
The Billionaire Who Forgot Our Twins
Clara Bennett built her life around two promises-protect her twins and never depend on anyone.
For five years, she has raised Liam and Isla alone, keeping the truth about their father buried in the past... a past that began with a single night she barely remembers.
But everything changes when billionaire CEO Ethan Caldwell suddenly walks back into her life.
Cold, powerful, and dangerously perceptive, Ethan offers Clara an arrangement she cannot refuse-one that forces them to live under the same roof.
What Ethan doesn't know is that the twins who instantly capture his attention might be more connected to him than he realizes.
As sparks ignite and tensions rise, secrets begin to surface. A ruthless corporate enemy is watching. And the truth about that forgotten night is closer to being exposed.
When the truth finally comes out, Ethan will have to face the one thing he never expected...
The family he never knew he had.
And Clara must decide whether she can trust the man who once walked out of her life without even remembering.
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Chapter 1
The morning sun had barely crested the skyline when Clara Bennett adjusted the crisp folds of her blazer, standing by the floor-to-ceiling window of her small, temporary office in Sydney's central business district. Outside, the city stretched endlessly-a river of cars, trams, and people chasing opportunity. She should have felt proud. After five long years of financial ruin, her fledgling company was slowly clawing its way back. But pride was a luxury she couldn't afford this morning.
Her thoughts weren't on profit margins, mergers, or marketing strategies. They were on the two pairs of little feet pattering across the apartment upstairs. Her twins. Her world. Her secret.
"Liam, stop drawing on the wall!" she called without turning, her voice calm but firm.
A muffled giggle echoed from the other room.
She rubbed her temple, letting out a soft sigh. Raising five-year-old twins alone had a rhythm all its own. Liam, her quiet, observant boy, already displayed uncanny intelligence and a seriousness that reminded her disturbingly of the man who had changed her life forever. Isla, her mischievous little girl, was her mirror: fiery, protective, and unapologetically chaotic.
Clara reminded herself of the rules. Keep them safe. Keep them hidden. Keep them away from the one man who, without knowing it, had tied their fates to his own decades before.
Because today... everything was about to change.
The Call
The phone on her desk buzzed insistently, dragging her back to reality. She picked it up with professional calm.
"Hello?"
A deep, controlled voice, smooth but edged with authority, came through the line.
"Clara Bennett?"
She straightened. The voice was familiar-oddly familiar-and yet she shook her head, insisting on professionalism.
"Yes. Who is this?"
"I'm Ethan Walker," he said. The name made her stomach clench. Ethan Walker-the billionaire, the man she had once met on a night she could barely remember, a night that had left her with the heaviest secret she had ever carried. "I'd like to meet. Today."
Her pulse quickened, but her expression remained neutral. "And what exactly would a billionaire want with me?"
"A business proposal," he said, curt. But there was something in his tone-something commanding, possessive, a trace of interest. The kind that made you listen even if you had every reason to walk away.
She pinched the bridge of her nose, trying to stop her mind from racing. This was dangerous. Dangerous for her. Dangerous for her twins. Dangerous for the fragile life she had built in the shadows.
"I'll meet," she said finally. "But only in my office."
A pause. Then, "Of course."
The Arrival
By mid-morning, Ethan Walker arrived in his trademark black Mercedes, descending with the precision of a man used to commanding the world. He was even taller than she remembered, with sharp features, piercing eyes, and the calm, overwhelming aura of someone used to being obeyed.
He didn't smile. He didn't greet. He simply looked around the office, then at her.
"You're Clara Bennett," he said, voice low, almost measuring.
"Yes," she replied, keeping her tone polite but firm. "And you are Mr. Walker."
He nodded. Then his gaze softened-just slightly. Something flickered in his expression as though he sensed a connection, though he could not place it.
