
The Billionaire And His Children's Tutor
She was supposed to tutor his children.
Not steal his heart.
After a brutal breakup and one very bad night, Hannah Milton becomes a live-in tutor at the powerful Walton estate-where rules are strict, emotions are buried, and falling in love is absolutely forbidden.
Benjamin Walton is older, untouchable, and completely off-limits. He's built his life on control, but Hannah's wit, warmth, and chaos threaten everything he's worked to protect.
As desire ignites and secrets surface, one woman inside the house is determined to destroy Hannah before love can win.
Because some loves aren't meant to happen...
until they do.
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Chapter 2
The Day a Stranger Hit Me and Ruined My Peace
(Benjamin POV)
I had not gone to the hiking trail to die.
That felt important to clarify-especially in light of what happened next.
I went there because silence is expensive, and it is the one thing money cannot buy. Not when you own an empire, not when your name is printed in financial journals, not when every room you walk into expects something from you.
The trail was the only place that didn't.
No assistants.
No board members.
No questions.
Just trees, wind, and the quiet memory of a woman who used to walk beside me and laugh at nothing.
Chloe loved this place.
She used to say it reminded her that life didn't care how rich you were-it would still go on without you. I never liked that sentiment. Now, years later, I understood it far too well.
I stood near the edge of the cliff, hands in my coat pockets, staring down at the endless stretch below. Not because I wanted to jump.
Because sometimes you need to stand close to something vast to remember how small your problems are supposed to be.
Apparently, this made me look suicidal.
I learned that when someone slammed into me from behind.
Hard.
"What the-"
My balance shifted violently as hands grabbed my coat and yanked with surprising strength. For half a second, I genuinely wondered if this was how I was going to die-not from despair, but from being tackled off a cliff by a stranger with poor timing.
Instinct kicked in.
I turned sharply, reaching out to steady whoever had just decided my personal space no longer mattered.
And that was when I found myself gripping the wrists of a woman who looked at me like I had personally crawled out of her nightmares.
She screamed.
Not a polite scream. Not a startled sound.
A full, soul-deep, you are about to be featured on a crime documentary scream.
"Let go of me!" she yelled, thrashing like a cornered animal.
"I'm not-" I started.
She did not wait for clarification.
She tore herself free, stumbled backward, and grabbed a plank of wood off the ground.
A plank.
At this point, I had several thoughts in rapid succession:
1. This is escalating.
2. I should leave.
3. Why does this keep happening to me?
"Don't come closer!" she warned, eyes wild, tears streaking down her face.
I raised my hands slowly. "You grabbed me first."
This did not help.
"I was trying to stop you!" she cried.
"From what?"
"You were going to jump!"
I blinked. "I was standing."
She swung.
The impact was immediate and deeply unpleasant.
Pain exploded at the side of my head, bright and sharp, and then the world tilted sideways. I remember thinking, This woman is surprisingly strong, and then I was on the ground.
Darkness followed.
---
I woke up to voices.
Police voices.
Which is never ideal.
"What happened, sir?" someone asked.
I opened my eyes slowly, immediately regretting it. The sky fractured above me, blue lights flashing between the trees like I'd wandered into the world's most inconvenient music video.
