

Chapter 1
I'm staring at a document that just erased the last thread of my sanity. I've pinched myself so many times that my skin has turned bright pink.
Yet.I haven't woken up from this nightmare that seems to be my life and reality. Dr.
Miller sits across from me, his hands folded over a tan folder, looking everywhere but at my face. "Can.can you repeat yourself?" I ask the doctor, hoping that I misheard him the first time.
Because this can't be real. This can't be real. "I'm sorry, Miss Emily," he says.
His voice is small, lacking the professional confidence he usually carries. "There was a clerical error in the lab.
A mislabeling during the cryopreservation retrieval." "What.what does that mean?" He adjusts in his seat. "The embryo we implanted. it wasn't created with Julian Thorne's samples.
The sperm used belonged to another donor." I wrap my arms around my middle, feeling the slight curve of my belly through the thin fabric of my floral dress. This child is my anchor.
Since Julian's car spun out on that rainslicked highway a month ago, this pregnancy has been the only thing keeping me from sinking.
The doctors said Julian might never wake up from the coma, and his parents begged me to use the samples he'd frozen before we even got engaged.
They wanted a piece of him to live on. I wanted it more. "No," I say, shaking my head slowly. My voice is so calm it surprises me. "No, that's not right.
We. we used Julian's sample. That's what we agreed on.
That's what I signed for." "Miss Emily" "I went through weeks of treatment," I snap, and the calm in my voice is gone. "Hormones. Injections. Blood tests.
You told me everything was fine.
You told me this would work." "It did work," he says gently. "You are pregnant." Then his voice reduces. "But the biological father is not Julian Thorne." A tear rolls down my cheek before I can stop it, and I angrily swat it away. "That's not my child," I say confidently, as if my confidence can erase the truth. "It is your child," he says. "Genetically, you are the mother." I glare at him for a few seconds and then I laugh.
It's a bitter, humorless sound. "It's not my child with my fiancé. I wanted a baby with the man I love. The man I'm going to marry. I did everything right. I followed every step.
I trusted you." "I understand how difficult this is" "No, you don't!" I yell, banging my shaking hands against the table. "You don't understand what this means." Because Julian might never wake up.
Because this child was supposed to be the only piece of him I'd have left.
Because I built my entire future around this one thing. "I'm sorry." "You're sorry?" I scoff. "You didn't lose my luggage, Doctor. You lost the last living piece of my fiancé.
Julian is in a coma. He might never wake up, and you've filled me withwith what? Some random guy's DNA?" The irony is a jagged pill in my throat.
I spent six weeks pumping myself full of hormones, bruising my thighs with needles. "I want it out," I say calmly. "Terminate the pregnancy. We'll redo the cycle.
I'm not carrying a 'coding error' to term." "Miss Emily. The hospital board is prepared to offer you a settlement of one million dollars," Dr.
Carter continues quickly, his face pale. "Along with a full refund and the best prenatal care money can buy, provided you sign a nondisclosure agreement." I stand up so fast my chair screeches against the linoleum.
One million dollars. They want to pay me off for a stranger's child.
I look at the framed degrees on his wall, the anatomical charts, the little plastic models of life, and I feel a wave of heat wash over my neck.
My skin feels too tight for my body. "One million dollars?" I whisper. Another tear slides down my face and that chilling calm returns.
I am slipping between calm and rage, and I have no way of controlling it. "I.
I don't want your money," I say. "I want this," I point to my belly. "Gone." His expression tightens. "I'm afraid that may not be advisable" "I don't care. Get. Rid. Of.
It." "That would be a mistake." The voice is like a low vibration, commanding and cold. I spin around to see a man standing by the doorframe.
He is tall, broadshouldered, and wearing an expensivelooking charcoal suit. His eyes are a piercing, unforgiving grey, and they are fixed directly on me. Dr.
Carter stands up so fast he nearly trips. "Mr. Wolfe. I didn't realize you were on the premises." "I tend to move quickly when my assets are mishandled, Doctor," the man says.
He steps into the room, and the space suddenly feels half its size. He doesn't look at the doctor; he looks at me, scanning me with a clinical, predatory intensity.
His presence is so intense and intimidating that I almost feel the need to step back. But I don't. I struggle with every bone in my body to maintain my composure. Mr.
Intimidating reaches into his pocket and pulls out a thick, matteblack business card onto the desk. Alistair Wolfe. CEO, Wolfe Industries. My lips part slightly.
This is the man who has effectively automated half the logistics firms in the country.
