The CEO's Secret Baby - Editor's Pick

The CEO's Secret Baby

Chapter 1

JFK Airport, New York City

Some nights change everything.

You don't know it at the time, of course. You think you're just having a drink to kill time, waiting out a storm, making small talk with a stranger because the alternative is sitting alone with your thoughts. You think it's just another Thursday night, another canceled flight, another minor inconvenience in a life full of them.

And then you look up, and there's someone beside you who makes your heart do things it shouldn't, and suddenly the universe shifts on its axis and nothing is ever the same again.

That was the night I met Adrian Thornton.

That was the night the whole equation rewrote itself.

The rain beat against the windows of the airport hotel bar like it was trying to get inside. Not the gentle Seattle drizzle I'd grown up with, but a full-force New York downpour that had grounded every flight out of JFK and stranded thousands of travelers in various states of frustration.

It was a relentless, rhythmic drumming that seemed to vibrate through the glass and into the very bones of the building. Inside, the air was thick with the scent of damp wool, spilled beer, and collective resignation. The low hum of conversation rose and fell in waves, punctuated by the clinking of heavy glass against coasters and the occasional groan as the departure board flashed yet another row of red CANCELLED notifications. I traced the rim of my glass with a fingernail, watching a drop of condensation slide down the side, pooling on the napkin below. It was a small, insignificant thing, but in that moment, I felt just like that droplet—unmoored, sliding inevitably downward, waiting to be absorbed into something formless.

I was on my third vodka tonic when he sat down next to me.

"Grounded too?"

I looked up from my drink to find the most beautiful man I'd ever seen watching me with warm brown eyes that crinkled at the corners when he smiled. Dark hair slightly disheveled, suit jacket discarded, tie loosened—the universal uniform of a businessman at the end of a very long day.

"Seattle," I confirmed. "They're saying maybe tomorrow morning, but the weather looks bad."

"Minneapolis." He signaled the bartender. "Scotch, neat." Then, to me: "Mind if I join you? Misery loves company, and all that."

The request hung in the air between us, suspended like the condensation on my glass. I watched his hands as he loosened his tie—long fingers, capable and sure, the kind of hands that looked like they could build things or take them apart with equal skill. A shiver that had nothing to do with the hotel's air conditioning traced its way down my spine. It was reckless to invite a stranger into my space, even just the space of a small cocktail table, but the exhaustion in his eyes mirrored my own so perfectly it felt like looking in a mirror.

Under normal circumstances, I might have said no. I'd learned the hard way to be cautious around charming strangers, especially men who looked like they'd stepped out of a magazine spread. But there was something about the way he asked—polite, almost uncertain, like he was genuinely prepared to accept a refusal.

"Sure," I heard myself say. "I'm Holly."

"Adrian." His smile widened, transforming his face from merely handsome to devastating. "Adrian Thornton."

The name meant nothing to me then. I wouldn't learn until later that Adrian Thornton was the CEO of Thornton Enterprises, one of the largest real estate development companies in the country. That he was worth more than a small nation. That his face regularly appeared in business magazines and gossip columns alike.

That night, he was just Adrian. A tired traveler stuck in the same predicament as me, with a wry sense of humor and an unexpected talent for making me laugh.

We talked for hours. About nothing important at first—favorite movies, worst travel disasters, the particular hell of airport food. But as the drinks flowed and the bar emptied, the conversation deepened. He told me about his father's death the previous year, how the weight of the family business had landed on his shoulders before he was ready. I told him about escaping my small town, about building a career in marketing, about the loneliness of always being the new person in a city that never seemed to notice you.

I didn't tell him about the nights I spent staring at the ceiling, wondering if this was all there was. I didn't tell him about the hollow ache that sometimes woke me up at 3:00 AM. But somehow, he seemed to hear it anyway. He listened with a focused intensity that was almost unnerving, his brown eyes tracking my every expression as if he were memorizing me for a test he couldn't afford to fail. The air around us grew heavy, charged with a static electricity that sparked every time our knees accidentally brushed under the small table.

"You don't seem like someone who gets overlooked," Adrian said, his voice dropping into something more intimate. The bar was nearly empty now, just us and a few other stranded souls nursing their drinks at distant tables.

"You'd be surprised." I traced a pattern in the condensation on my glass. "I'm very good at being invisible when I need to be."

"That's a shame." He leaned closer, and I caught the scent of his cologne—something woody and expensive that made my pulse jump. "Because I haven't been able to stop looking at you since I sat down."

It was a line. I knew it was a line. But there was something in his expression—earnest and hungry and a little bit vulnerable—that made me believe he meant it.

"My room is on the eighth floor," I heard myself say. "In case you wanted to continue this conversation somewhere more private."

The walk to the elevator felt like the longest journey of my life. Neither of us spoke. The tension between us was thick enough to cut with a knife, electric with possibility and the kind of reckless desire that only happens between strangers in liminal spaces.

