Chloe stood and faced Harrison. “Because when I tried to tell you, your assistant blocked my calls. Your lawyer returned my letters unopened. Your security team threw me out of your building when I came with the medical file.”
Harrison’s expression hardened. “That never happened.”
“It did.”
“I would have known.”
“You were in Singapore. I called. I emailed. I came to your office. Madeline told security I was unstable.”
At Madeline Vance’s name, Harrison went still.
“She saw the ultrasound,” Chloe said.
Harrison stared at her, pale.
Chloe ended it there. She sent the boys into the Bentley. Before getting in, she looked at him one last time.
“You humiliated me on that plane because you thought I had nothing. Now you know what you lost too.”
As the car pulled away, Harrison stood alone at the curb, watching the sons he had never known disappear.
For the first time in years, Chloe didn’t feel small. But she did feel afraid. Because Harrison Sterling had just learned he was a father—and men like Harrison did not accept being shut out.
At home in Lincoln Park, the boys were quiet. Their warm brick townhouse, messy with drawings, socks, toys, and breakfast smells, was nothing like Harrison’s penthouse. But it was theirs.
Lucas finally burst out, “Is that man really our dad?”
“Yes,” Chloe said.
“Why didn’t he come to our birthdays?”
Chloe sat with them. “When I found out I was pregnant, I tried to tell him. But people around him kept me away. He didn’t know.”
“Was he mean to you?” Leo asked.
Chloe chose her words carefully. “He hurt my feelings a long time ago.”
“Did you hurt his?”
She looked down. “Maybe.”
“Are we going to live with him?” Lucas asked.
“No. This is your home.”
Then her phone rang from a blocked number. Harrison.
“I need to see them,” he said.
“No.”
“They’re my children.”
“They are five-year-old boys who found out the truth in an airport because you couldn’t control yourself.”
“I know. I’m sorry.”
Once, that apology would have meant everything. Now it felt too small.
“They need time,” Chloe said.
“I’m not asking to take them. I’m asking to understand.”
Finally, she agreed to meet him the next day in a public park. One hour. No lawyers. No security. No Madeline.
“Madeline no longer works for me,” Harrison said coldly.
Chloe froze.
He had checked the archived security logs. Chloe had indeed come to his office five years earlier. She had stayed seventeen minutes before guards removed her on Madeline’s orders. Her calls had been redirected. Her emails filtered. Her letters destroyed.
“I told you,” Chloe whispered.
“I know,” Harrison said, and those two words carried more weight than any apology.
Then he asked about Julian Reyes—the man he had believed was Chloe’s lover.
“He wasn’t my lover,” Chloe said. “He was a genetic counselor.”
Her mother’s neurological disease might have been hereditary. Chloe had been getting tested before trying for children. The messages Harrison had found were about clinic appointments and results.
“You never let me explain,” she said.
He had seen phrases like “I can’t tell Harrison yet” and assumed betrayal. But the truth was fear. Chloe had been afraid she might carry a dangerous genetic marker.
“The results were negative,” she told him. “I was going to tell you that night. I bought baby shoes. The blue box on the table.”
Harrison whispered, “I threw it away.”
“I know.”
The next day, Harrison arrived at the park without an entourage, wearing a navy sweater and holding three small bags from a toy store. He looked nervous.
Lucas approached first. “What’s in the bags?”
“Books,” Harrison said. “And an apology.”
Leo narrowed his eyes. “Do you know how to apologize?”
“I’m learning.”
Harrison crouched carefully, giving them space. “I’m Harrison,” he said. “I know you learned something big yesterday. I’m sorry it happened that way. I didn’t know about you, but I should have listened to your mom.”
Leo studied him. “Are you our father?”
“Yes.”
“Do you want to be?”
Harrison’s voice broke. “More than I know how to explain.”
Mason whispered, “Are you going to make Mom cry?”
Harrison looked at Chloe, then back at him. “No. Not on purpose.”
For the next hour, the boys questioned him with brutal honesty. Did he have stairs? Did he eat cereal? Could he make pancakes? He listened to every question as if it mattered more than any business deal of his life.
Mason eventually sat beside him. Lucas talked loudly about dinosaurs. Leo remained cautious, watching everything.
When the hour ended, Harrison didn’t argue. “Thank you for letting me meet you,” he told the boys.
Lucas said, “You can come again if Mom says.”
Mason whispered, “Bye.” That single word nearly broke him.
Before Chloe left, Harrison handed her a folded document. “I pulled records from that year,” he said. “Madeline wasn’t acting alone.”
Chloe read the paper.
Payment authorization approved: Arthur Winters.
Her father.
Harrison’s voice was grim. “Your father paid Madeline three hundred thousand dollars after she blocked you from seeing me.”
Chloe went cold. Her father had helped her after the divorce. He bought her townhouse through a trust. Arranged doctors. Protected her during pregnancy. Or so she had believed.
Then her phone buzzed.
Dad: Don’t trust Harrison. He knows less than he thinks.
Another message came with a photo. Madeline stood outside a private clinic with Chloe’s father. Beside them was Julian Reyes.
The genetic counselor everyone believed had died four years ago. But the photo was dated three weeks earlier. Julian was alive.