He is the "Ghost of Wall Street." "I am the biological father of the child you're carrying," Alistair says.
His tone isn't apologetic; it is a statement of fact. "And I have no intention of letting you terminate. Carry the pregnancy to term.
Hand the child over to me the moment it's born, and I will deposit one hundred million dollars into an account of your choosing." I take a step back until my calves hit the guest chair.
I stare at him, my breath hitching. My calm changes to that hot feeling in my chest and I clench my fists. "You're insane." Dr. Carter's eyes widen and Mr.
Intimidating frowns. "What?" "You're insane," I repeat. "My fiancé is lying in the hospital in a coma and you think you can pay me to have your baby and not his?" "Two hundred mi" "I don't care about your money!" I snap. "I want my life back.
I want my fiancé's child." Alistair's expression doesn't soften. If anything, it turns to stone. "Money buys time, Ms. Vance.
And right now, you're out of it." "What does that mean?" He signals to Dr. Carter, who hands me another report from his table. "Your latest screenings came back this morning.
Your uterine lining is... it's significantly thinner than we anticipated.
The hormonal stress of this IVF cycle has caused severe scarring." He pauses, looking at Alistair, then back to me. "If you terminate this pregnancy, the damage will be irreversible.
The likelihood of a successful second implantation is virtually zero.
You would be permanently infertile." My head spins, and I feel like I'm going to pass out. "That.that's not true. You can give me some kind of injection.
You can perform a surgery." "Those aren't feasible options Miss Emily." The dream of a house with a tire swing, of a little boy with Julian's messy blonde hair, it all starts to evaporate like mist.
If I end this, I end everything. I will never be a mother. Not with Julian's child.
Not with any child. "Think about it," Alistair says, his voice dropping to a silken thread. "You keep the child. You fulfill your biological potential.
You get a fortune that ensures you never have to work a day in your life. And then you can have another child with your fiancé.
All I ask is for" He pauses when he sees fresh tears gather in my eyes. Something softens in his expression, but it lasts just one second. "What's mine," he completes.
The dizziness worsens and now I can't breathe. It's too much information. I need to see Julian. I need to touch his hand and tell him I am sorry I've failed him.
As if the universe read my mind, my phone on the table begins to vibrate.
I lunge for it the second I see Julian's mother's name on the screen. "Emily!" she sobs the moment I answer. "Emily, come to the hospital. Now! Julian.he opened his eyes.
He's awake!" I don't say a word to Alistair Wolfe. I don't even look at him. I run. I sprint through the hospital corridors. My heart is a drum, beating out a single word: Julian.
Julian. Julian. I reach the Intensive Care unit, my lungs burning. I slow down as I approach Room 402, my hand trembling as I reach for the handle.
I want to burst in, to throw my arms around him, to tell him that we will figure out the mess with the baby together. But the door is cracked open an inch.
And from inside, I don't hear the beep of monitors or the steady breathing of a recovering patient. I hear a muffled, familiar sob.
Chapter 2
The man I planned to spend my life with is currently stroking my sister's hair like she's the one who's been sleeping in a hospital chair for a month.
I stand in the shadows of the hospital door, my fingers curled in a fist. Julian looks different propped up against those white pillows.
The rugged, athletic fiancé I knew has been replaced by a man who looks brittle. But his eyes are wide and focused on Chloe.
She's leaning in so close that their foreheads touch. "I was coming to see you that night," Julian whispers. "I was in the car because I couldn't wait another day to tell Emily that the wedding was a mistake.
I was rushing to her to call it off, Chloe.
The rain.I just didn't see the truck coming." Chloe lets out a strangled sob, burying her face in the side of his mattress. "You almost died for us," she wails. "I've been so scared, Julian.
Having to watch her play the grieving girlfriend when I'm the one who actually loves you." The air in the hallway turns to ice.
Every sacrifice I've made over the last four weeks comes to my mind. I think of the needles I stuck into my thighs for the IVF.
I think of the crushing guilt I felt, believing he'd crashed that car because he was rushing home to me.
I think of the child growing inside me, the child that belongs to a coldeyed stranger named Alistair Wolfe, all because I wanted to give Julian's parents a piece of their son before he slipped away.
I push the door open and step into the room. The moment the light hits them, Chloe jerks away. Julian looks toward me, his eyes wide and glassy.
He doesn't hold my gaze for a second before his cheeks flush pink and he looks away at the ceiling. Before I can find my voice, a sound comes from behind me.
I turn to see Julian's mother standing there with a cardboard tray of coffees.