My head throbbed.
"I was assaulted," I said truthfully.
Across the trail, wrapped in a borrowed jacket and vibrating with panic, stood the woman who had done it.
She was speaking rapidly to another officer, gesturing wildly in my direction.
"He chased me! He tried to-he was going to-"
I stared at her.
She stared back.
And I watched the exact moment realization punched her in the chest.
Her shoulders sagged. Her mouth fell open slightly. Whatever story she'd built in her head collapsed under the weight of facts.
Ah.
She thought I was the threat.
This explained everything.
At the station, the truth came out in pieces-alcohol, heartbreak, fear, poor judgment. She sat across from me, hands shaking, eyes red, shrinking into herself as the weight of what she'd done settled in.
She looked young.
Too young to carry that much guilt.
"I'm so sorry," she said quietly, not meeting my eyes. "I really thought... I wasn't thinking."
No, she hadn't been.
But neither had I, standing at a cliff in a tailored suit like a tragic metaphor.
My lawyer arrived. My assistant, Joe, looked ready to combust. Pressing charges would have been effortless. The system loves efficiency.
I looked at her again.
At the way she was folded inward, remorse written into every line of her body.
"No," I said finally. "I won't press charges."
Her head snapped up. "You won't?"
"It was a misunderstanding," I replied. "A dramatic one. But still."
Relief flooded her face so fast it nearly knocked her over.
She whispered thank you about three times.
I left with a bandage on my head and a story I would absolutely not be telling at board meetings.
I assumed that would be the end of it.
I was wrong.
---
A week later, I reviewed a file Joe placed on my desk between meetings.
"In-house tutor," he said. "Excellent academic record. Strong recommendation."
I skimmed it without much interest.
Then I saw the name.
Hannah Milton.
I froze.
"That's not funny," I said flatly.
Joe frowned. "What isn't?"
"The universe," I replied.
He leaned over my shoulder. "Do you know her?"
"Yes," I said. "She hit me."
Joe paused. "I'm sorry?"
"She thought I was suicidal and/or a criminal," I clarified. "Used a plank."
Joe stared at me for a long moment. Then-unhelpfully-he smiled.
"That's one way to meet," he said.
I closed the file.
"I'm not hiring her."
Joe lifted an eyebrow. "Because she assaulted you?"
"Because she drinks, panics, and solves problems with wood."
"Sir," he said carefully, "the interview is tomorrow."
I sighed.
"Fine," I muttered. "I'll meet her. And then I won't hire her."
It was a solid plan.
It failed spectacularly.
---
Because the woman who walked into my garden the next morning-limping, pale, and painfully determined-was not the reckless menace I had imagined.
She was human.
And, as I would soon learn, very inconvenient.
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9.6
After getting drunk at a wedding party, Maya had spent a night with a man. She then found herself pregnant after that. She wanted to keep the child, but the man had other plans. She tried to run away but was caught. "If you want to keep the child, marry me. Well divorce after two years, and meanwhile, don't touch me-not even holding hands," the man said, backing her into a corner. She found the man utterly shameless.
"Holding hands? Dream on."
After the marriage, the man said, "I know you are scared. Let's sleep together tonight."
"I'm not scared."
"I saw you in a dream and heard you say you're scared and want to sleep with me."
"Have you no shame, Charles Darwin?"
"Shame? What is shame?"

