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THE GROOM WAS MY SON’S FATHER… AND MY BEST FRIEND WAS ABOUT TO MARRY HIM
Chapter 1 / 1

Chapter 1

THE GROOM WAS MY SON’S FATHER… AND MY BEST FRIEND WAS ABOUT TO MARRY HIM

6,808 words

THE GROOM WAS MY SON’S FATHER… AND MY BEST FRIEND WAS ABOUT TO MARRY HIM

Opening Hook — The Groom Walked In

The groom walked into the chapel, and my heart stopped.

Not slowed.

Not stumbled.

Stopped.

Five years vanished in the space between one breath and the next.

The white flowers blurred.

The violin music thinned into a high, distant ringing.

The guests around me rose from their seats, smiling, whispering, turning toward the aisle as if they were about to witness a fairytale.

But I could not stand.

I could not move.

Because the man waiting at the altar was not just the billionaire fiancé my best friend had spent six months describing as “complicated but worth it.”

He was not just Colin Prescott.

Tech mogul.

Hotel heir.

Magazine-cover bachelor.

Hot-shot billionaire with cold blue eyes, a devastating mouth, and enough arrogance to make gravity feel optional.

He was the stranger from the worst night of my life.

The man who had held me together in a hotel bar after my world collapsed.

The man who had taken me upstairs

and made me forget grief existed for one reckless, impossible night.

The man who disappeared before sunrise.

The father of my child.

And he was about to say I do to my best friend.

I gripped the edge of the pew so hard my knuckles turned white.

Beside me, my mother leaned close.

“Emily? Are you all right?”

No.

No, I was not all right.

Because Colin Prescott looked exactly the same.

Older, maybe.

Sharper.

More dangerous in a charcoal tuxedo that fit him like sin had a tailor.

But the mouth was the same.

The hands were the same.

The scar near his eyebrow was the same.

And when his gaze swept the chapel, polite and bored and controlled, it passed over me.

Stopped.

Returned.

Locked.

Recognition hit his face like a crack through glass.

For one second, the billionaire mask vanished.

I saw the man from room 1704.

The man who had whispered my name like he had found something worth losing control over.

The man who had said, “Stay until morning,” before morning stole him first.

His lips parted.

The priest turned a page.

The music shifted.

And at the back of the chapel, my best friend, Vanessa, appeared in her wedding dress.

Beautiful.

Radiant.

Smiling like she had no idea that the maid of honor sitting in the second row had once loved her groom for exactly one night.

No idea I knew the way his voice broke when he wanted something.

No idea I had spent five years raising a little boy with Colin Prescott’s smile.

The priest began.

“Dearly beloved…”

Colin was still looking at me.

I wanted to run.

I wanted to scream.

I wanted to drag him outside and demand where he had been when I cried over a positive pregnancy test

alone in my bathroom.

Instead, I sat frozen as my best friend walked toward him.

Then came the vows.

Vanessa said hers first.

Her voice trembled beautifully.

The guests dabbed their eyes.

Then the priest looked at Colin.

“Do you, Colin James Prescott, take this woman to be your lawfully wedded wife?”

Colin’s eyes found mine again.

My chest tightened.

Say no, some terrible part of me begged.

Say no.

He swallowed.

Then he said, “I do.”

And something inside me broke so quietly nobody heard it.

Not even him.

But before the priest could pronounce them husband and wife, the chapel doors slammed open.

A man in a dark suit rushed down the aisle and whispered something into Vanessa’s father’s ear.

Vanessa turned pale.

Colin stiffened.

The priest stopped speaking.

The wedding planner gasped.

And within sixty seconds, the fairytale began to rot.

Because Colin Prescott was not marrying my best friend for love.

Vanessa was not marrying him for love either.

Their wedding was a business arrangement.

A lie.

A shield.

And I had brought the one secret that could burn the whole thing down.

His name was Noah.

He was four years old.

And he had his father’s smile.


Chapter One — The Worst Day of My Life

Five years earlier, I met Colin Prescott on the day my fiancé left me.

Not dramatically.

Not at the altar.

Worse.

Quietly.

With a spreadsheet.

His name was Derek, and he had the emotional range of a filing cabinet with good hair. We had been together for three years, long enough for me to mistake habit for destiny and shared rent for love.

That morning, he sat across from me in our tiny kitchen and said, “I’ve done the math.”

I remember looking at him over my coffee.

“The math?”

He slid a printed sheet across the table.

Savings.

Debt.

Projected income.

Wedding expenses.

My father’s medical bills.

A column labeled emotional liability, which I wish I were making up.

“I don’t think marrying you is financially responsible,” Derek said.

My father had died six weeks earlier.

My mother was drowning in hospital invoices.

I had taken on extra shifts at the marketing agency and barely slept.

And Derek, the man who once promised he loved my resilience, had decided resilience was no longer cost-effective.