Her eyes are rimmed with red and she looks like she hasn't slept in a week. "Emily, dear, you're white as a sheet," she says.
She looks at my stomach with a hopeful, watery smile. "How did the appointment go?
Is our little miracle holding on?" I look at her, the woman who has treated me like a daughter for three years, then at Julian. The coward is still staring at the ceiling.
The truth about Alistair Wolfe's baby sits like a mouthful of ash in my throat. "It didn't work," I say.
My voice is steady, devoid of grief in a way that surprises me. "The IVF failed. There is no baby." The older woman's face seems to collapse.
She reaches for the back of a plastic chair to steady herself. "Oh, Emily. No. Not after everything. I'm so sorry." I watch Chloe out of the corner of my eye.
She's staring at me, her mouth slightly open in a mock expression of shock.
She brings a lace handkerchief to her eyes, dabbing at tears that aren't there. "Oh, Emily, that's devastating," Chloe says. She stands up and moves toward me.
She looks at the mother with a mournful expression before turning that gaze back to me. Her eyes don't look sad. If anything, they're bright. "I know how much you wanted this.
We all did." She stops a foot away from me. "But maybe," Chloe continues, her tone dropping into a whisper, "maybe it's probably for the best, isn't it?
Everything is so complicated right now with Julian's recovery. Now you don't have that burden holding you back.
You can focus on yourself for once." The word burden rings in my ears like a bell. A strange, freezing calm settles over me.
The heat in the room seems to vanish, replaced by a clarity so clear it feels like a veil dropped from my eyes. I think of the hormones I pumped into my body.
I think of the way I sat by Julian's bed, whispering to him about a child I thought would save his family's spirit. The rage I feel is not something I've ever felt before.
It just sits there, a blinding, whitehot stillness that dictates my next move. Before I can even process, my hand goes up with a speed that catches her completely off guard.
The sound of my palm hitting her cheek is loud in the small room.
Chloe's head snaps to the side and stumbles back, a red handprint blooming across her skin. "Emily!" Julian shouts from the bed.
He tries to sit up, his face contorting in pain as his monitors begin to beep a frantic, irregular rhythm. "What the hell are you doing?" I don't answer him.
I grab Chloe by the collar of her silk blouse, dragging her toward the side of the bed. She's screeching, her polished nails clawing at my wrists, but I don't feel a thing.
I shove her toward Julian. "You want to talk about burdens, Chloe?" I ask. "Let's talk about the burden of being a liar.
Let's talk about what you two were doing while I was at the clinic trying to save a legacy that didn't even want to be saved." Julian reaches out, his fingers trembling as he tries to pull my hand away from her collar. "Emily, stop.
You're being hysterical." I look at him then, and the man I thought I loved is gone. In his place is a stranger with a weak chin and a terrified expression.
I let go of Chloe's shirt, but only so I can turn the full force of my attention on him. I raise my hand and bring it down on his face.
The first slap is for the three years I wasted. The second slap is for the guilt I carried, thinking I was the reason he was hurt. The third slap is for the farce.
For the way they let me walk into a hospital and have a stranger's child implanted in me while they were planning their getaway. "We're done," I say. "Don't call me.
If I see either of you again, I'll make sure the rest of the world knows exactly what kind of people you are." I turn and walk out, ignoring the muffled cries and the chaos erupting in the room.
I don't stop until I'm in the empty stairwell three flights down. I lean against the cold concrete wall and finally, the air breaks. I sob until my lungs ache. I am alone.
I am pregnant with a billionaire's child. And I have nothing. An hour later, I'm sitting in the waiting room of a lowcost women's clinic on the other side of town.
I can't keep Alistair Wolfe's child, not when it was conceived under the umbrella of a lie. The doctor is a woman in her sixties with tired eyes.
She looks at my charts, then back at me. "I have to be honest with you. Your records show a history of severe endometriosis and a very thin lining.
This pregnancy is essentially a medical fluke. If we proceed with the termination, the scarring will be permanent.
You'll likely never conceive again." I leave that clinic and go to another. And another.
I spend the entire afternoon driving through the city, hearing the same sentence repeated in different accents and different offices. Permanent infertility.
By the time I pull into the driveway of the Vance estate, the sun is already setting.
I head toward the study to find my father, but I stop when I hear voices coming from the cracked door of the sitting room.
At this point, I should know not to listen to voices from cracked doors. "I don't know about this, Lydia," my father's voice says. "The firm is underwater," a voice replies.