"Do you know why I'm here?"
She raised an eyebrow. "You just said it was a business proposal."
"Yes," he said, with an edge that made her spine stiffen. "But it's more than that."
Her heart skipped a beat-not out of love, not out of longing, but instinct. Something about him... the way he spoke, the way he carried himself, suggested he had underestimated how much control he could wield over her. And he had, once, without even realizing it.
The Contract
The meeting was tense. Ethan presented documents, terms, numbers-but beneath the corporate language was a weight she could not ignore.
"You need a partner," he said flatly. "I need a wife."
Clara blinked, processing.
"You... need a wife?"
"Yes," he replied, completely serious. "A public spouse. A partner in appearance, at least, for one year. After that, we negotiate the terms. You get what you want, I get what I want. Everyone wins."
Her mind reeled. A contract marriage. That had been a trope in the stories she had read, but she had never imagined living it. Especially not with him.
"I see," she said, keeping her voice calm. "And what exactly do you get from me?"
"Compliance," he said. "Respect. Presence at all required events. Discretion. And..." His eyes locked onto hers, sharp as a blade, "...nothing else. You do your work. I do mine. Simple."
Her pulse was hammering. The irony was bitter: he wanted a wife publicly, but she already had two children he didn't know existed. The children he had fathered on a night he didn't remember.
She swallowed. "And if I refuse?"
He leaned back, calm, but his tone suggested no tolerance for defiance.
"You'd be walking away from the very chance to rebuild what you've lost."
The Twins' Subtle Interference
Back at home, the twins were playing quietly. Liam built a tower of blocks with perfect symmetry. Isla knocked it down gleefully.
"You're just like your dad," Liam murmured.
Isla scowled. "Don't say that!"
Clara's heart skipped. She had warned them not to speak of him, not even in jest. But she couldn't scold them now-they didn't understand.
She took a deep breath, remembering the stakes. The twins' innocence had to be protected. No one could ever know.
The Decision
By late afternoon, Clara returned to her office with the contract in hand. Ethan was still there, standing, eyes scanning the skyline of Sydney Harbour.
"You'll sign?" he asked, calm, controlled, dominant.
She paused, considering.
One year. One year to secure her empire, protect her twins, and-if necessary-keep him at bay.
She thought of the twins upstairs, of the nights she had cried silently over what she had been forced to endure, of the legacy that had been stolen from her.
Her voice was steady. "I'll sign."
He smiled-just a fraction-and for a moment, something unspoken passed between them. Tension, recognition, and the faintest trace of curiosity.
Neither of them knew it yet, but this contract was more than a legal agreement. It was a collision of past sins, hidden truths, and two lives forever intertwined.
The First Hint of Danger
As Clara placed her signature on the contract, a shadow flickered outside the glass window.
In the background, unnoticed, someone was watching. A figure older, calculating, calm-the kind of presence that had orchestrated every misstep leading to this moment.
The grandfather. His fingers tapped lightly on a cane, a smile playing at the corner of his lips. Everything was proceeding exactly as he had planned.
And Clara... and Ethan... had no idea how tangled their lives would become.
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7.5
To save my dying father, I made a deal with the billionaire Christopher Kirkland. I became his secret, a bird in a gilded cage he paraded around when it suited him.
But I was just a pawn in his twisted game to win back his ex-girlfriend.
He proved it when he publicly outbid me for my own mother's heirloom necklace, only to gift it to her right in front of me.
Then he threw me out of the penthouse. My few cherished belongings-my books, a photo of my parents-were tossed out.
"Chaney doesn't like clutter," he told me, erasing my entire existence for her.
A text on his phone confirmed the brutal truth.
"Our little game is working perfectly," she'd written. "She's completely fooled."
Years later, after she betrayed him and his empire nearly crumbled, he came back begging. He thought he could buy my forgiveness. He was about to learn that my freedom had no price tag.