My heart hammered against my ribs, a frantic bird trying to escape a cage. Logic screamed at me to turn back, to go to the lobby, to book a separate room and lock the deadbolt. You don't know him, the sensible voice in my head warned. He could be anyone. But then he glanced at me, a sideways look full of heat and promise, and the sensible voice was drowned out by the roar of my own blood. I felt unmoored, adrift in the storm, and for the first time in my life, I didn't want to find the shore. I wanted to drown.

The moment the elevator doors closed, he kissed me.

And I kissed him back.

What followed was the kind of night you read about in romance novels—intense and consuming and utterly disconnected from the real world. Adrian was passionate and attentive, the kind of lover who made you forget your own name while simultaneously making you feel like the center of the universe.

He traced every inch of my body with devastating attention. Made me come apart so many times I lost count. Whispered things against my skin that I'd replay in my memory for years to come.

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By the time dawn lightened the windows, we were wound around each other in the hotel sheets, exhausted and satisfied and suspended in that perfect moment before reality came crashing back.

The gray light of dawn filtered through the heavy curtains, painting stripes across the hotel carpet. I lay still, afraid that moving would shatter the fragile peace of the room. Adrian's arm was heavy across my waist, a grounding weight that felt deceptively permanent. I studied the curve of his shoulder, the dark stubble shadowing his jaw, and felt a pang of preemptive loss so sharp it almost stole my breath. This wasn't my life. This was a bubble, a fantasy spun from rain and whiskey, and bubbles always popped eventually.

"I want to see you again," Adrian said, his fingers brushing absently over my shoulder. "Really see you. Not just a one-night thing."

"I live in Seattle," I reminded him. "You live in New York."

"I have a private jet. Distance is a solvable problem." He propped himself up on one elbow, looking down at me with an expression that made my heart stutter. "Give me your number. Let me take you to dinner. A real date, in a real restaurant, with conversation that doesn't involve canceled flights or airport bars."

I should have said yes. Should have given him my number and seen where this connection might lead. But something held me back—some instinct I couldn't name, some fear of letting this beautiful stranger too close to my carefully constructed life.

"I'll think about it," I said instead.

"That's not a no." His smile was hopeful, boyish. "I'll take it."

We exchanged numbers anyway, despite my hesitation. He programmed his directly into my phone, and I watched my own number appear in his.

Then my flight was reboarding, and the moment was over, and I was walking away from Adrian Thornton without looking back.

I told myself it was for the best. That a man like that—wealthy, powerful, probably used to women falling at his feet—wouldn't really want someone like me. That our connection had been fueled by alcohol and circumstance and the kind of false intimacy that airports created.

I told myself a lot of things.

Two weeks later, when I discovered I was pregnant, those comfortable lies stopped working.

I stared at the positive pregnancy test for what felt like hours, sitting on the bathroom floor of my tiny Seattle apartment, trying to make sense of the impossible.

The tile was cold beneath my legs, seeping through my thin pajama pants, but I couldn't bring myself to move. The bathroom fan rattled overhead, a dying mechanical wheeze that had annoyed me for months but now sounded like the only thing tethering me to reality. Two pink lines. Two stark, unapologetic lines that had the power to dismantle the carefully organized solitude I'd built. My hand shook as I set the plastic stick on the edge of the sink, half-expecting the lines to fade or rearrange themselves into a negative if I just looked away for a second. They didn't. They sat there, glowing with a chemical certainty that made the walls of the small bathroom feel like they were closing in, pressing the air from my lungs until I had to gasp for breath.

We'd used protection. I'd been careful—I was always careful. But nothing was foolproof, and now I was paying the price for one reckless night with a stranger I barely knew.

I considered calling him. Picked up my phone a dozen times, stared at his contact information, tried to figure out what I would even say. Hi, Adrian, remember me? The woman from the airport? Surprise—you're going to be a father!

Every scenario I imagined ended badly. He'd think I was trying to trap him, to stake a claim on his fortune. He'd offer me money to go away. He'd deny the baby was his. Or worse—he'd take the child from me, use his wealth and power to prove I was an unfit mother, raise our baby in a world I couldn't begin to navigate.

I couldn't risk it. Couldn't risk losing the one thing that was already starting to feel precious, despite how unexpected it was.

So I deleted his number. Eventually, I changed mine entirely. Told myself I was protecting both of us—him from an obligation he never asked for, myself from the inevitable disappointment of watching another man walk away.

I'd already made my decision. But now, with a baby growing inside me, I wondered if I'd made a terrible mistake. I thought about trying to find him—Adrian Thornton couldn't be that hard to track down. But the fear held me back.

So I stayed silent. Kept my secret. Raised my daughter alone.

My daughter was born nine months later, perfect and beautiful. Rosalind Mae Monroe—Rosie for short. She had her father's coloring—dark hair and warm brown eyes, the same eyes I'd stared into across an airport bar. I built a freelance marketing career around nap schedules and pediatrician appointments and the constant, grinding exhaustion of single parenthood. My mother helped when she could, flying up from California for the first few months, but eventually she had to go back to her own life, and I had to figure out how to build mine.

For four years, I thought I had it figured out. Rosie and me against the world, making our way, building something that was ours alone.

Then Mitchell found me.

And everything fell apart.

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