
The Billionaire's Secret Baby
Chapter 2
The morning light filtering through my apartment's thin curtains felt like needles against my eyes as I stared at the crumpled check on my nightstand. One million dollars. The number seemed obscene, printed in elegant script on cream-colored paper that probably cost more than my monthly rent.
I grabbed the check with trembling fingers, my stomach churning as I read the memo line: "For services rendered."
Services rendered. Like I was some kind of...
The rage that had been simmering since Adrian King walked out of that hotel room six weeks ago finally boiled over. I tore the check in half, then in half again, the expensive paper making a satisfying ripping sound as I shredded it into tiny pieces.
"Arrogant bastard," I whispered, throwing the fragments into the trash can beside my bed. They fluttered down like confetti, mocking me with their destroyed worth.
But even as I watched the pieces settle among my coffee grounds and takeout containers, I couldn't shake the memory of that night. The way his hands had felt against my skin, desperate and reverent. The broken way he'd whispered my name like a prayer. The vulnerability in his eyes when the drug finally wore off and he realized what had happened between us.
I squeezed my eyes shut, trying to banish the images. It didn't matter. He'd made it clear what he thought of me, what that night had meant to him. Nothing. Less than nothing.
My phone buzzed on the nightstand, and I grabbed it, hoping for a distraction. A text from Chloe: "Coffee later? You've been MIA for weeks."
I started to type a response, then stopped. How could I explain that I'd been avoiding everyone because I couldn't stop thinking about a man who'd treated me like a transaction? That every time I closed my eyes, I felt his mouth on mine, his hands threading through my hair?
"Can't today. Working double shifts," I typed back, which wasn't entirely a lie. I had picked up extra hours at the diner to avoid the empty silence of my apartment.
The weeks that followed blurred together in a haze of grease-stained aprons and aching feet. I threw myself into work, taking every shift I could get, telling myself that exhaustion was better than the alternative—remembering. But no matter how tired I was, sleep brought dreams of dark eyes and gentle hands, of whispered confessions in the pre-dawn darkness.
It was a Tuesday morning when everything changed. I'd been feeling off for days—nauseous, dizzy, my breasts tender in a way that made wearing a bra uncomfortable. I'd chalked it up to stress and too much coffee, but when I missed my period for the second time, a cold dread settled in my stomach.
The pregnancy test sat on the bathroom counter like an accusation, its pink packaging garish under the fluorescent light. My hands shook as I read the instructions, though I'd already memorized them during my panicked trip to the drugstore.
Three minutes. That's all it would take to confirm what my body was already telling me.
I sat on the edge of my bathtub, staring at the white plastic stick, willing it to stay blank. The seconds ticked by with agonizing slowness, each one stretching into eternity.
When the first pink line appeared, my heart stopped. When the second one followed, darker and more definitive than the first, the world tilted on its axis.
Positive.
I was pregnant with Adrian King's baby.
The test slipped from my numb fingers, clattering onto the cracked linoleum floor. I stared at it, willing the lines to disappear, to be a mistake, a cruel joke played by a universe that had already taken so much from me.
But the lines remained, bold and unmistakable.
"Oh God," I whispered, my voice barely audible in the small space. "Oh God, oh God, oh God."
My mind raced through the implications. A baby. Adrian King's baby. The heir to a tech empire growing inside me, the product of one night that was supposed to mean nothing.
I thought of his cold dismissal, the check he'd left like payment for services rendered. What would he do when he found out? Would he try to buy me off again? Threaten me? Or worse—would he try to take the baby away from me?
The business card. I remembered finding it in his jacket pocket when I'd helped him get dressed that morning, his movements still sluggish from whatever drug had been slipped into his drink. I'd kept it, though I couldn't say why. Maybe as proof that it had really happened, that I hadn't imagined the whole surreal night.
I stumbled to my bedroom, pulling open the drawer where I'd hidden the card beneath a stack of old photographs. There it was, elegant black lettering on pristine white cardstock: "Adrian King, CEO, King Technologies."