I stared at the spreadsheet.

Then at him.

“You’re breaking up with me with Excel?”

His mouth tightened.

“I’m trying to be rational.”

“No. You’re trying to be a coward with formulas.”

He packed by noon.

By three, I had thrown his remaining protein powder off the balcony.

By seven, I was in a hotel bar downtown because my apartment smelled like betrayal and vanilla protein dust.

That was where Colin found me.

He sat two stools away wearing a black suit, no tie, and an expression that warned the world not to expect softness from him.

The bartender placed a whiskey in front of him without asking.

So not a stranger to expensive loneliness.

I was on my second martini and first public breakdown.

Not loud.

Just tears sliding down my face while I tried to pretend olives were emotionally moving.

Colin glanced over.

“You’re crying into a drink that deserves better.”

I turned.

“Excuse me?”

“Martinis are for revenge. Not grief.”

I laughed once.

It sounded broken.

“Do you always insult crying women?”

“Only when they appear to be wasting good alcohol.”

“You’re charming.”

“No. I’m accurate.”

I should have ignored him.

Instead, I said, “My fiancé left me because marrying me was not financially responsible.”

Colin’s eyebrows lifted.

“He said that?”

“He made a spreadsheet.”

His expression changed.

Not pity.

Disgust.

“Give me his address.”

I blinked.

“What?”

“So I can send flowers to whatever woman is unfortunate enough to be his next tax advantage.”

I laughed for real then.

The sound surprised us both.

He looked at me as if he liked it.

That was dangerous.

“What’s your name?” he asked.

“Emily.”

“Emily what?”

“Does it matter?”

“For tonight, Emily is enough.”

I should have heard the warning.

For tonight.

But I was tired of tomorrow.

So we talked.

Not about family names.

Not about jobs.

Not about the kind of lives that would have made us strangers again.

We talked about grief.

About bad music in hotel bars.

About fathers who leave holes in rooms.

About people who mistake being practical for being cruel.

He told me his father had died when he was young.

That his family turned mourning into business meetings.

That he had learned early that money could buy silence but not sleep.

I told him my father used to dance with me in the kitchen while pasta boiled.

That he called me his “brave girl,” which made me angry now because bravery had not saved him.

Colin listened.

Really listened.

Not waiting to speak.

Not fixing.

Just there.

At midnight, he walked me to the elevator because I was staying in the hotel for one night, a sad little rebellion against my apartment and Derek’s abandoned spreadsheets.

The doors opened.

I stepped inside.

He did not follow.

That made me want him to.

I turned.

“Are you always this careful?”

His eyes darkened.

“No.”

“Then why now?”

“Because you’re hurt.”

“So are you.”

Something moved across his face.

Recognition, maybe.

Or warning.

The elevator doors began to close.

I reached out.

He caught them with one hand.

Our eyes locked.

“Emily,” he said.

My name sounded different from him.

Less like a person trying to survive.

More like a woman who still had skin capable of heat.

“Come upstairs,” I whispered.

For one second, he looked like he would refuse.

Then he stepped into the elevator.

The doors closed.

And the worst day of my life became the night that changed every day after.


Chapter Two — Room 1704

I do not remember every detail of that night.

Grief edits strangely.

Desire edits worse.

But I remember his hands.

Colin’s hands were careful at first.

At the back of my neck.

At my waist.

Hovering before they held.

As if every inch of me required permission, even when I was the one pulling him closer.

I remember his mouth against my shoulder.

The rough sound he made when I said his name.

The way he stopped when tears slipped from my eyes.

“Do you want me to leave?” he asked, voice ragged.

“No.”

“Emily.”

“I’m not crying because of you.”

His thumb brushed my cheek.

“That does not automatically make this right.”

I kissed him then.

Because I did not want right.

I wanted alive.

I wanted one night where nobody measured me in debt, grief, usefulness, or liability.

Colin gave me that.

He gave me heat without pity.

Hunger without cruelty.

Silence without loneliness.

Afterward, I lay against his chest while dawn slowly turned the windows blue.

He traced absent circles on my bare shoulder.

“Stay until morning,” he murmured.

“It is morning.”

“Later morning.”

I smiled against his skin.

“That sounds like a man negotiating with sunlight.”

“I usually win negotiations.”

“Arrogant.”

“Accurate.”

I laughed.

His hand stilled.

“What?”

“Nothing,” he said softly. “I like that sound.”

I should have asked for his last name.

His number.

Something.

Anything.

Instead, I slept.

When I woke, he was gone.

Not dramatically.

No note.

No phone number.

No explanation.

Just an empty room, cold sheets, and my dress folded neatly over a chair.

For one humiliating moment, I thought I had imagined the softness.

Then I saw the hotel receipt on the table.

Room paid.

Breakfast ordered.

A single line written on the notepad.