It's Lydia, my stepmother. "And this deal with Silas Reed is the only thing that can save us now. He's been asking about Emily for months.
He won't care about the fact that the engagement fell apart.
He's willing to pay off the primary debt the moment the marriage certificate is signed." "But the rumors about him," my father says weakly. "The way his last wife ended up. and he's nearly twenty years older than her." "He's wealthy, Thomas," Lydia snaps. "After the news we got from the hospital, we know that Emily needs to be handled.
Silas will keep her on a short leash. " I lean against the hallway wall, my stomach churning. Silas Reed. He's a predator who is known for his cruelty.
My own family is selling me to a monster to save a failing business. My phone vibrates in my pocket. I pull it out and read the words on the screen with blurry vision. .
Have you reached a decision, Emily? Alistair Wolfe. I look at the door to the sitting room, where my father and stepmother are negotiating my life like a piece of livestock.
Then I look at the text. I have no husband. I have no family. And if I lose this baby, I have no future. I hit the call button on the unknown number.
It rings once before he picks up. "I didn't expect your call," the voice says. "I'll do it," I say. I stand up straight, my hand resting on my stomach. "I'll carry the child.
I'll give you your heir." There's a brief silence on the other end. "A wise choice, Emily.
I'll have the papers drawn up for the trust." "No," I say, my voice hardening. "I don't want the hundred million.
I want something else." "Name it." I take a deep breath. "You have to marry me, Alistair."
Chapter 3
I've just asked a billionaire to marry me to save myself from a predatory debt collector and a family that views me as a line item.
Silence feels like punishment when you're talking to a man like Alistair Wolfe. And the phone has been silent for what feels like hours now.
I grip the phone so hard that the edge of the case bites into my palm, "Just a marriage of convenience," I say, my voice sounding much firmer than I feel. "I don't want your money.
Once the baby is born, we can file for divorce.
The only thing I ask for is visitation rights so I won't be a ghost in my own child's life." The silence stretches for another five seconds, long enough for me to count the cracks in the hallway floorboards.
I'm about to emphasize that it's just for convenience but I don't get the chance. "Seven in the morning," Alistair says. "The City Clerk's Office.
Bring your birth certificate, your passport, and every piece of identification you own. My lead attorney will be there at six fortyfive with the paperwork.
Don't be late, Emily." The line clicks dead before I can even breathe a sigh of relief. He didn't say yes, but the instructions are good enough.
I lean my head against the cool wallpaper, closing my eyes. This isn't the wedding I spent my girlhood dreaming about.
There are no peonies, no cathedral veils, and certainly no groom who looks at me like I'm his entire world. Instead, I'm trading my freedom for a shield.
It's a fair trade, I suppose. I sleep fitfully, waking every hour to the image of Silas Reed's oily smile and Chloe kissing my fiancé.
When the sun finally starts to bleed through the curtains, I pull myself out of bed, take a short shower, and reach for a simple navy blue wrap dress.
It's professional, modest, and hides the fact that I've lost weight over the last few weeks. I brush my hair until it's a dark, glossy sheet.
A little concealer and a swipe of tinted lip balm hide my weary look. The City Clerk's Office smells like lemon floor wax and old coffee.
It's a drab, municipal building with rows of plastic chairs and the constant, dull drone of a printer somewhere in the back.
A man in a charcoal suit stands near the information desk, clutching a leather briefcase. The quality of his suit tells me he's the billionaire's lawyer. "Ms.
Vance?" he asks when he sees me. He doesn't smile. "I'm Markson, Mr. Wolfe's personal counsel.
We have quite a bit to get through before he arrives." He leads me to a small, private table in the corner and begins spreading out sheets of thick, highbond paper.
The prenuptial agreement is so detailed I almost suspect it was prepared weeks before. But that's not possible because this marriage was my idea.
It outlines the duration of the marriage, the postdivorce property arrangements, and the most painful part: full legal and physical custody of the child for Alistair Wolfe.
My visitation rights are listed in a series of bullet points. I read every word, the ink blurring as tears gather my eyes.
I realize I'm signing away the only thing that will be truly mine. But then I remember the alternative.
If I stay in that house, my stepmother will drag me to marry a man who breaks women for sport.
I reach for the goldtipped pen Markson offers and sign my name on the bottom of every page. "Everything seems to be in order," Markson says, checking his watch.
A few minutes later, the glass doors at the entrance swing open, and the atmosphere in the room shifts. It's as if the temperature has dropped ten degrees.
Alistair Wolfe walks in, and almost everyone in the room turns to lok at him. He isn't wearing a full suit today.