My laptop took forever to boot up, the ancient machine wheezing to life like an old car. When the browser finally loaded, I typed his name into the search bar with trembling fingers.
The results were overwhelming. Hundreds of articles, photos, interviews. Adrian King, 28, heir to the King tech fortune. Net worth: $3.2 billion. Known for his ruthless business tactics and ice-cold demeanor. Currently engaged to Victoria Davenport, daughter of the Davenport banking dynasty.
Engaged.
The word hit me like a physical blow. Of course he was engaged. Men like Adrian King didn't stay single—they made strategic alliances, merged empires through marriage. I was nothing but a footnote in his perfectly orchestrated life.
I scrolled through image after image of him in expensive suits, shaking hands with world leaders, accepting awards. In every photo, his expression was the same—controlled, distant, untouchable. This was the real Adrian King, not the vulnerable man who'd clung to me in that hotel room.
A knock at my door made me jump, slamming the laptop shut. I wasn't expecting anyone, and the thought of facing another human being right now seemed impossible.
The knocking continued, patient but insistent. I dragged myself to the door, checking the peephole. A man in an expensive suit stood in the hallway, holding a leather briefcase. He looked like a lawyer—all sharp angles and predatory confidence.
"Miss Rossi?" he called through the door. "My name is Harrison. I represent Mr. King. I believe we need to discuss your recent... situation."
My blood turned to ice. Somehow, he knew. Adrian King knew about the pregnancy, and he'd sent his attack dog to deal with it.
I opened the door just wide enough to see his face—thin, aristocratic, with cold gray eyes that reminded me uncomfortably of a shark.
"I'm not interested in whatever you're selling," I said, starting to close the door.
He placed his foot in the gap, his smile never wavering. "I think you'll want to hear what I have to say, Miss Rossi. It concerns your future—and your child's."
The casual way he said it, like my pregnancy was just another business transaction to be handled, made my stomach turn. But I stepped back, letting him enter my small apartment. He looked around with barely concealed distaste, taking in the secondhand furniture and peeling paint.
"Mr. King is prepared to be very generous," Harrison said, setting his briefcase on my coffee table and opening it with practiced efficiency. Inside, nestled in black velvet, was another check. This one had more zeros than I could process.
One million dollars.
"All you have to do is sign these papers," he continued, pulling out a thick contract. "The procedure will be scheduled at the finest private clinic. Everything will be handled discreetly, and you'll never have to worry about money again."
Procedure. He couldn't even say the word abortion.
I stared at the check, at the contract, at this man who spoke about ending my pregnancy like it was a minor inconvenience to be swept away. The rage that had been building since I saw those two pink lines finally exploded.
"Get out," I said, my voice low and dangerous.
Harrison blinked, clearly not expecting resistance. "Miss Rossi, I don't think you understand the magnitude of Mr. King's offer—"
"I understand perfectly." I grabbed the check, tearing it in half just as I had the first one. The sound was even more satisfying this time. "Tell your boss that my child isn't for sale!"
I tore the check again and again, the pieces raining down on Harrison's shocked face. His composure finally cracked, his mouth falling open as I destroyed what most people would consider a fortune.
"You're making a mistake," he said, hastily shoving the contract back into his briefcase. "Mr. King won't be pleased."
"I don't give a damn what Mr. King is pleased about," I snarled, grabbing him by the arm and hauling him toward the door. "And if he sends another one of his lackeys to my home, I'll call the police."
I shoved him into the hallway and slammed the door, turning the deadbolt with shaking hands. Through the thin walls, I could hear him muttering as he walked away, probably already calling his boss to report his failure.
I slumped against the door, my legs finally giving out as the adrenaline faded. The torn pieces of the check lay scattered across my floor like snow, and I stared at them through tears I hadn't realized I was crying.
Adrian King thought he could buy his way out of this, just like he'd tried to buy his way out of our night together. But he was wrong. This baby—our baby—was mine to protect.
And I would protect it from him and his world, no matter what it cost me.
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