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The Billionaire's Contract: Protecting My Secret Son

Chapter 3 No.3

Word Count: 668    |    Released on: 06/02/2026

His reflection stared back-angry,

t?" Her voic

l," Council said. He didn

ha

You cried about your living conditions.

living room, surrounded by Leo's toys. She had been about to beg him. She had been about to off

accusing her

mother," Addie said.

night. I'm bringing luggage. But remember this

ne wen

inked. A laugh bubbled up in he

e whispered. "He'

un him around. "We're

rstanding, but happy

rary of the Bartlett estate

ou agreed,

small. He always felt small around her. "But I will prove she is a fraud. I will

void the marriage within three months, without hurting the stock

rowed. "You're bet

. I want to see if you have

ea

bag. She swept the clutter off the table. She

ed her clothes to one side, squeezing them u

looked at

uble bed. T

. No. He wouldn

old sheets. She looked at the sofa. It was

rf

you sure a

l be watching your arrival. You need to look like yo

ajamas. If I'm going undercover in the slums, I need to blend in once I'm inside." He paused.

eens. It was a hea

out. He was wearing dark trousers and a cashmere sweater, still looking

ti near the door. A pile of garbage bags

im. rotting fru

alked to the door. There w

Two flights. The stairwell smelled

. He stood in front of doo

e felt like a soldier st

his hand a

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The Billionaire's Contract: Protecting My Secret Son
The Billionaire's Contract: Protecting My Secret Son
“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.”