Billionaire Saw His Ex Return Formula And Face The Son He Missed-kieutrinh

The first thing Caspian Vance noticed was the receipt shaking in Serafina’s hand.

He had walked into the pharmacy for pain medicine, irritated by a headache he blamed on investors, screens, and another night of sleep he had treated like a weakness.

A young mother stood at the register with a baby pressed to her chest, her shoulders curved in the unmistakable posture of someone trying not to fall apart in public.

Image

Then she turned.

Serafina.

The baby in her arms was crying into the fabric at her collarbone.

Doris, the cashier, held a plain container of formula beside the register.

“I can take this off, honey,” Doris said softly.

Serafina nodded once, and Caspian saw the receipt.

The receipt said the formula was removed from the order so she could pay for diapers and medicine.

He did not have to read every line.

The scene read him first.

Ten months earlier, he had stood in his own kitchen with a phone in one hand and a contract folder in the other.

Serafina had tried to stop him before he left for another investor dinner.

“I need five minutes,” she had said.

He remembered saying, “A family can wait; this contract cannot.”

At the time, he had considered it practical.

Standing in the pharmacy, watching her return food for the baby in her arms, he understood that some sentences do not end when the speaker walks away.

Serafina saw him.

The color left her face so quickly that Theo stopped crying for half a breath, as if even the baby felt the room shift.

Caspian stepped forward.

Then he stopped because the baby looked at him.

The boy had Caspian’s mouth.

He had the same little crease between the brows that Caspian’s mother used to laugh about in old photographs.

“Serafina,” Caspian said.

She held Theo closer.

“Do not,” she whispered.

One word, and it carried ten months.

Doris looked from one of them to the other and quietly slid the formula back toward the bag.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *