My Husband's Billion-Dollar Baby Deception

My Husband's Billion-Dollar Baby Deception

CHRISTINE ROBINSON

5.0
Comment(s)
4.2K
View
21
Chapters

For fifteen years, I gave up my dream of being a mother for my husband. He was the heir to a billion-dollar empire, and he carried a family curse-the women they loved died in childbirth. I accepted it, for him. Then, his dying grandfather demanded an heir. To save his inheritance and "protect" me, he hired a surrogate. A woman who looked exactly like a younger version of me, who he promised was just a clinical arrangement. The lies started immediately. He began spending every night with her, claiming she needed "emotional support." He missed our anniversary. He forgot my birthday.

Chapter 1

For fifteen years, I gave up my dream of being a mother for my husband. He was the heir to a billion-dollar empire, and he carried a family curse-the women they loved died in childbirth. I accepted it, for him.

Then, his dying grandfather demanded an heir. To save his inheritance and "protect" me, he hired a surrogate. A woman who looked exactly like a younger version of me, who he promised was just a clinical arrangement.

The lies started immediately. He began spending every night with her, claiming she needed "emotional support." He missed our anniversary. He forgot my birthday.

Chapter 1

For fifteen years, Kelsey Jensen's camera had documented every angle of their perfect New York love story-every angle except the one she was forbidden to create.

Her husband, Bennett Randolph, the handsome heir to a billion-dollar empire, loved her too much to risk it. He carried a family curse, he'd explained, a tragic legacy where the women they loved-his mother, his grandmother-died in childbirth. It was the one shadow in their sprawling penthouse overlooking Central Park, the unspoken reason for the empty rooms.

"I can't lose you, Kels," he would say, his voice strained, his hand gripping hers tightly. "I won't."

And for years, Kelsey had accepted it. She loved him enough to sacrifice her own deep-seated desire for a family. She poured her creative instincts into her photography, nurturing her subjects and their stories through her lens.

Then came the ultimatum.

Bennett's grandfather, the formidable patriarch of the Randolph dynasty, was dying. From his hospital bed, surrounded by the scent of antiseptic and old money, he delivered his final command. His father, a grim-faced man who rarely showed emotion, stood by his side, echoing every word of the dying patriarch.

"I need an heir, Bennett. The Randolph line doesn't end with you. Get it done, or the company goes to your cousin." His father, his face etched with a desperate anxiety, clutched his arm. "Don't let this family die with us, Bennett. I couldn't bear it."

The pressure changed everything. That night, Bennett came to Kelsey, his face a mask of agony. He told her he'd rather forfeit the entire Randolph fortune than risk her life. Kelsey's heart ached with love for him. But the next evening, his father arrived, his eyes red-rimmed and his voice trembling on the edge of hysteria. He spoke of duty, of legacy, of the shame of a barren bloodline, his performance culminating in a veiled threat to end his own life if Bennett let the family name wither away.

Trapped and broken, Bennett finally relented. "A surrogate," he said to Kelsey later, his voice carefully neutral. "It's the only way."

Kelsey, who had long given up hope, felt a flicker of it ignite. "A surrogate? Really?"

"Yes," he confirmed. "A purely clinical arrangement. Our embryo, her womb. You'd be the mother in every way that matters. We just bypass the risk to you."

He assured her he would handle everything. A week later, he introduced her to Aria Diaz.

The resemblance was immediate and unsettling. Aria had the same dark, wavy hair as Kelsey, the same high cheekbones, the same shade of emerald green in her eyes. She was younger, maybe a decade younger, with a raw, unpolished beauty that was a stark contrast to Kelsey's sophisticated grace.

"She's perfect, isn't she?" Bennett said, a strange light in his eyes. "The agency said her profile was an excellent match."

Aria was quiet, almost timid. She kept her eyes down, murmuring her responses. She seemed overwhelmed by the opulence of their apartment, by them.

"She is just a vessel, Kels," Bennett whispered to her later that night, pulling her close. "A means to an end. Our end. You and I, we're the parents. This is for us."

Kelsey looked at her husband, the man she had loved for more than half her life, and she chose to believe him. She had to. It was the only way to get the family she had always dreamed of.

But the lies started almost immediately.

The "IVF cycles" required Bennett to be at the clinic. He started missing dinners, then entire evenings.

"Just supporting Aria," he'd say, texting late into the night. "The hormones are making her emotional. The doctors said it's important for the surrogate to feel secure."

Kelsey tried to be understanding. She clung to the explanations like a lifeline, refusing to see the truth that was fraying the edges of her perfect life.

Their wedding anniversary arrived. For years, they'd had a standing tradition: a trip, just the two of them, to a new city to get lost in and photograph. He canceled at the last minute.

"Aria's having a bad reaction to the medication," he said over the phone, his voice rushed. "I have to be here. I'm so sorry, Kels. I'll make it up to you."

