The Billionaire's Contract: Protecting My Secret Son

The Billionaire's Contract: Protecting My Secret Son

Afrodite LesFolies

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I sat in a Louis XV-style chair that cost more than my entire education, picking at the peeling leather of my thrift-store handbag. Across the mahogany table, Council Bartlett didn't even look at me; he just checked his watch, treating our marriage like a corporate merger that needed to be finalized before the market closed. To the world, I was a gold digger hitting the lottery, but I was actually a woman with a secret I guarded more fiercely than a state secret. I had one week to show a social worker a stable home with a husband, or they would take my four-year-old nephew, Leo, and put him back into the system forever. The ink was barely dry on our marriage certificate when my world started to fracture. My aunt called, screaming for help as her drunk husband broke into her house, forcing me to leave my new "billionaire husband" in my cramped Queens apartment to handle a domestic nightmare with a baseball bat and pepper spray. When I returned, smelling of cheap whiskey and sweat, I found Council's mother-the ice-cold Hortense-waiting on a video call. She didn't just want a business arrangement; she wanted an heir, and she'd already sent a box of fertility drugs to my kitchen counter to prove it. I was living a lie in a tenement building, caught between a man who treated me like a line item and a social worker who viewed my life as a "phantom." Council was sleeping on my lumpy sofa, his expensive legs dangling off the end, while I locked the bedroom door every night. I didn't want his money; I just wanted my boy. But how could I survive a war where the enemy lived in a penthouse and the casualties were measured in custody hearings? Just as Council saw me holding Leo and the "Ice King" finally began to thaw, his phone buzzed with an anonymous threat. "I know you're faking it. Pay me 100k or the press gets the story." The blackmailer was someone inside the Bartlett estate, and the "shield" I had built for Leo was about to become our cage.

Chapter 1 No.1

Addie sat in the leather chair that cost more than her entire education. A Louis XV-style Bergère, she noted internally, likely a 19th-century reproduction. Flawless upholstery, but the gilding was too uniform. Still, worth a fortune. Her fingers were white, wrapped around the strap of a handbag she had bought at a thrift store in Queens three years ago. The leather of the bag was peeling. She could feel the flake of it under her thumb. She picked at it. It was the only thing keeping her from screaming.

A wave of nausea washed over her, and she subtly pressed a hand to her lower abdomen, a secret she guarded more fiercely than any state secret.

Across the mahogany expanse, Council Bartlett checked his watch. He didn't look at her. He looked at the time. To him, this wasn't a marriage. It was a merger. It was a line item on a spreadsheet that needed to be crossed off before the market closed.

The air conditioner in the conference room was set to a temperature that felt like a morgue.

The chief lawyer, a man with a neck that spilled over his collar, slid a document toward her. It was heavy. It hit the table with a thud that vibrated through the wood and into Addie's elbows.

Fifty pages. The Prenuptial Agreement.

"Miss Henry," the lawyer started, his voice a drone meant to intimidate. "Article one outlines the complete forfeiture of any claim to the Bartlett estate, stocks, or future earnings in the event of a dissolution. Article two specifies that-"

Addie reached out. Her hand didn't shake. She flipped the heavy stack of paper over to the last page.

The lawyer stopped. His mouth hung open slightly.

Council looked up. He raised an eyebrow, just a fraction of an inch. Addie could feel his judgment. It radiated off him like heat. She's in a hurry, he was thinking. She wants the ring so she can start spending.

He was wrong. She didn't want the money. She wanted this to be over so she could go home.

Addie picked up the pen. It was heavy, weighted, expensive. She pressed the tip to the signature line. She drew the first curve of the 'A' in her name, then paused. Her eyes scanned the fine print at the bottom, a boilerplate clause about appended schedules. She flipped back to the attached asset list. Her appraiser's eye caught it instantly. Schedule C: Art & Antiquities. A Monet listed with an acquisition date from a Christie's auction she knew for a fact had been cancelled. A fabrication. A test.

She dropped the pen. It clattered loudly on the mahogany.

"I can't sign this," she said, her voice clear and steady.

The lawyer sputtered. Council's eyebrow shot up again, this time in genuine surprise.

"And why is that, Miss Henry?" Council asked, his tone dangerously soft.

Addie tapped the fraudulent entry with her index finger. "Because your Monet is a ghost. That auction never happened. This document is built on a lie, which makes the entire agreement contestable. I won't sign a flawed contract."

