Billionaire Found His Twins, Then His Ex Tried To Erase Them-kieutrinh

Alex Reed saw the silver locket before he saw the child wearing it.

It swung against a little cream sweater near Bethesda Fountain, catching the late sun in a way that made his chest tighten before his mind caught up.

He had bought that locket six years ago for Veronica Hale, back when he still believed he could love a woman between meetings and call it devotion.

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The girl turned, and Alex stopped walking.

She had Veronica’s hair, his eyes, and the same stubborn little frown he saw in his own childhood photographs.

Then another girl ran past her, identical enough to make the whole park tilt.

“Lily, Sophie, time to go,” a woman called from a bench.

Alex turned toward the voice.

Veronica stood with one hand on her purse strap and the other pressed flat to the bench, as if the wood under her palm was the only thing holding her in the present.

For six years, Alex had told himself she left because she could not survive his ambition.

Now two small girls were staring at him with his own eyes.

“Veronica,” he said.

The girls went quiet.

Sophie leaned against her sister and asked, “Mommy, who is he?”

Veronica looked at Alex, and the guilt in her face gave him an answer he was not ready to hold.

“He’s an old friend,” she said.

Alex felt something in him go cold.

He had been called ruthless, brilliant, impossible, and untouchable, but no title had ever hurt like that one.

“Do not,” he said softly, “make me an old friend to my own children.”

Veronica closed her eyes.

The twins looked from one adult to the other, confused by a silence too heavy for a park at dusk.

Veronica asked the girls to watch the fountain for one more minute, then stepped close enough for Alex to hear her whisper.

“Not here.”

“Are they mine?”

She did not answer quickly enough to save either of them.

“Yes,” she said.

The word landed harder than any accusation.

Alex looked at the girls again, and his life of towers, contracts, private flights, and acquisitions became a clean glass wall with nothing living behind it.

Six years had gone by while Lily and Sophie learned to walk, talk, read, fight over cereal, and ask questions at bedtime.

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