
The Billionaire's Secret Baby
Chapter 3
The call came at three in the morning.
I jolted awake to the shrill sound of my phone, my heart hammering against my ribs. The glowing screen showed an unknown number, but something about the timing made my blood run cold. Only emergencies came at this hour.
"Miss Rossi?" The voice was crisp, professional, unmistakably expensive. "This is Harrison, Mr. King's attorney. I'm calling to inform you that your... rejection of our generous offer has been noted."
I sat up in bed, my free hand instinctively moving to my still-flat stomach. "It's three in the morning."
"Mr. King doesn't operate on conventional schedules," Harrison replied smoothly. "He wanted me to convey his... surprise at your decision. It's been quite some time since anyone has refused his assistance."
The way he said 'assistance' made my skin crawl. "Good for him. Don't call me again."
"Miss Rossi, I strongly advise you to reconsider—"
I hung up and turned off my phone, but sleep was impossible after that. I spent the rest of the night staring at the ceiling, wondering what kind of man sent his lawyer to harass pregnant women in the middle of the night.
The kind who thought everything had a price, apparently.
Two weeks later, I found myself in the sterile waiting room of St. Mary's Medical Center, clutching my insurance card like a lifeline. The prenatal appointment had been scheduled weeks ago, back when the two pink lines were still a fresh shock. Now, at ten weeks, the reality was starting to sink in.
A baby. I was actually going to have a baby.
The waiting room was crowded with expectant mothers in various stages of pregnancy, some glowing with that mythical pregnancy radiance, others looking as green around the gills as I felt most mornings. I tried to focus on the outdated magazines scattered across the coffee table, but my mind kept wandering to the conversation I'd need to have with my boss about maternity leave, about the second job I'd need to find, about how I was going to afford everything a baby needed.
"Sophia Rossi?"
The nurse's voice cut through my spiraling thoughts. I stood on unsteady legs, following her down a hallway that smelled of disinfectant and hope.
The appointment went smoothly. The doctor, a kind woman in her fifties, confirmed what I already knew—everything looked normal, healthy. The baby was growing right on schedule. She handed me a strip of ultrasound photos, and I stared at the grainy black and white image that somehow contained my entire future.
"Your next appointment should be in four weeks," she said, making notes in my chart. "Any questions?"
I shook my head, still mesmerized by the tiny form on the ultrasound. My baby. Mine.
I was walking toward the elevator, the appointment card clutched in one hand and the ultrasound photos in the other, when I saw him.
Adrian King stood near the information desk, his dark suit impeccable despite the harsh hospital lighting. But it wasn't his presence that made my breath catch—it was the woman beside him. Tall, blonde, elegant in the way that only came with generations of breeding and finishing schools. She wore a cream-colored coat that probably cost more than my rent, and her manicured hand rested possessively on Adrian's arm.
Victoria Davenport. I recognized her from the engagement photos I'd tortured myself with online. The banking heiress who would become Mrs. Adrian King in what the society pages called "the wedding of the century."
I tried to duck behind a pillar, but it was too late. Adrian's head turned, and our eyes met across the crowded lobby. For a moment, the world seemed to stop. His face went completely still, those dark eyes I remembered too well widening slightly as they took in my appearance.
I was wearing a loose sweater that had belonged to my mother, paired with jeans that were already getting tight around the waist. Nothing that screamed pregnancy to a casual observer, but Adrian wasn't a casual observer. He'd seen me naked, had memorized every inch of my body during that one night we'd shared.
His gaze dropped to my midsection, and I saw the exact moment he noticed the subtle roundness that hadn't been there ten weeks ago.
Victoria was saying something to him, her perfectly modulated voice carrying across the space, but Adrian wasn't listening. He was staring at me with an intensity that made my skin burn.
I turned and walked quickly toward the bathroom, my heart pounding so hard I was sure everyone could hear it. The hallway seemed to stretch endlessly, but finally I reached the women's restroom and pushed through the door, gasping as if I'd been holding my breath.
I barely made it to the sink before my hands started shaking. I gripped the porcelain edge, staring at my reflection in the mirror. My face was pale, my eyes too wide, and there was no hiding the slight swell of my belly beneath the sweater.
The door opened behind me, and I knew without turning around who it was. The air in the small space seemed to thicken, charged with the same electricity I remembered from that night in the hotel room.
"Is it mine?"
His voice was low, dangerous, barely controlled. I met his eyes in the mirror, seeing the same man who'd whispered my name in the darkness, but harder now, more predatory.
I turned slowly to face him, my back pressed against the sink. He was standing too close, close enough that I could smell his cologne, could see the tension in his jaw.
"You shouldn't be in here," I said, proud that my voice didn't shake.
"Answer the question, Sophia." He stepped closer, and I had nowhere to go. His eyes were fixed on my stomach, and I could see his hands clenching and unclenching at his sides. "Is. It. Mine?"
The possessive way he said it, like he had some claim on me, on the life growing inside me, made my temper flare.
"It has nothing to do with you," I said, lifting my chin defiantly.
Something flickered in his eyes—surprise, anger, maybe even hurt. But it was gone so quickly I might have imagined it.
"Nothing to do with me?" He laughed, but there was no humor in it. "That's my child you're carrying."
"No," I said firmly, pushing past him toward the door. "It's mine."
I walked away from him, my legs steady despite the trembling in my chest. I didn't look back, but I could feel his eyes on me until I disappeared around the corner.
Let him stand there and process what I'd told him. Let him figure out how to explain to his perfect fiancée why he'd followed a pregnant woman into the bathroom.
This baby was mine to protect, and I'd just made it clear that Adrian King had no power here.
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