You deserved kindness. I’m sorry I was only one night. — C

I stared at it until the letters blurred.

Then I folded the note and kept it.

Because women do foolish things with scraps after being abandoned by men with beautiful hands.

Six weeks later, I found out I was pregnant.

I took the test alone.

Then another.

Then a third.

All positive.

I sat on my bathroom floor with Derek’s old spreadsheet still crumpled in the trash and laughed until I cried.

I tried to find Colin.

Of course I did.

The hotel would not release information.

His first name and a notepad initial were useless.

The bartender remembered him but not his room number.

The credit card receipt was private.

So I became a mother without knowing how to tell a ghost he had left part of himself behind.

My son, Noah, was born on a rainy Tuesday.

He screamed like he had opinions.

He had dark hair at first, then it lightened.

By age two, he had Colin’s smile.

By age three, he had Colin’s habit of studying people like he was deciding whether they deserved his time.

By age four, he could charm cookies from my mother and negotiate bedtime with terrifying skill.

“Mommy,” he once said, standing in dinosaur pajamas with serious eyes, “what if sleep is optional?”

“Then so is breakfast.”

He considered this.

“Sleep is important.”

Exactly his father’s son.

I built a life around him.

Small.

Messy.

Exhausting.

Full of toy cars, rent stress, preschool art, and love so fierce it made every other kind look decorative.

I told myself the stranger from room 1704 was a memory.

A beautiful mistake.

A man who had given me one night of kindness and left me with the greatest thing in my life.

Then Vanessa got engaged.


Chapter Three — My Best Friend’s Billionaire

Vanessa Hart had been my best friend since college.

She was dramatic, loyal, glamorous, and the kind of woman who could make grocery shopping look like an editorial shoot.

She knew about Noah.

Of course she did.

She had held my hand during labor.

She brought diapers when I cried over money.

She once threatened Derek with a stiletto in a parking lot after he called me “complicated.”

She knew Noah’s father had been a stranger.

What she did not know was his name.

Because I did not know either.

When Vanessa called me six months before the wedding, she was breathless.

“Emily, don’t scream.”

“That sentence always makes me want to scream.”

“I’m engaged.”

I did scream.

For ten minutes, I was happy.

Truly.

Then I asked, “To whom?”

She hesitated.

Only a breath.

“Colin Prescott.”

The name meant nothing to me then.

Not yet.

“Prescott as in Prescott Hotels?” I asked.

“And Prescott Capital. And Prescott Tech. And Prescott, apparently, emotional constipation.”

“Romantic.”

“He’s complicated.”

“That means rich and traumatized.”

“Exactly my type.”

I laughed.

She described him over the next months.

Brilliant.

Arrogant.

Private.

Protective in ways that made her roll her eyes but secretly smile.

“He doesn’t love easily,” she told me once.

“Do you?”

Silence.

Then: “I think I could.”

Something in her voice worried me.

But Vanessa was always half in love with drama.

I became maid of honor.

I helped choose flowers.

I adjusted her veil.

I held her hand while she complained that Colin insisted on a prenuptial agreement thicker than a Bible.

“Do you love him?” I asked her the night before the wedding.

She looked at herself in the mirror.

“I love what marrying him could save.”

I frowned.

“What does that mean?”

She smiled too fast.

“Nothing. Wedding nerves.”

I should have pushed.

I didn’t.

Because friendship sometimes teaches us where not to press.

And because I had my own secrets.

Noah was staying with my mother for the wedding weekend. He had a cold, and I was relieved not to chase a four-year-old through a cathedral filled with expensive floral arrangements.

“Bring me cake,” he demanded over video call that morning.

“I will.”

“Big cake.”

“Yes, sir.”

“Chocolate if they have it. If not, I accept vanilla.”

“Generous.”

He grinned.

Colin’s grin.

I kissed the screen and told myself, as I had for years, that not every child needed both parents to be loved enough.

Then I put on my pale blue bridesmaid dress and went to watch my best friend marry a man I had never seen.

Except I had.

I had seen all of him.

Room 1704.

Rain.

Whiskey.

Kindness.

Heat.

And now the father of my child stood at the altar waiting for Vanessa.


Chapter Four — The Wedding That Cracked Open

After Colin said “I do,” the chapel did not become silent because of me.

It became silent because Vanessa’s father collapsed.

Not fully.

Just enough to cause panic.

He clutched his chest, staggered, and grabbed the arm of the nearest groomsman.

Vanessa gasped and ran to him.

The priest stopped the ceremony.

Guests stood.

Someone called for a doctor.

Colin moved quickly, controlled and efficient, but his eyes flicked once toward me.

I looked away.

My hands shook.

The wedding was paused.

Then postponed.

An ambulance arrived.

Vanessa left with her father.

The guests were guided to the reception hall with that strange social obedience people develop around rich disasters.

I tried to disappear.

I made it to the side corridor before Colin caught my wrist.

Gently.

But his touch burned through five years.

“Emily.”

My name.

He remembered.

I pulled free.

“Don’t.”

His face was pale beneath the perfect billionaire composure.

“It’s you.”

I laughed once.

“No, Colin. It’s your wedding day.”

His jaw tightened.

“I didn’t know you were Vanessa’s Emily.”

“Funny. I didn’t know you were Vanessa’s Colin.”

Pain crossed his face.

Then his eyes moved over me.

Searching.

Hungry.

Guilty.

Alive with the same memory destroying me.

“I looked for you,” he said.

The words hit harder than they should have.

“No, you didn’t.”

“I did.”

“You had my first name and a hotel room. You are a billionaire. Forgive me if I doubt your investigative limitations.”

His expression tightened.

“I was called away before dawn. My brother overdosed in London. By the time I returned, the hotel had purged guest privacy records. You hadn’t left a last name.”

My anger faltered.

I hated that.

“Convenient.”

“No. Tragic.”

For one second, neither of us spoke.

Then he asked, “Are you married?”

“No.”

“Seeing someone?”

I stared at him.

“You don’t get to ask that.”

His jaw flexed.

“You’re right.”

That surprised me.

He stepped back.

“Are you happy?”

That was worse.

Because the answer was complicated.

I thought of Noah.

His laugh.

His little arms around my neck.

His dinosaur pajamas.

“Yes,” I said. “And no thanks to you.”

Colin flinched.

Good.

He deserved at least one wound.

From down the hall, Vanessa called his name.

He turned.

My chest tightened.

“Go,” I said.

He looked back at me.

“There’s something you’re not saying.”

My blood went cold.

“There are many things I’m not saying.”

His eyes sharpened.

“Emily—”

“Your bride needs you.”

That landed.

He stepped away.

I watched him go to my best friend.

And I hated myself for remembering what his hands felt like when they belonged only to a stranger.


Chapter Five — The Marriage Was a Lie

Vanessa’s father survived.

Barely.

The wedding, however, did not resume.

Not that day.

Not in public.

The official statement said Mr. Hart had suffered a cardiac event and the families requested privacy.

The unofficial truth came at midnight.

Vanessa found me in the hotel garden, still in my bridesmaid dress, shoes abandoned, champagne untouched beside me.

“You know him,” she said.

I closed my eyes.

There it was.

“Vanessa.”

“How?”

I turned.

She was still in her wedding dress, veil gone, makeup smudged, face unreadable.

“How do you know Colin?”

My mouth went dry.

I could have lied.

I should have.

But Vanessa had held my hand while I gave birth.

She had fed my son mashed bananas when I had the flu.

She deserved truth.

“I met him five years ago,” I said.

Her face changed.

“Five years…”

“Yes.”

Her eyes filled with something I could not name.

“You slept with him.”

I said nothing.

She laughed softly.

Not angry.

Broken.

“Oh God.”

“I didn’t know it was him.”

“I believe you.”

That almost hurt more.

I whispered, “Do you love him?”

She looked away.

“No.”

The answer stunned me.

“What?”

She wrapped her arms around herself.

“I like him. I respect him. I think, in another life, I could have loved him. But this marriage…” She swallowed. “It was never about love.”

“What was it about?”

“My father’s company is collapsing. Not just debt. Fraud. Someone inside Hart Industries has been laundering money through our charitable accounts. Colin agreed to marry me to stabilize investor confidence long enough to find proof and keep my father out of prison if he was innocent.”

I stared at her.

“Why didn’t you tell me?”

“Because you would have tried to save me.”

“That is usually the point of friendship.”

“I was ashamed.”

The word softened me instantly.

Vanessa sat beside me.

“My father is many things, but he isn’t a criminal. I think my uncle framed him. Colin has evidence, but if the board panics before we secure the files, thousands lose pensions, jobs, everything.”

“So you were going to marry him.”

“For six months. Quiet separation. No scandal.”

I laughed in disbelief.

“Rich people treat marriage like a tax structure.”

“Sometimes it is.”

She looked at me then.

“Emily, what happened between you two?”

I thought of Noah.

The secret pressed against my ribs like a second heartbeat.

“Just one night,” I said.

Vanessa watched me too carefully.

“Did you love him?”

“No.”

A lie.

Not entirely.

But enough.

“Did he hurt you?”

I thought of the empty room.

The note.

The pregnancy test.

The loneliness.

“No,” I whispered. “Life did.”

Vanessa took my hand.

I almost told her about Noah.

The words rose.

Then her phone rang.

She looked at the screen.

Fear crossed her face.

“My uncle,” she said.

When she answered, I saw every bit of color drain from her face.

“What?” she whispered.

A pause.

Then she looked at me.

“Colin has been arrested.”


Chapter Six — The Billionaire in Handcuffs

Colin Prescott in handcuffs looked almost bored.

That was impressive.

Reporters swarmed the hotel entrance as police escorted him out, shouting questions about fraud, coercion, insider trading, and the halted wedding.

He did not look at them.

He looked at me.

One moment.

One direct, burning moment across chaos.

Then he was gone.

Vanessa’s uncle, Gregory Hart, moved fast.

Too fast.

By morning, every news outlet claimed Colin had manipulated Hart Industries for a hostile takeover disguised as marriage.

The evidence looked damning.

Emails.

Transfers.

Board communications.

All fake, according to Vanessa.

But good fake.

Professional fake.

Colin’s lawyers descended like expensive wolves.

Vanessa fell apart privately and performed publicly.

I tried to stay out of it.

I failed.

Because two days after the arrest, Colin called me from a private legal office.

I stared at the unknown number.

Answered anyway.

“Emily.”

His voice did terrible things to my spine.

“You should call your almost-wife.”

“I did.”

“Then call your lawyers.”

“I did.”

“Then why are you calling me?”

Silence.

Then: “Because you knew me before Prescott mattered.”

I closed my eyes.

“One night.”

“Yes.”

“That doesn’t count.”

“It does to me.”

I hated him for that.

“Colin.”

“I need to know if Vanessa is safe.”

That surprised me.

Even from the center of his own scandal, he was worried about her.

“She’s scared, but safe.”

“Good.”

“Did you do it?”

“No.”

I believed him.

Immediately.

Annoyingly.

“Gregory Hart framed you?”

“Yes. And possibly Daniel Mercer.”

“Who is Daniel?”

“My cousin. He benefits if Prescott stock drops and I’m removed from the board.”

“Your family sounds warm.”

“They make glaciers look affectionate.”

A laugh escaped me.

Soft.

Brief.

He went quiet.

“What?” I asked.

“I missed that.”

My heart twisted.

“You don’t get to miss things you left.”

His voice lowered.

“I know.”

I should have hung up.

Instead, I asked, “What do you need?”

He exhaled.

“There’s a storage unit under Hart Foundation’s legal name. Vanessa can’t access it without triggering Gregory. I need someone outside both families.”

“Me?”

“You’re smart. You’re underestimated. And if you say no, I will not ask again.”

There it was.

Permission.

A door.

God, I hated that the father of my child still knew how to ask.

I said yes.

That was how I entered the war.

Not as Colin’s lover.

Not as Vanessa’s friend.

As the woman nobody saw coming.


Chapter Seven — The Boy With His Smile

The storage unit smelled like dust and corporate crime.

Vanessa came with me.

So did a private investigator Colin trusted, a woman named Mara who looked like she could make a tax audit cry.

Inside the unit were boxes.

Hard drives.

Signed contracts.

A hidden server.

And photographs.

Gregory Hart with Daniel Mercer.

Gregory Hart with shell-company directors.

Gregory Hart at dinner with Derek.

My Derek.

The spreadsheet coward.

I stared at the photo.

“What is he doing there?”

Mara leaned over.

“Derek Shaw. Financial analyst. Worked for Hart Industries five years ago.”

The room tilted.

Five years ago.

The worst day of my life.

Vanessa touched my arm.

“Emily?”

I opened a file folder with Derek’s name on it.

Inside were emails.

He had helped flag irregularities in Hart accounts.

Then buried them.

Then received a payment.

Then left me the same week.

Not because I was a financial liability.

Because my father’s medical debt made me easy to abandon without suspicion.

Derek had not simply been cruel.

He had been paid to disappear from scrutiny.

My entire worst day had been part of someone else’s cover-up.

I sat on a box.

Vanessa knelt in front of me.

“Breathe.”

“I hate rich people,” I whispered.

“I know.”

“You are rich.”

“I hate us too right now.”

That made me laugh and cry at once.

Then my phone rang.

My mother.

I answered with shaking hands.

“Mom?”

Her voice was panicked.

“Emily, there are men outside the apartment.”

My blood turned to ice.

“Noah?”

“He’s with me. He’s scared.”

Vanessa looked at me.

Colin’s secret, hidden for four years, rose like a wave about to drown everything.

Mara grabbed her keys.

“We move now.”

We raced to my mother’s apartment.

Too late.

The door was open.

Furniture overturned.

My mother crying.

And Noah gone.

For one moment, I could not understand the room.

His dinosaur cup on the floor.

His little shoes by the door.

His drawing of us on the fridge.

Gone.

My son was gone.

The sound that came out of me did not feel human.

Vanessa caught me before I fell.

Mara was already on the phone.

My mother sobbed.

“They said you stole from Mr. Hart. They said they were taking him somewhere safe.”

Safe.

I nearly vomited.

My phone buzzed.

Unknown number.

A photo appeared.