He forgot. He forgot the one promise he had sworn to always keep. She spent their anniversary alone, the silence of the penthouse deafening.

Her birthday was worse. She waited for hours at the restaurant he'd booked, a single candle flickering on a small cake the waiter had brought out in pity. He never showed. A text message appeared after midnight.

[Emergency at the clinic. Don't wait up.]

She walked home, feeling utterly lost and defeated, letting the cold, drenching rain soak through her coat, each icy drop a fresh wave of despair. The next morning, she woke with a raging fever. She called Bennett. The phone rang and rang, then clicked to voicemail. She took a cab to the hospital, alone.

When she returned home two days later, weak and drained, the apartment was just as she had left it. He hadn't come home. He hadn't even called to see if she was alive. As she collapsed onto the living room sofa, her hand slipped between the cushions and brushed against something soft and unfamiliar. It was a piece of lingerie, a cheap scrap of black lace. It wasn't hers.

At that moment, she heard his voice from the balcony, low and intimate. He was on the phone.

She froze, her blood turning to ice. That's when she heard it.

"I'm planning a wedding for you in Europe after the baby is born," Bennett was saying, his tone full of a passion she hadn't heard in years. "A secret one, in Lake Como. We'll fly in your favorite flowers from Holland. It will cost a hundred million, a hundred times grander than my first one. You deserve it. You deserve everything."

A wave of nausea washed over her. She stumbled back, knocking a picture frame off an end table. It shattered on the marble floor with a deafening crash.

The conversation on the balcony stopped. The door flew open, and Bennett stood there, his face a mask of panic when he saw her.

"Kelsey! What are you doing out here?"

Kelsey straightened up, the shock giving way to an icy calm she didn't know she possessed. She looked at her husband, the man who was planning a secret wedding with her surrogate, and she forced a smile.

"I just got home," she said, her voice steady.

She held up the piece of black lace. "I found this in the sofa. I was wondering who it belonged to."

For a split second, he looked trapped. Then, a smooth, practiced mask slipped over his features. "That must be yours, Kels," he said, his voice dripping with false concern. "You're always losing things."

The lie was so blatant, so insulting, it stole the breath from her lungs. She had made one rule when this all began: Aria was never to set foot in their home. He had sworn on his father's grave to honor it.

Just then, his tablet, left on the coffee table, lit up. A new message from Aria.

[I'm wearing that little number you like so much. The one you couldn't get me out of fast enough last night. Hurry back.]

His phone rang. He glanced at the caller ID and his face tightened. "It's the office," he lied, already moving toward the door. "An emergency with the new merger. I have to go."

He walked out, leaving her alone with the shattered glass and the shattered truth.

She walked into her studio, the one place that was still hers. She picked up the phone and dialed a number she knew by heart. A number she hadn't called in years.

"Amelia," she said, her voice a ghost of itself. "It's Kelsey. I need you to make me disappear."

Continue Reading

Other books by CHRISTINE ROBINSON

More
Rejected By The Alpha: The Starlet's Return

Rejected By The Alpha: The Starlet's Return

Werewolf

5.0

On my eighteenth birthday, as my bones broke and reshaped for my First Shift, I looked up at Autry from the cold marble floor. The Alpha. My guardian. And as the moon decided, my Fated Mate. I reached a trembling hand toward him, desperate for the bond to settle the agony tearing me apart. Instead, he recoiled. "I reject you," he spat, his voice devoid of emotion. Beside him, his Beta mistress smirked, wearing a diamond bought with his pack's debt. He didn't reject me because I was unfaithful; he broke our soul bond because I was a "charity-case Omega" with no political value. He threw a check onto the floor, letting it land in a pool of my own sweat, and gave me one hour to get out. But exile wasn't enough for them. To ensure I couldn't return, they framed me. While I was bleeding out at the border, they released doctored photos accusing me of sleeping with Rogues, destroying my reputation just to save his poll numbers with the council. I watched a livestream of them bulldozing my mother's rose garden, laughing as they erased my existence. He thought I would die in the wild. He thought the rejection had killed my wolf. Five years later, I stepped out of a limousine in front of his corporate tower. I wasn't the scrawny orphan anymore. I was J.B., the face of Vogue, carrying the awakened power of the rare White Wolf bloodline. Autry rushed to meet me, eyes glowing gold, thinking he could simply snap his fingers and get his mate back. He didn't notice the massive sapphire ring on my finger. Or the Alpha of the European Silver Mist Pack standing behind me, ready to tear his throat out if he took one more step.

