The Billionaire Saw The Woman He Left On TV Holding A Baby-kieutrinh

For four seconds, Ethan Carlisle believed the baby on the evening news was dead.

The thought arrived before reason could stop it.

It came while rain needled the glass walls of his Seattle office and the television filled with emergency lights, wet pavement, and a reporter speaking in that careful voice people use when they do not yet know how bad the wreck is.

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Ethan had been sitting behind a desk big enough to make other men feel smaller.

A nine-hundred-million-dollar contract waited under his pen.

His assistant had brought him black coffee thirty minutes earlier, and it sat untouched beside a leather folder stamped with the name of a company he was about to absorb.

None of it mattered once the camera cut to the curb beside the ambulance.

A woman sat there with blood at her temple and a baby pressed to her chest.

Her dark hair was loose.

Her sweater was torn.

Her whole body curved around the little blue blanket as if the city, the traffic, the fire trucks, and the rain were all trying to take that child from her.

Then she turned her face.

Ethan stood so fast his chair hit the window behind him.

“Harper,” he whispered.

No one in the office heard him.

The market analyst on the television kept talking.

The red ticker kept crawling.

The reporter said a silver SUV had run a red light near Pioneer Square and struck a compact sedan carrying a woman and an infant.

Ethan did not hear the rest.

He saw only Harper Monroe sitting under emergency lights with a child in her arms.

Fifteen months had passed since the night he had watched her leave his kitchen.

He could still see her there if he let himself.

Bare feet on cold tile.

His white dress shirt hanging loose on her shoulders.

Her hair still damp from the shower.

Her voice quiet enough to hurt.

“Do you see a life with me, Ethan?”

It had been a simple question.

It had deserved a human answer.

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