Noah sitting in the backseat of a car, clutching his stuffed dinosaur, eyes wide with fear.

Below it, one message:

Tell Prescott to confess, or the boy disappears for good.

Vanessa whispered, “Emily… who is he?”

I looked at the photo.

At my son’s face.

At Colin’s smile trembling on his mouth.

“Noah,” I said, voice breaking, “is Colin’s son.”


Chapter Eight — Colin Finds Out

Colin learned he was a father in a police interview room.

Not ideal.

But nothing about our story had ever been kind.

His lawyers had secured limited release for questioning under supervision when Mara brought him the phone.

I was already there, shaking so badly Vanessa had wrapped her coat around my shoulders.

Colin entered the room in a wrinkled shirt, no tie, jaw unshaven, eyes exhausted.

The moment he saw me, he knew something was wrong.

“What happened?”

I could not speak.

Mara handed him the phone.

He looked at the photo.

His entire body went still.

Not shock.

Recognition.

Deep.

Primitive.

Impossible to deny.

His eyes lifted to mine.

“Emily.”

I broke.

“He’s yours.”

Silence.

The kind that changes lives.

Colin looked back at the photo.

The little boy with his smile.

His eyes.

His stubborn chin.

“How old?” he asked.

“Four.”

His breath left him like he had been hit.

“Four.”

“I tried to find you.”

His eyes closed.

“I know.”

“No, you don’t. I had nothing. Just Colin. Just a note. I tried the hotel. I tried—”

“I believe you.”

That undid me.

He stepped closer.

Stopped.

“May I?”

I nodded, not knowing what he asked until he wrapped his arms around me.

Not as a lover.

Not first.

As a man holding the mother of the child he had just discovered and already feared losing.

His voice broke against my hair.

“What is his name?”

“Noah.”

Colin made a sound.

Almost a laugh.

Almost a sob.

“Noah,” he whispered.

Vanessa was crying silently near the window.

I looked at her over Colin’s shoulder.

“I’m sorry.”

She shook her head.

“No. Save him first. Apologize later.”

That was why I loved her.

Colin pulled back.

Something had changed in him.

The billionaire mask was gone.

The arrogant protector remained, but now it had a target.

His son.

“Who took him?” he asked.

Mara answered, “Gregory Hart’s people, likely with Daniel Mercer’s financing.”

Colin’s eyes turned lethal.

I grabbed his arm.

“No. You cannot go full billionaire revenge thriller and get arrested again.”

His gaze snapped to mine.

“They have my son.”

“Yes. And he needs his father free, not dramatic.”

The word father hit him.

He swallowed.

Then nodded.

“Tell me what to do.”

Colin Prescott, the man who usually commanded rooms by existing, looked at me and waited.

So I told him.

We would not confess.

We would not panic.

We would leak enough evidence to make Gregory move Noah.

We would track the car.

We would use Vanessa as bait only if she agreed.

Vanessa said, “Absolutely not.”

Then, two seconds later, “Fine. But I’m wearing flats.”

Even Mara smiled.

Colin looked at me through the chaos.

“You’re incredible.”

I wanted to say, You missed four years.

I wanted to say, Don’t look at me like that.

I wanted to say, Our son has your smile and asks impossible questions and hates peas.

Instead, I said, “Save compliments for after we get Noah back.”

His face hardened.

“Yes, ma’am.”

Damn him.

Even then, I almost smiled.


Chapter Nine — The Rescue

Gregory moved Noah to an unfinished Hart property outside the city.

A luxury wellness resort that had never opened because apparently even crime sometimes has construction delays.

The plan was simple.

Which meant it immediately went wrong.

Vanessa called Gregory, pretending to break.

She told him she would sign control of her shares if he released the child.

He agreed too fast.

Mara traced the call.

Colin’s security team surrounded the property.

The police, now holding enough evidence to stop treating Colin as the villain, stayed three minutes out.

Then Daniel Mercer appeared with Noah.

My son looked so small in his arms.

Tiny sneakers.

Dinosaur hoodie.

Tear-streaked face.

“Mommy!” he screamed when he saw me.

I nearly ran.

Colin caught my hand.

Not to stop me.

To steady me.

His own hand was shaking.

Daniel held a gun low at his side.

“Prescott,” he shouted. “Confess publicly, transfer your voting shares, and the kid walks.”

Colin stepped forward.

“Noah,” he called gently.

My son stared at him.

Confused.

Afraid.

Something in Colin’s face broke.

“Hey, buddy,” he said, voice rough. “I’m Colin. I’m a friend of your mom.”

Not father.

Not yet.

Even then, he did not take what had not been given.

Noah sniffed.

“Do you have snacks?”

A sob-laugh tore from me.

Colin’s mouth trembled.

“Not on me. But I can acquire snacks.”

Noah nodded, considering.

“Okay.”

Daniel snarled, “Enough.”