When Love Became Cold Abandonment

When Love Became Cold Abandonment

Romance

5.0

The phone call came on a Tuesday, a regular day until the private investigator' s flat voice delivered news that shattered my world: "Sarah, I found him. He' s alive." Three years of grieving for my presumed dead husband, a Navy SEAL, ended with that devastating revelation. But the real blow came next: he was living in Oregon with another woman, his estranged sister Lisa, who was now the beneficiary of his life insurance, a change made just a week before his disappearance. This wasn' t a rescue; it was a betrayal, a meticulously planned abandonment. I drove six hours to a quiet town, finding him on a porch swing, relaxed and healthy, with Lisa beside him, very pregnant. The sight broke something in me, dissolving any lingering hope. When I confronted him, his guilt and fear were clear, yet he offered hollow excuses about protecting Lisa and obligations. My anger and pain erupted; I hit him, screaming about selling our house to fund the search, losing everything while he played house. Lisa screamed about her baby, and I froze, seeing her pregnant belly-the ultimate betrayal. He couldn' t deny it; he nodded, confirming their child. The man I married, the hero, was now a coward who looked at me with cold abandonment. The fight drained, leaving a cold void. I demanded the insurance money, a bitter exchange for my wasted life, and walked away, a stranger to the man I once loved. The man I knew was dead to me. I flew to a new country, seeking a new life away from the ruins of my past. But the phone rang. It was his voice, hesitant, then full of doting tenderness for Lisa and their baby, a love he once reserved for me. He asked if I got the money, then promised to "make things right" once Lisa was settled. My voice dripped with contempt as I told him not to bother and hung up. His new happiness was a physical pain, a cruel reminder of all I' d lost, including our own baby, conceived before his disappearance and lost to the stress of searching for him-a fact he never knew, and would never know. I knelt by our child's unmarked grave, vowing he deserved to pay.

Betrayal In A Care Package
Betrayed Bride, Broken But Unbowed

Betrayed Bride, Broken But Unbowed

Romance

5.0

My wedding day. Five months pregnant, ready to marry the man I loved. Then, two strangers burst in, dragging me out, darkness descending as a rough bag covered my head. They held me a day and a night; I lost my baby, left in a field, my wedding dress torn and stained. Waking in a hospital, I learned my fiancé, Mark Sullivan, had publicly called off our engagement, announcing his immediate marriage to my best friend, Tiffany Hayes. Just when I thought I was utterly broken, Mark' s younger brother, Ethan, appeared like a savior, promising a future, showering me with love, building a fortress around my shattered life. For three years, he was my everything, my protector, the man who wanted a family with me, even as fertility doctors said my body was too damaged. But then, I overheard a conversation on the terrace, a quiet, chilling confession between Ethan and his friend. "Remember how you arranged for her to be assaulted so Tiffany could marry the older brother?" My blood ran cold. "And you' ve been secretly giving her birth control pills all these years. It' s pretty messed up." The man who saved me was the monster who ruined me. He had orchestrated every single agonizing detail, all for Tiffany' s happiness, mocking my "tainted" body. The man I loved, the man I married, had built my hell-and then trapped me in its gilded cage. My world shattered, but in the silence of the grand library, a chilling clarity settled over me: if this was all a lie, I had nothing left to lose. I would leave, and he would never see me again.

You'll also like

The Billionaire's Cold And Bitter Betrayal

The Billionaire's Cold And Bitter Betrayal

Clara Bennett
5.0

I had just survived a private jet crash, my body a map of violet bruises and my lungs still burning from the smoke. I woke up in a sterile hospital room, gasping for my husband's name, only to realize I was completely alone. While I was bleeding in a ditch, my husband, Adam, was on the news smiling at a ribbon-cutting ceremony. When I tracked him down at the hospital's VIP wing, I didn't find a grieving husband. I found him tenderly cradling his ex-girlfriend, Casie, in his arms, his face lit with a protective warmth he had never shown me as he carried her into the maternity ward. The betrayal went deeper than I could have imagined. Adam admitted the affair started on our third anniversary-the night he claimed he was stuck in London for a merger. Back at the manor, his mother had already filled our planned nursery with pink boutique bags for Casie's "little princess." When I demanded a divorce, Adam didn't flinch. He sneered that I was "gutter trash" from a foster home and that I'd be begging on the streets within a week. To trap me, he froze my bank accounts, cancelled my flight, and even called the police to report me for "theft" of company property. I realized then that I wasn't his partner; I was a charity case he had plucked from obscurity to manage his life. To the Hortons, I was just a servant who happened to sleep in the master bedroom, a "resilient" woman meant to endure his abuse in silence while the whole world laughed at the joke that was my marriage. Adam thought stripping me of his money would make me crawl back to him. He was wrong. I walked into his executive suite during his biggest deal of the year and poured a mug of sludge over his original ten-million-dollar contracts. Then, right in front of his board and his mistress, I stripped off every designer thread he had ever paid for until I was standing in nothing but my own silk camisole. "You can keep the clothes, Adam. They're as hollow as you are." I grabbed my passport, turned my back on his billions, and walked out of that glass tower barefoot, bleeding, and finally free.

