
The Billionaire Who Loved Me in Secrets
Chapter 2
The café felt different after that night.
Not quieter—no, it was still filled with the familiar sounds of clinking cups, murmured conversations, and the hum of the espresso machine—but heavier. As though the walls themselves had learned the truth and were now holding their breath.
Alexander Blackwood.
The name echoed in my mind every time I wiped a table or poured a cup of coffee. I tried saying it silently, letting it roll around my thoughts, hoping it would feel less unreal if I repeated it enough times. It didn’t. It only made my chest tighten.
A billionaire.
The word felt obscene when attached to the man I knew—the man who stared out windows like he was searching for escape, the man who drank his coffee black and listened as if words mattered more than money. The billboard image and the man who sat across from me didn’t belong in the same world, yet somehow, impossibly, they were the same person.
He didn’t come the next day.
Or the day after that.
I told myself it was better this way. That secrets had a way of swallowing people whole, and I was lucky to have discovered his before it swallowed me too. I told myself that whatever connection we had was fragile, built on half-truths and silence, and it was best left unfinished.
Still, I found myself glancing at the door more often than I should have.
On the fourth evening, just as I was about to close, he appeared.
He looked different—sharper somehow. His suit was darker, his posture more controlled, as though he had pulled every piece of armor back into place. The softness I had grown used to seeing in his eyes was gone, replaced by something guarded and cautious.
I didn’t greet him.
He stood there for a moment, uncertainty flickering across his face, then approached the counter.
“Ava,” he said quietly.
I kept my hands busy, pretending to arrange cups that didn’t need arranging. “What can I get you?”
“Honesty,” he replied.
My fingers stilled.
“That’s expensive,” I said without looking up. “You should be used to paying for it.”
He flinched, and for a fleeting second, guilt pricked at me. But I pushed it aside. He had lied—maybe not with words, but with omission—and omissions could wound just as deeply.
“I never meant to deceive you,” he said. “I just… wanted one place where my name didn’t matter.”
I laughed softly, though there was no humor in it. “And I was supposed to be what? A refuge? A distraction?”
“No,” he said quickly. “You were never that.”
“Then what was I?”
He hesitated.
The silence stretched between us, thick with things unsaid.
“You were real,” he finally said. “And that terrified me.”
I looked up then, really looked at him, and saw the tension in his jaw, the faint lines at the corner of his eyes that spoke of sleepless nights. For the first time since the billboard, I saw the man again—not the billionaire.
“You should’ve told me,” I said softly.
“I wanted to,” he admitted. “Every time. But the moment I did, everything would change.”
“And now?” I asked.
His gaze held mine, unwavering. “Now it already has.”
He stayed until closing.
We didn’t talk much after that—just quiet, careful conversation, like two people navigating fragile ground. When I locked the doors and turned the sign to Closed, he didn’t leave.
“Walk with me,” he said.
It wasn’t a question.
The night air was cool, the streets glowing under soft streetlights. We walked side by side, not touching, though the space between us felt charged.
“I can’t offer you a normal life,” he said suddenly. “I won’t pretend I can.”
“I never asked for one,” I replied. “I asked for truth.”
He nodded. “And if I give you that truth, you may decide to walk away.”
I stopped walking.
“So this is a test?” I asked. “See how much I can handle?”
“No,” he said, stopping too. “It’s a choice. Yours.”
He told me then—about the empire he inherited, the expectations stitched into his bloodline, the way every relationship he’d ever had was measured for profit and perception. He spoke of boardrooms colder than winter and a family that saw love as a liability.
“I live under a microscope,” he said quietly. “One wrong move, one scandal, and everything crumbles.”
“And I’m the scandal,” I said.
His head snapped toward me. “No. You’re the risk I want to take.”
Those words should have frightened me.
Instead, they made my heart ache.
Over the following weeks, our relationship changed—not in feeling, but in form. We stopped meeting at the café. Instead, he arranged quiet dinners in hidden restaurants, late-night drives where the city lights blurred into anonymity. Sometimes, we didn’t go anywhere at all—we just sat in his car, talking, laughing softly like the world couldn’t touch us there.
But the shadows followed us.
He never held my hand in public. Never said my name too loudly. When his phone rang, he always stepped away. And sometimes—too often—I caught glimpses of the world he belonged to in headlines, photographs, and whispered rumors.
One evening, I saw her.
She was beautiful in the way magazines adored—tall, elegant, polished to perfection. She stood beside him in a photograph splashed across a news site, her hand resting possessively on his arm.
SERENA VALE AND ALEXANDER BLACKWOOD SPOTTED AT CHARITY GALA
My chest tightened as I stared at the image.
When I confronted him, his face darkened with frustration. “It was a business appearance. Nothing more.”
“But you let them believe it,” I said.
“I have to,” he replied. “Sometimes, perception is survival.”
The words cut deeper than I expected.
That night, for the first time, I wondered if love hidden in secrets could survive the weight of the spotlight. I wondered how long I could remain invisible without losing myself entirely.
Yet when he pulled me into his arms later, resting his forehead against mine, his voice was barely a whisper.
“You are the only place I am free,” he said.
And despite everything—the fear, the doubt, the growing ache of being unseen—I stayed.
Because even in secrecy, even beneath the weight of his world, his love felt real.
And I was already too deep to pretend otherwise.
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