Everything happened quickly then.

Vanessa appeared from the side entrance, shouting at Gregory, who had arrived through the back with signed documents.

Mara’s people cut the lights.

Colin moved when Daniel looked away.

I saw the billionaire become something else.

Not reckless.

Precise.

Furious.

He disarmed Daniel in three brutal seconds.

Noah ran.

I dropped to my knees and caught him.

His little arms wrapped around my neck.

“Mommy, I was brave but I cried.”

I sobbed into his hair.

“You were very brave.”

Colin stood a few feet away, chest heaving, eyes fixed on Noah as if looking too closely might scare him.

Noah peeked over my shoulder.

“Are you the snack man?”

Colin let out a broken laugh.

“Yes.”

Noah studied him.

“You look like me.”

The whole world stopped.

Colin’s eyes filled.

I pulled back slightly.

“Noah,” I whispered. “This is Colin.”

“I know.”

“He is…” My throat closed.

Colin crouched slowly, keeping distance.

Only four feet.

But it felt like crossing years.

His voice was gentle.

“I’m your dad, if that’s okay with you.”

Noah frowned.

“My dad?”

“Yes.”

“Where were you?”

The question hit like a blade.

Colin accepted it.

“I didn’t know about you. I should have. I’m sorry.”

Noah considered this.

Then said, “Do you like dinosaurs?”

Colin wiped at his face quickly.

“I can learn.”

Noah nodded.

“Okay. You can be my dad.”

I cried harder.

Vanessa sobbed loudly behind us and then yelled, “I’m fine!” at no one.

The police arrived.

Gregory Hart was arrested.

Daniel Mercer too.

Derek later tried to run and was caught at the airport with an embarrassingly small suitcase and an even smaller amount of dignity.

The nightmare ended under fluorescent lights and police sirens.

But Colin stayed crouched in front of Noah until my son reached out and touched his face.

Right near the scar by his eyebrow.

“Mommy said I have your smile,” Noah said.

Colin looked at me.

Every wall between us cracked.

“Yes,” Colin whispered. “You do.”


Chapter Ten — The Wedding That Didn’t Happen

Vanessa did not marry Colin.

Obviously.

She did, however, keep the cake.

“All of it,” she announced two days later from her father’s hospital room, wearing sweatpants and a tiara from her canceled reception. “I have earned emotional frosting.”

Her father survived.

He was cleared after Gregory’s documents proved he had been framed and medically manipulated into stepping back from company oversight.

Hart Industries stabilized.

Colin was publicly exonerated.

His arrest became a scandal, then a lawsuit, then a corporate bloodbath that ended with Gregory and Daniel in prison and Colin somehow richer, which annoyed Vanessa.

“Men really do fail upward,” she said.

Colin looked offended.

“I was framed.”

“And yet wealthier.”

“Fair.”

Our friendship survived.

Not instantly.

Not without tears.

Vanessa came to my apartment a week after Noah’s rescue with cupcakes and mascara already running.

“I’m not mad you slept with him five years ago,” she said.

“I’m glad.”

“I’m mad he was better looking than the men I’ve slept with.”

I laughed until I cried.

Then she hugged me.

“I’m also mad you went through pregnancy alone.”

“I didn’t know how to find him.”

“I know.”

“I should have told you at the wedding.”

“I probably would have thrown up on my dress.”

“That dress cost more than my car.”

“Exactly. Tragic.”

We healed the way real friends do.

Badly at first.

Then honestly.

As for Colin, he entered fatherhood like a man preparing for war.

He bought parenting books.

All of them.

He made spreadsheets.

I threatened him with Derek’s ghost if he ever used the phrase “efficiency model” near Noah.

He apologized immediately.

He asked before visiting.

Asked before buying gifts.

Asked before introducing Noah to his family.

Asked before telling the press anything.

He did not demand forgiveness because he had not known.

He did not claim rights before earning trust.

He showed up.

That was all.

And everything.

At first, Noah called him Colin.

Then Snack Man.

Then sometimes Dad when sleepy.

The first time it happened, Colin froze so completely I thought he had short-circuited.

Noah was half-asleep on the couch, dinosaur documentary playing softly.

“Dad,” he mumbled, “stegosaurus has plates.”

Colin looked at me.

I looked at him.

His eyes were wet.

“Yes,” he whispered. “It does.”

Later, in the kitchen, Colin stood by the sink pretending to drink water.

I said, “You’re allowed to cry.”

He said, “I’m hydrated through emotion.”

I laughed.

He smiled.

And there he was again.

Room 1704.

Not the billionaire.

Not the almost groom.

The man who had once seen me crying into a martini and made me laugh when I thought laughter had left for good.


Warm Ending — The Second First Kiss

One year later, Vanessa got married.

Not to Colin.

To Mara, actually.

Nobody saw that coming except everyone with eyes.