Secret Baby: The Jilted Wife's Final Goodbye

Secret Baby: The Jilted Wife's Final Goodbye

Cait
5.0

I sat on the cold tile floor of our Upper East Side penthouse, staring at the two pink lines until my vision blurred. After ten years of loving Julian Sterling and three years of a hollow marriage, I finally had the one thing that could bridge the distance between us. I was pregnant. But Julian didn't come home with flowers for our anniversary. He tossed a thick manila envelope onto the marble coffee table with a heavy thud. Fiona, the woman he'd truly loved for years, was back in New York, and he told me our "business deal" was officially over. "Sign it," He said, his voice flat and devoid of emotion. He looked at me with the cold detachment of a man selling a piece of unwanted furniture. When I hesitated, he told me to add a zero to the alimony if the money wasn't enough. I realized in that moment that if he knew about the baby, he wouldn't love me; he would simply take my child and give it to Fiona to raise. I shoved the pregnancy test into my pocket, signed the papers with a shaking hand, and lied through my teeth. When my morning sickness hit, I slumped to the floor to hide the truth. "It's just cramps," I gasped, watching him recoil as if I were contagious. To make him stay away, I invented a man named Jack-a fake boyfriend who supposedly gave me the kindness Julian never could. Suddenly, the man who wanted me gone became a monster of possessiveness. He threatened to "bury" a man who didn't exist while leaving me humiliated at his family's dinner to rush to Fiona's side. I was so broken that I even ate a cake I was deathly allergic to, then had to refuse life-saving steroids at the hospital because they would harm the fetus. Julian thinks he's stalling the divorce for two months to protect the family's reputation for his father's Jubilee. He thinks he's keeping his "property" on a short leash until the press dies down. He has no idea I'm using those sixty days to build a fortress for my child. By the time he realizes the truth, I'll be gone, and the Sterling heir will be far beyond his reach.

The Scars Behind My Golden Dress

The Scars Behind My Golden Dress

Catherine
5.0

I spent four hours preparing a five-course meal for our fifth anniversary. When Jackson finally walked into the penthouse an hour late, he didn't even look at the table. He just dropped a thick Manila envelope in front of me and told me he was done. He said his stepsister, Davida, was getting worse and needed "stability." I wasn't his wife; I was a placeholder, a temporary fix he used until the woman he actually loved was ready to take my place. Jackson didn't just want a divorce; he wanted to erase me. He called me a "proprietary asset," claiming that every design I had created to save his empire belonged to him. He froze my bank accounts, cut off my phone, and told me I’d be nothing without his name. Davida even called me from her hospital bed to flaunt the family heirloom ring Jackson claimed was lost, mocking me for being "baggage" that was finally being cleared out. I stood in our empty home, realizing I had spent five years being a martyr for a man who saw me as a transaction. I couldn't understand how he could be so blind to the monster he was protecting, or how he could discard me so coldly after I had given him everything. I grabbed my hidden sketchbook, shredded our wedding portrait, and walked out into the rain. I dialed a number I hadn't touched in years—a dangerous man known as The Surgeon who dealt in debts and shadows. I told him I was ready to pay his price. Jackson and Davida wanted to steal my identity, but I was about to show the world the literal scars they had left behind.

The Sterling Scandal: Married To The Uncle

The Sterling Scandal: Married To The Uncle

C.D
5.0

I was at my own engagement party at the Sterling estate when the world started tilting. Victoria Sterling, my future mother-in-law, smiled coldly as she watched me struggle with a cup of tea that had been drugged to ruin me. Before I could find my fiancé, Ryan, a waiter dragged me into the forbidden West Wing and locked me in a room with Julian Sterling, the family’s "fallen titan" who had been confined to a wheelchair for years. The door burst open to a frenzy of camera flashes and theatrical screams. Victoria framed me as a seductress caught in the act, and Ryan didn't even try to listen to my pleas, calling me "cheap leftovers" before walking away with his pregnant mistress. When I turned to my own family for help, my father signed a document severing our relationship for a five-million-dollar payout from Julian. They traded me like a commodity without a second thought. I didn't understand why my own parents were so eager to sell me, or how Ryan could look at me with such disgust after promising me forever. I was a sacrifice, a pawn used to protect the family's offshore accounts, and I couldn't fathom how every person I loved had a price tag for my destruction. With nowhere left to go, I married Julian in a bleak ceremony at City Hall. He slid a heavy diamond onto my finger and whispered, "We have a war to start." That night, inside his secret penthouse, I watched the paralyzed man stand up from his wheelchair and activate a screen filled with the Sterling family's darkest secrets. The execution had officially begun.

Chapters
Read Now
Download Book