The Billionaire's Secret Heir In Hiding

The Billionaire's Secret Heir In Hiding

Evvie Foreman

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I woke up in a bed of cold marble and silk, lying next to Armond Emerson-the billionaire CEO who treats people like disposable assets. Five years ago, I escaped his world with a secret that could destroy me; now, a single night of desperation had put me right back in his crosshairs. My nightmare was only beginning. My ex-boyfriend, Lucas, had me followed to the penthouse and was now using my family as target practice to force me back under his thumb. Within twenty-four hours, my gallery was seized, my bank accounts were frozen, and my brother was left bleeding on a warehouse floor with his painting hands crushed. Lucas's threat was clear: "Kneel and beg, or I'll make sure your little bastard in Queens has an accident." That "bastard" was Leo, my four-year-old son. He was the secret heir to the Emerson empire, and Armond had no idea he existed. To protect him, I sold my soul. I walked into Armond's office and offered a deal: I'd be his fake fiancée to stabilize his board of directors if he destroyed Lucas. He agreed, but his touch was a brand and his suspicion was a knife. He started digging into the five-year gap in my resume, hiring investigators to peel back the layers of my time in Switzerland. I thought I could play the part of the harmless socialite until the danger passed. I thought I could keep my son hidden in the shadows of a crumbling Queens apartment while I played house with a monster. But after a brutal attack in a parking garage, I collapsed in Armond's arms, my consciousness fading as I whispered the one name I should have kept buried. As I lay sedated in his penthouse, my phone buzzed on the nightstand. Armond answered it. "Mommy? Are you okay? Uncle Nate said the bad man hurt you." The silence that followed was the sound of my world ending. Armond stared at the caller ID, looking at the face of the son I had stolen from him, and finally realized exactly what I had been running from.

Chapter 1 1

A dull, rhythmic throb behind Kate Silva's eyes was the first thing to greet her. It was a physical weight, pressing down on her temples, syncing perfectly with the heavy beat of her own heart. She blinked, expecting the cracked plaster of her Queens apartment ceiling.

Instead, she saw intricate, hand-molded crown molding that probably cost more than her father's entire life insurance payout.

Panic, cold and sharp, pierced through the hangover fog. Kate shifted, her limbs heavy, and her hand brushed against the bedside table. It wasn't the cheap particle board she was used to. It was cold, smooth marble. Her fingers curled around a heavy object resting there.

A watch. A Patek Philippe. The metal was cool against her skin, but it burned her mind with sudden, violent clarity.

The charity gala. The champagne tower she shouldn't have touched. The desperate need for investors. And him.

Kate turned her head slowly, the movement making her neck pop. Her breath hitched in her throat, strangled by fear.

Armond Emerson lay next to her.

The CEO of Emerson International. The man who treated emotions like bad investments. He was on his stomach, the sheet pooled at his waist. His back was a landscape of muscle and scars, but what made Kate's stomach twist into a knot was the fresh, angry red scratch running down his shoulder blade.

She had done that.

Bile rose in her throat. This wasn't just a mistake; it was a catastrophe. If he woke up, if he realized who she was-a desperate woman trying to hustle him for capital-he would destroy her. Or worse, he would dig. And if he dug, he would find the five-year gap in her resume. He would find Switzerland. And the untouchable trust fund tied to a gag order so complete it had essentially erased her.

He would find Leo.

Kate scrambled out of the bed, her legs shaking so hard they nearly buckled. The plush carpet swallowed her feet, a stark contrast to the cold dread freezing her blood. She grabbed her dress from the floor. The black silk was torn at the hem. A casualty of urgency.

Armond shifted.

Kate froze. She stood like a statue, clutching the ruined dress to her chest, her heart hammering against her ribs like a trapped bird. He groaned, a low, rough sound, and flung an arm across the empty space where she had just been lying. The warmth of his body still radiated from the sheets.

He didn't wake up.

She didn't breathe until she was in the bathroom, pulling the dress over her shivering body. She grabbed her heels, refusing to put them on for fear of the click-clack on the marble floors. She tiptoed toward the massive double doors, feeling like a thief in a museum.

The penthouse living room was cavernous. It was filled with art that belonged in the MoMA, yet the space felt sterile. Dead. There were no photos. No clutter. Just expensive emptiness.

At the foyer, Kate jammed her feet into her heels. She checked her phone. The screen lit up, blindingly bright in the dim morning light.

10 Missed Calls: Lucas Sterling.

A wave of nausea rolled over her. Lucas. Her ex. The man who made her life a living hell.

She fled into the elevator, pressing the lobby button with a trembling finger. The numbers counted down-45, 44, 43-like a timer on a bomb. When the doors slid open, the concierge looked up, his eyes sweeping over her torn dress and disheveled hair. Kate lowered her head, shame burning her cheeks, and pushed through the revolving doors.

The New York morning air hit her like a slap. It was crisp, smelling of exhaust and coffee. Kate hailed a yellow cab, her hand shaking so bad she almost dropped her phone.

"Queens," she told the driver, giving him the address of the crumbling brick building that was her sanctuary.

She sank into the cracked leather of the backseat. Her phone vibrated again. Not a call. A text.

Lucas: I know whose bed you warmed last night. You think sleeping with Emerson will save you?

Kate's grip on the phone tightened until her knuckles turned white. He had her followed. Of course he did.

The cab ride was a blur of gray concrete and anxiety. When they pulled up to her building, she threw cash at the driver and ran inside. Her hands fumbled with the keys, metal scratching against metal, until the lock finally clicked.

She burst into the apartment. The smell of oatmeal and old pipes greeted her-the smell of home.

"Mama?"

Kate dropped her purse. In the center of the worn rug, a small boy sat surrounded by complex geometric blocks. Leo looked up, his dark eyes wide and intelligent. He was four years old, but his gaze held a focus that belonged to a much older man.

"You're late," Leo said matter-of-factly, holding up a dodecahedron he'd constructed.

Kate fell to her knees and pulled him into her arms. She buried her face in his neck, inhaling the scent of milk and baby shampoo. It was the only thing that could ground her. He was solid. He was real.

He was the Emerson heir. And Armond didn't know he existed.

"I'm sorry, baby," she whispered, her voice cracking. "Mama had work."

Her phone buzzed against her hip. Kate pulled back, kissing Leo's forehead, and looked at the screen. It was a picture message from Lucas.

It was a photo of the Silva Family Gallery. A bright orange eviction notice was plastered across the glass door.

Kate stared at the image, the blood draining from her face. The war hadn't just started. She was already losing.

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