Chapter Two: What The Billionaire Did Next
Ethan Harmon crouched down.
Right there on the marble floor of his own grand hallway. The man who had built a billion-dollar company before he turned thirty. The man who had never asked anyone for anything.
He crouched down to the level of a four-year-old girl.
Lily peeked out from her mother’s neck.
Her face was wet. Her eyes were wide. She clutched Bun so tightly the rabbit’s torn ear stretched further.
“Hey,” Ethan said.
His voice was different now. Softer. Almost careful.
“You dropped something.”
He reached down. His fingers closed around the gold button.
He held it out to Lily.
Lily stared at him.
The silence stretched between them like a held breath.
Then, very slowly, she reached out.
Her tiny fingers wrapped around the button. She pulled it to her chest. Held it against Bun’s matted fur.
“Pretty,” she whispered.
“Yeah.”
Ethan’s voice cracked slightly on the word.
“It is.”
He stood up slowly.
The movement seemed to cost him something. His jaw was tight. His hands, when he pulled them from his pockets, were trembling.
He turned to face Natalie.
The silence in that hallway had weight now. Heavy and real and suffocating.
“Rosa and Lily are not going anywhere.”
Natalie’s eyes widened.
“Ethan—”
“They are not going anywhere.” He said it again. Slower this time. “Tonight or any night.”
Natalie stared at him.
Her jaw tightened. Her hands curled into fists at her sides.
“So you’re choosing a maid and her child over your own fiancée?”
Something moved across Ethan’s face.
Something complicated and old. Like a door opening onto a room nobody had been in for a very long time.
“I need you to go upstairs,” he said quietly.
Natalie didn’t move.
“Go upstairs, Natalie.”
She looked at him. Then at Rosa. Then at Lily, who was still clutching the gold button.
She walked up the stairs without looking back.
The front door closed somewhere in the distance.
Ethan and Rosa stood alone in the hallway.
Lily had fallen asleep. The morning’s terror had exhausted her. Her small body sagged against Rosa’s shoulder. Her fingers still curled around the button.
Rosa couldn’t look at him.
She stared at the marble floor. Counted the veins in the stone. Anything to avoid those eyes.
“Four years,” Ethan said.
Rosa said nothing.
“You worked in my house for four years.”
She nodded.
“And you never said a word.”
Her throat closed. The tears came without permission. She blinked them back, but they fell anyway.
“I didn’t know how,” she whispered.
“How to what?”
“How to tell a billionaire that he had a daughter.”
The word hung between them.
Daughter.
Ethan took a breath. It was unsteady. Wrong for a man who had built an empire on control.
“Whose?”
Rosa finally looked at him.
His face was pale. His eyes were dark with something she couldn’t name. Fear, maybe. Or hope. Or both.
“Yours,” she said. “She’s yours.”
The confession came out in fragments.
The charity gala. The corridor behind the main hall. Two hours of talking that felt like falling.
Three more meetings after that. Coffee. A walk in the rain. One night that Rosa had replayed so many times she had worn the memory thin.
Then nothing.
His company exploded. His phone stopped accepting personal calls. Her messages disappeared into the machinery of an assistant who had been told to screen everything.
She tried three times.
Three times, she got nothing.
“I thought you knew,” she said. “I thought you chose not to respond.”
Ethan’s hands were shaking.
“I never got any messages.”
“I found out later. Your assistant was fired for screening calls without permission.”
“Two years too late.”
Rosa closed her eyes.
“I was already raising her alone. I had already built a life. When I saw the job posting, I didn’t know it was your house. And by the time I found out—”
“You were already invisible.”
The word hit her like a slap.
Invisible.
Yes. That was exactly what she had become.
Ethan looked at Lily.
She was still asleep. Her dark hair fanned across Rosa’s shoulder. Her mouth was slightly open. Her fingers still curled around the gold button.
“She has my mother’s eyes,” he said.
Rosa’s breath caught.
“I noticed it months ago.” His voice was barely a whisper. “I didn’t let myself believe it, but I’ve been looking at those eyes my whole life.”
The silence between them was unbearable.
“Why didn’t you tell me?” he asked.
The question she had been waiting for. Dreading. Hoping for.
“Because I was afraid,” she said. “Because I needed this job. Because Lily needed a roof and food and—”
“I would have given you anything.”
“I didn’t know that.”
“You never asked.”
“You never looked.”
The words landed between them like broken glass.
Ethan stared at her.
And then, slowly, his face crumbled.