7.0
For three years, Breanna gave up her brilliant career as a top-tier perfumer to be the perfect housewife for her billionaire husband, Hartwell.
But when he finally returned from a three-month business trip to Paris, he didn't even glance at the dinner she had carefully prepared. Instead, he threw a divorce agreement on the table.
He gave her thirty days to move out and offered a ridiculously low settlement. When she cried and asked if there was someone else, he looked at her with absolute disgust.
"You used to smell like ambition and possibility. Now you smell like cooking oil and the desperation of a woman who has nothing outside her husband. You're a trap."
He threatened to bury her in legal fees if she didn't sign. Heartbroken and confused, Breanna forced his assistant to reveal what really happened in Paris. The truth was humiliating. Hartwell had been spending all his time with a twenty-six-year-old genius perfumer—a girl who was the exact mirror image of who Breanna used to be before she sacrificed everything for him.
He didn't just want a new woman. He wanted a younger, untainted replacement of her past self.
Wiping away her tears, Breanna's grief instantly hardened into cold, calculated rage. She tore up his insulting settlement and prepared to fight back, completely unaware that her cruel husband was currently hiding in a hotel room, coughing up blood, deliberately playing the villain to force her to survive his impending death.

9.0
I spent five years acting as the perfect, invisible caretaker for my wealthy family, meticulously managing their health and social standing while they treated me like a ghost.
Then, my nightmare became reality when my brother Alon shoved me out of bed, forcing me to apologize to our adopted sister, Fallon, for a jealousy I never felt.
My parents and brother stood over me, their eyes filled with unfiltered disgust, demanding I play the servant to a girl who was actively plotting my social destruction.
They froze my accounts, stripped me of my dignity, and mocked my existence, fully expecting me to crawl back to them in tears like I did in my other, broken life.
I stared at their entitled faces, feeling a cold, sharp clarity wash over me; they were so obsessed with status that they didn't realize they had just handed the keys to their own ruin to a complete amateur.
Why was I still playing the martyr for people who would watch me burn without blinking?
I stood up, walked away from their chaos, and cut the final tie, leaving them to face the ruthless social elite with a liability they couldn't control.

7.6
Bridget caught her fiancé tangled in the sheets with another woman. She left the engagement ring behind and, in a moment of reckless defiance, had a one-night stand with Damond Oneill, the most terrifying billionaire on Wall Street.
But her nightmare was far from over. Her biological father threatened to destroy her mother's company if she didn't crawl back to her cheating ex to secure a business merger.
Worse, she found her mother coughing up bright red blood, secretly hiding a fatal illness. Desperate to save her family, Bridget attended a high-society gala, only for her ex and her legitimate half-sister to slip a powerful drug into her champagne. Trapped on a locked balcony, her body burning and paralyzed, she watched her ex approach to assault and film her.
"Let's see how arrogant you are when the drugs kick in."
She didn't understand why her own blood treated her like disposable trash. Why was she always the pawn while her mother suffered in secret? The absolute despair almost broke her.
Just as he grabbed her dress, a deafening explosion shattered the glass door.
Damond stepped through the ruin, brutally crippled her ex, and claimed her as his own. But when Damond's team traced her mother's secret medical funds to a highly classified Swiss clinic, Bridget realized the real war had just begun.

7.1
Bonnie Galvan woke up to the suffocating scent of lilies, staring at the mirror in the exact same seven-figure wedding dress she had worn seven years ago.
In the doorway stood her so-called best friend Itzel and her secret lover Erwin, desperately urging her to elope.
They warned her that her soon-to-be husband, the billionaire Arlington Townsend, was a crippled monster, and marrying him would ruin her life forever.
In her previous life, she blindly believed their lies and ran away from the altar.
Because of her public betrayal, the ruthless Townsend family completely bankrupted her father's company in retaliation.
Erwin and Itzel swooped in as her saviors, only to steal whatever was left of her family's wealth and power.
When she was finally stripped of her value, Erwin pushed her down an icy mountain slope during a brutal blizzard.
With a shattered ankle, she could only watch as Itzel smirked and Erwin coldly walked away, leaving her to be buried alive under the freezing snow.
As her lungs burned and her heart gave out in the agonizing cold, she was consumed by hatred.
Why did the man who swore to protect her and the friend she trusted with her life plot so meticulously to destroy her?
Opening her eyes again, Bonnie was back in the bridal suite, minutes before the ceremony.
This time, she didn't run.
She walked straight down the aisle, looked the terrifying Arlington Townsend in the eye, and firmly said her vows.
"I do."

7.2
Stepping out of the women's correctional center, Karli took her first breath of freedom in three years.
But the luxury SUV waiting for her didn't bring her home. Instead, her adoptive parents tossed a prenuptial agreement onto her lap.
They demanded she marry a violently unhinged, disfigured man so their company could secure a massive commercial deal.
When she refused, her adoptive mother slapped her hard across the face.
The blow brought back the suffocating nightmare from three years ago—how they had drugged her, framed her for a crime she didn't commit, and sent her to prison just so her stepsister could steal her fiancé.
Now, to break her again, her adoptive father ordered his bodyguards to drag her into the estate's freezing, pitch-black basement.
"You can rot in the dark without food or water until you sign that paper!"
Sitting on the damp cement, bleeding and shivering, a white-hot fury burned away Karli's panic.
They had stolen her youth, her reputation, and her grandfather's inheritance. She would rather die than be their sacrificial lamb again.
She smashed the basement window with a hammer, dragged her bleeding body through the shattered glass, and sprinted blindly into the stormy night.
Under the flickering neon sign of a convenience store, she grabbed the sleeve of a terrifyingly cold stranger.
"Are you single? Marry me right now."
She just needed a legal marriage to escape her family, entirely unaware she had just proposed to the most ruthless billionaire in Chicago.