Their wedding was small, chaotic, full of excellent cake, and featured Noah as ring bearer.

He took his role very seriously and asked whether the rings had tracking devices “for safety.”

Colin said, “Good question.”

I said, “Do not encourage him.”

Colin smiled.

“Too late.”

After the ceremony, Noah fell asleep on my mother’s lap, frosting on his cheek, one tiny hand still clutching a toy dinosaur.

Colin stood beside me beneath string lights in the garden.

For a long time, neither of us spoke.

Then he said, “A wedding brought you back to me.”

I looked at him.

“A wedding almost married you to my best friend.”

“Temporary logistical complication.”

I laughed.

He smiled softly.

Then grew serious.

“I missed four years.”

My smile faded.

“Yes.”

“I will regret that forever.”

“I know.”

“I can’t fix it.”

“No.”

“But I can be here for every year he lets me.”

My throat tightened.

“He already lets you.”

Colin looked toward Noah.

Love softened his face so completely it hurt.

Then he looked back at me.

“And you?”

There it was.

The question we had avoided for a year.

Not because desire was gone.

It was not.

It lived between us in quiet moments.

When his hand brushed mine over Noah’s school forms.

When he laughed in my kitchen.

When he looked at me like he remembered every inch of a night we had both tried to file under mistake and failed.

I took a breath.

“You hurt me.”

His jaw tightened.

“I know.”

“Not intentionally. But you did.”

“Yes.”

“I built a life without you.”

“And it is beautiful.”

That made tears burn behind my eyes.

“I don’t need rescuing.”

“No,” he said softly. “You never did.”

“I don’t need your money.”

“I know.”

“I don’t need a father for Noah who comes with conditions.”

“He won’t.”

I looked at him.

“What do you want, Colin?”

His eyes held mine.

“Permission to love you in daylight.”

The words landed gently.

That was the surprise.

For a man who could buy towers, crush companies, and command rooms, he asked like someone who understood the answer might be no.

I stepped closer.

“This is not room 1704.”

“No.”

“No disappearing before sunrise.”

“Never.”

“No deciding what’s best for me because you have more money.”

A faint smile.

“I am occasionally intelligent enough to be corrected.”

“Occasionally?”

“I’m trying to appear humble.”

“You’re failing.”

“I know.”

I touched the scar near his eyebrow.

The one Noah loved asking about.

The one I remembered from a night that had changed everything.

Colin closed his eyes.

When he opened them, there was no arrogance left.

Only hope.

So I kissed him.

Not like the first night.

Not grief.

Not escape.

Not loneliness trying to feel alive.

This kiss was slower.

Wiser.

A little sad for what we missed.

A lot grateful for what survived.

When we pulled apart, Colin rested his forehead against mine.

“Emily.”

“Yes?”

“I still owe you breakfast.”

I laughed into his chest.

“You owe me four years of breakfasts.”

His arms came around me carefully.

“Then I’d better start tomorrow.”

Years later, people still tell the story wrong.

They say I had a one-night stand with a stranger and found him years later at my best friend’s wedding.

They say the groom was my son’s father.

They say secrets ruined the ceremony.

They say a billionaire discovered he had a child and won back the woman he never forgot.

People love neat stories.

The truth was messier.

The truth was grief in a hotel bar.

A note on a pillow.

A pregnancy test on a bathroom floor.

A best friend in a wedding dress telling the truth.

A little boy asking his father for snacks before forgiveness.

A man who had everything learning he had missed the only thing that mattered.

And me?

I learned that love does not always arrive on time.

Sometimes it gets lost.

Sometimes it returns at the worst possible moment wearing a tuxedo and standing beside your best friend.

Sometimes forgiveness begins not with grand gestures, but with showing up for preschool pickup.

Now, every Saturday, Colin makes breakfast.

Badly.

Noah rates the pancakes with brutal honesty.

“Too round,” he said once.

Colin looked betrayed.

“Pancakes are meant to be round.”

“Dinosaurs are better.”

So Colin bought dinosaur molds.

Of course he did.

Vanessa visits often with Mara and claims she is Noah’s “almost stepmother by canceled wedding rights.”

Noah accepts this because she brings cake.

My mother adores Colin, though she pretends not to because she says men should never become too confident.

Smart woman.

And sometimes, late at night, after Noah is asleep, Colin finds me by the window.

He always comes slowly enough that I can turn.

Always asks with his eyes before his hands settle at my waist.

Always remembers that the first night began in grief, but this life began with choice.

“Still here?” he asks sometimes.

I smile.

“Still here.”

Then he kisses me like morning is no longer something he has to leave before.

And every time Noah laughs from the next room, that same crooked smile lighting his face, I remember the moment in the chapel when the groom walked in and my whole world cracked open.

I thought it was the end.

It was not.

It was the truth arriving late.

And sometimes, late is still in time.

THE END

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