7.2
Five years ago, I, Claire Parker, ran away for love with Daniel Carter, the broke boy everyone looked down on. But on the very day we were supposed to leave together, he abandoned me.
Overnight, I became the laughingstock of the entire city and was forced into a marriage alliance with a terminally ill man, Ryan Cooper.
Five years later, my husband died, the marriage arrangement fell apart, and the Cooper family threw me out without a shred of mercy.
Meanwhile, Daniel, the man everyone once sneered at, returned home in glory and became the hottest rising name in the business world.
And somehow, he ended up becoming my boss.
I wanted nothing to do with him, yet he kept closing in on me, cornering me with sarcasm sharp enough to draw blood.
Then one day, Daniel caught me on a date with another man.
His eyes reddened instantly as he pinned me against the wall. "Claire... are you abandoning me again?"

7.6
To pay for her father's life support, Haleigh sold herself into a marriage with Fabian Blackburn, a ruthless billionaire in a deep coma.
But on her wedding day, she caught her boyfriend cheating with her stepsister, laughing about how they would steal the inheritance the second Fabian stopped breathing. Cornered and desperate, Haleigh secretly underwent IVF using her comatose husband's frozen sperm to secure the family trust.
Weeks later, a miracle happened. Fabian woke up.
But instead of gratitude, he treated her like trash. He threw annulment papers at her face, completely disgusted by the arranged marriage.
"If you try any dirty tricks to get pregnant, I will personally drag you to a clinic and have that bastard scraped out of you."
Terrified, Haleigh hid her positive pregnancy test and desperately tried to hack her way to enough cash to escape. But while using his computer, she accidentally opened a highly classified folder.
Inside was a medical file and a photo of a severely disabled girl who looked exactly like Fabian.
Before she could process it, Fabian walked in. Seeing the screen, his cold mask shattered into pure, unhinged madness. He lunged across the room, lifting her off the floor by her throat, completely ignoring her desperate gasps for air.
"Lock her in the basement," he roared to his guards. "No food. No water."
Curled on the freezing concrete, clutching her newly pregnant belly, Haleigh didn't understand what she had just seen that turned him into a murderous monster.
But she knew one thing: if she didn't escape this terrifying estate, both she and his unborn heir would die in the dark.

7.1
They ruined her face. Stole her child. Now she's back-and nothing will stop her.
Five years ago, Raina Carrington lost everything: her beauty, her family, and her newborn baby.
Now she's returned-unrecognizable, unbreakable, and with one goal in mind: to find her son and make them pay. But revenge is never simple, especially when it draws the attention of Leif Vexley-the most powerful and dangerous man in the city-who just might hold the key to her child's past.
Yet she's not the victim anymore.
She's the storm-and she's ready to strike.

8.9
Aubree Hamilton was the top-tier executive assistant to Wall Street's most ruthless titan, Beck Franco. A month ago, she made a catastrophic mistake and spent the night in his bed.
Thinking she had erased the mistake with a morning-after pill, she panicked upon his return and lied about being engaged to push him away.
But Beck, a man who despised disloyalty above all else, immediately suspended her and ordered her escorted out of the building. Her nightmare only escalated when her toxic ex-boyfriend attacked her on the street, tearing her purse open and exposing the empty morning-after pill box to the public—and to Beck, who was watching from his penthouse. After having his security rescue her, Beck trapped her in his car, ruthlessly tearing apart her fake engagement. Later in her apartment, the suffocating tension between them almost ignited into a kiss, but a violent wave of nausea suddenly hit Aubree.
She shoved him away with all her strength and violently threw up in the bathroom.
Beck took it as the ultimate physical disgust. He walked out, deeply humiliated and dangerously obsessed, unleashing his resources to investigate her every move.
Left alone and trembling, Aubree finally checked the crushed white box. The pill she took had expired a month ago.
Staring at the two bright pink lines on the pregnancy test, she made a desperate vow: Beck Franco could never know she was carrying his child, and she had to disappear before he found out.

8.6
I was on my knees in the Ohio dirt, frantically scooping wet coffee grounds back into a torn trash bag while my foster mother screamed that I was a useless waste of space.
Then, ten black Escalades rolled into our rotting trailer park like a funeral procession, and a woman in silk fell to the mud, sobbing that she had finally found her "Elara."
I was whisked away to a mansion that looked like a castle, but the nightmare didn't end with a warm bed and sterilized air.
My brother Harlen looked at me with pure disgust, and when he slapped a chicken leg out of my hand at our first dinner, I instinctively dove under the table to eat it off the rug, begging for mercy through my tears.
My billionaire father, Arthur, watched in silent agony as I tried to wash my own rags in a gold-plated sink at dawn, terrified that I would be starved if I didn't "earn my keep."
He promised me a thousand silk dresses and ordered the trailer park bulldozed to the ground, but I still felt like a prey animal caught by very large, very sad predators.
The trauma wasn't a smudge I could wash off; it was a map of cigarette burns and bruises that I was desperate to hide from the family that had spent millions searching for me.
Just as I thought I might be safe, a black helicopter banked over the lawn, carrying a medical team and a cold order from my oldest brother, the "Shark" of New York.
"No one is ever taking you away," my father growled, shielding me from the men in white coats.
But as the rotors shook the windows, I realized that being found was only the beginning of a different kind of war within the Bridges empire.