Target is Foster Entertainment," he continued, his voice as cold as the grave. "I want a liquidity trap. Buy up their short-term debt. Call in the favors with the advertising sponsors—threaten to pull Griffin Capital from any network that runs his ads."
I watched from the doorway, mesmerized and terrified. This wasn't business; it was warfare.
"Squeeze him," Giovanni murmured, watching a graph on the center screen plummet. "I want him so desperate for cash that he can’t afford a lawyer, let alone a PR team. Break him before he even steps into the courtroom."
He hung up and looked at me, his expression softening only slightly. "He wants a war for a family that isn't his? Fine. I’ll buy the battlefield."
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