The room went silent. Council stared at her, his mask of indifference finally cracking. He wasn't looking at a gold digger. He was looking at an expert.

"Then we have no deal," the lawyer blustered.

"We have a deal," Council said, overriding him, his eyes locked on Addie. "We'll strike Schedule C. The core terms remain. Are you satisfied?"

"For now," Addie said. She pushed the unsigned document back across the table. "Send a revised copy to City Hall. I'll sign it there."

"Can we go to City Hall now?" she asked.

Her voice was flat. She might as well have been asking if they could stop for milk.

Council stood up. He buttoned his suit jacket. One button. Perfectly tailored.

"The car is downstairs," he said.

They walked out of the room. He didn't hold the door for her. She didn't expect him to. They walked to the elevator with a meter of empty space between them. It was a physical manifestation of their contract.

Inside the elevator, the silence was thick. Council's phone buzzed in his pocket. He pulled it out. Addie saw the name on the screen: Mother. He jaw tightened. He swiped the notification away without reading it.

Addie stared at the numbers changing above the door. 20. 19. 18. She wasn't thinking about the man standing next to her. She was thinking about Leo. She was thinking about his lunchbox. Did she pack the apple slices? Did she cut the skin off? He wouldn't eat them if the skin was on.

The lobby was a blur of marble and security guards. Outside, the humid New York air hit them.

"Get in," Council said.

The black Maybach was waiting.

The drive to the City Clerk's office was silent. Council typed on his phone the entire time. Addie looked out the window. New York passed by in a grey smear.

City Hall was chaos. It smelled of floor wax and nervous sweat. Couples were everywhere. Some were crying. Some were laughing. Some were holding flowers.

Council looked like he had stepped into a petri dish. He stood stiffly, his shoulders rigid. He looked at the crowd with a mixture of confusion and disgust.

Addie moved. She wove through the bodies, finding the line for the license bureau. She didn't look back to see if he was following. She knew he would. He had to. The stock price depended on it.

The clerk was a woman with tired eyes and chipped nail polish. She looked at Council, then at Addie. Addie in her worn wool coat. Council in a suit that cost more than the clerk's car.

"You two together?" the clerk asked.

"Yes," they said in unison.

"Are you entering this union of your own free will?"

"Yes."

"Yes."

There was no hesitation. It was the most honest lie they had told all day.

"Sign here."

The stamp came down. Thump. Red ink.

"Rings?" the clerk asked.

"No," Addie said.

The clerk paused. She looked at Council. He stared back, his face a mask of indifference.

"Alright then," the clerk said. "By the power vested in me by the State of New York..."

It took three minutes.

When they walked back out onto the sidewalk, Addie let out a breath she felt like she had been holding for six months. Her shoulders dropped. A small, genuine smile touched her lips. It wasn't a happy smile. It was the smile of someone who had just survived a car crash.

Council saw it. He saw the relief.

She thinks she's made it, he thought. She thinks she's won the lottery.

"Pleasure doing business with you, Mr. Bartlett," Addie said. She turned to him and extended her hand.

Council looked at her hand. He didn't take it.

"Remember the NDA," he said. "One word to the press, and the settlement is void."

The driver opened the rear door of the Maybach.

Addie shook her head. She pointed toward the subway entrance on the corner.

"I can't," she said. "I have to go pick up the kid."

Council froze. His eyes narrowed.

"Kid?"

"My son. Leo."

Council's lip curled slightly. The prop, he thought. The sob story she uses to get sympathy. A bastard child to complete the picture.

"Right," he said.

Addie didn't wait for a dismissal. She turned and ran toward the subway stairs. She moved fast, her coat flapping behind her. She looked desperate. She looked cheap.

Council watched her disappear underground. He got into the car. The leather seat was cool against his back.

"Marcus," he said to the assistant sitting in the front seat.

"Sir?"

"Find out everything about the kid."

Down in the subway station, the air was hot and smelled of ozone. Addie sat on a plastic bench. She pulled the marriage certificate out of her bag. She stared at the red stamp.

Bartlett.

It was just a word. It was just a shield.

Her phone rang. She looked at the screen. It was Mrs. Miller, the social worker.

Addie's stomach dropped. She answered.

"Hello?"

"Addie," Miller's voice was sharp. "I'm coming over. Today."

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