He has on a white shirt with the sleeves rolled up to his forearms and a pair of dark tailored trousers.
He looks effortless, rugged, and breathtakingly handsome in a way that makes my throat feel dry.
He stops in front of our table, his gaze sweeping over me with the same intensity he had yesterday. He doesn't offer a greeting. He looks at the signed papers, then back at me.
For a split second, his eyes drop to my lips, his focus lingering just long enough to make my skin prickle.
Then, the coldness returns. "Did she sign?" Alistair asks the lawyer. "Every page, sir," Markson confirms. "Good.
Let's get this over with." The registration process is a blur of stamps and signatures.
Because of Alistair's influence, we are ushered into a private office where a clerk with a tired expression processes the expedited service.
Within fifteen minutes, a piece of paper with a gold seal is slid across the desk toward us. Alistair picks up one copy and hands it to me.
His fingers brush mine, and I feel a jolt of something that isn't quite fear but feels just as dangerous. His skin is warm, a sharp contrast to his icy demeanor. "You're now Mrs.
Wolfe," he says. "I have to fly to London immediately. There's an acquisition that needs my direct attention. I'll be gone for three days." I stare at the paper. Emily Wolfe.
It looks wrong.
It looks like a lie written in gold ink. "I'll send a car and a team of movers to your father's house on Thursday morning at eight," he continues. "You'll move into my estate.
For the duration of this contract, you live with me.
I need to ensure the health of my heir is monitored properly." "I can take care of myself, Alistair," I say, trying to reclaim some shred of my dignity.
He steps closer, his shadow falling over me. He smells like sandalwood. "You're carrying my child, Emily. That makes your safety my business.
Don't make this difficult." He pauses, his gaze softening by a fraction of a millimeter. "Do you need a ride back?" I shake my head quickly.
The thought of Alistair's black car pulling up to my father's driveway is a nightmare.
Lydia would have a heart attack, and Thomas would probably try to ask him for a loan before I could even get out of the vehicle. "No. I'll take a cab.
I need to handle things at home first." Alistair nods once, a sharp, decisive movement. "Thursday. Eight o'clock.
Don't make my men wait." He turns and walks out, Markson trailing behind him like a loyal shadow. I stand in the middle of the lobby, clutching my marriage license to my chest.
My heart is a steady, heavy thud. I've done it. I've jumped off the cliff, and now I just have to wait and see if the parachute opens.
When I walk through the front door of the Vance estate, the scent of Lydia's expensive lilies almost suffocates me.
My father and stepmother are sitting in the foyer, dressed as if they're going to a funeral.
Lydia is wearing a sharp, black suit, her hair pulled back into a bun so tight it looks painful.
Thomas is fidgeting with his cufflinks with a small frown on his face. "Where have you been?" Lydia snaps, standing up the moment the door clicks shut. "We've been calling you for two hours.
We have someone expecting us at the St. Regis for lunch. You need to go upstairs and put on that red dress I bought you. And for heaven's sake, do something about your face.
You look exhausted." "Who are we going to meet?" I ask, pretending not to already know. "Someone important." My father stands up too, though he won't quite meet my eyes. "Emily, please.
Just cooperate. It's a simple lunch. This person is a very influential man. He can help us." "Help you," I correct him.
I feel a strange sense of power bubbling up inside me, a cold, clean anger that burns away the last of my fear. "I know it's Silas Reed we're going to meet.
And you want to see me off because he can help you pay for your bad investments and Lydia's jewelry.
But he can't help me." "Don't be dramatic," Lydia says, walking toward me. "You're a Vance. You have a responsibility to this family. Now, get upstairs." I don't move.
I reach into my purse and pull out the marriage license.
I hold it up, the gold seal catching the light of the chandelier. "I'm not a Vance anymore," I say. "I got married this morning." Lydia stops dead in her tracks.
Her mouth opens and closes like a fish gasping for air. My father's face goes pale, his eyes wide as he stares at the document. "What are you talking about?" he stammers. "Married?
To who? Julian is still in the hospital, he" "Not to Julian," I say, stepping closer so they can see the name on the paper. "To Alistair Wolfe. I'm his wife now.
Which means I'm his responsibility. So, you can call Silas Reed and tell him the deal is off.
I'm moving out on Thursday." The silence that follows is the most satisfying sound I've ever heard.
I walk past them toward the stairs, my head held high, leaving the ruins of their plans scattered on the floor.
I'm going to a house of ice, but at least the walls there would be mine. For a while.
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