Her lips parted. She glanced around, checking who could hear.
And then Eli said the sentence that shattered the last piece of my certainty.
“She told me my dad’s name,” he said, staring at me. “It’s you.”
For a moment, my brain refused to accept it. My world had been built on numbers, contracts, and proof—things you could audit. A child’s claim wasn’t proof.
But Grace’s face was.
She didn’t laugh. She didn’t deny it with outrage. She looked like someone who’d been caught stepping off a ledge.
“Nathan,” she whispered, voice cracking. “Not here.”
“Where?” I asked, the word coming out too sharp. “In the car? At home? Or in front of this kid you’ve been hiding?”
Eli’s shoulders rose like he was bracing for impact. I realized then he wasn’t trying to steal from me. He was trying to survive.
I lowered my voice. “Eli, how did you find this place?”
He rubbed his nose with his sleeve. “I saw the lights. I saw your picture on a poster. I thought… maybe you’d help. I didn’t know you’d be here.”
Grace grabbed my wrist. “Please,” she said, eyes shining. “Let’s talk privately. I’ll explain everything.”
“Everything?” I repeated. “Like why you told him I would hate him?”
Her lips trembled. “Because I was scared,” she admitted. “Because the last time you saw me before we got married… you said you couldn’t afford a distraction.”
That hit me like a bruise I didn’t know I had. Ten years ago, Grace and I had been different people. I was building my first company, sleeping on office couches, obsessed with growth. Grace had been my girlfriend for six months—bright, funny, messy in a way I secretly loved. Then she disappeared for weeks after a fight. When she came back, she said she’d taken care of “a mistake” and wanted a clean start. I believed her. I wanted to believe her.
Now I stared at the boy who looked too much like me to be coincidence.
“Come with me,” I said to Eli, swallowing the tremor in my chest. “We’re not doing this in a lobby.”
Grace’s eyes widened. “Nathan—”
“I said come,” I snapped, and the billionaire voice everyone feared slipped out before I could stop it. Eli flinched, and guilt stabbed me immediately. I softened. “I’m not mad at you,” I told him. “I’m trying to understand.”