LOGINBlurb Five years ago, Celyne Ardent walked away from the only man she ever loved. Alexander Hale—Los Angeles’ most powerful billionaire—broke her heart and left her believing love only ends in destruction. Now she’s back in the city she once fled… carrying a secret that could end her life. When Celyne agrees to become a surrogate before cancer steals her chance at motherhood forever, fate plays a cruel joke. The baby she carries belongs to Alexander Hale. Her ex-husband. The same man who shattered her. And the man now engaged to the woman she once caught in his bed. Forced to live under the same roof as the man who once promised her forever, Celyne must survive a house filled with secrets, betrayal, and dangerous enemies who want her gone. But the deeper she falls back into Alexander’s orbit, the more terrifying truths begin to surface. Because the miscarriages that destroyed her marriage were never accidents. And the child growing inside her… might cost her everything including her life.
View MoreCelye pov
The paper trembles in my hand.
Not because of the cold.
Not because of the wind slicing through the quiet Paris evening.
But because of the word printed in bold across the top of the page.Malignant.
The doctor had said it gently. Too gently.
“Stage two ovarian cancer, Ms. Celyne. We caught it early, but your uterus will likely need to be removed within the year and you need to start treatment immediately to avoid it from worsening.”
A tear slips down my cheek, warm against the winter air. Then another. And another. They fall soundlessly onto the diagnosis sheet like quiet confessions.
I don’t remember leaving the hospital.
I don’t remember how I ended up walking.
But I am walking now.
Endlessly.
The streets of Paris blur around me—golden lamps reflecting off wet pavement, the distant hum of traffic, laughter spilling from cafés. Life moving forward. People living.
And I am standing still inside a sentence that has already decided my future.
My womb will soon be gone.
The one part of me that could create life.
The irony tastes cruel.
I survived a car crash at twelve.
I survived losing my parents.
I survived my aunt’s bitterness, her sharp words slicing into me like I was responsible for their deaths.
But this?
A car horn blares violently.
My body jerks backward just as headlights flash inches from me. A vehicle screeches to a halt.
The driver rolls down the window, shouting in rapid French, furious and frightened. “Êtes-vous fou? ”
I blinked.
I am standing in the middle of the road.
“Sorry” I whisper, though he can’t hear me.
I step back onto the sidewalk. My heart pounds violently against my ribs. I press the diagnosis to my chest like I can force it back inside my body where it belongs.
The next morning, I am no longer in Paris.
I am standing beneath the burning sun of Los Angeles.
The air feels different here—thicker, louder, unapologetic. The city pulses with movement. Cars honk. People rush. Skyscrapers glitter with ambition.
Paris was where I hid.
Los Angeles is where things happen.
My fingers tighten around my suitcase handle. Clara’s text message glows on my phone screen.
Sunset Boulevard. Blue gate. Ill be waiting.
I raise my hand to flag a cab.
The driver doesn’t ask questions. I’m grateful.
As we move through the city, I watch everything blur past—the palm trees, the billboards, couples arguing on the sideways, a mother dragging a toddler who refused to move.
The cab finally stops in front of a modern house tucked behind a cobalt-blue gate. My throat tightens.
Home.
Or at least the closest thing to it.
The door swings open before I even knock.
Clara Noah stands there in cream silk trousers and bare feet, her dark hair falling perfectly over one shoulder. Polished. Controlled. Untouchable.
Until she sees my face.
“Celyne…” she breathes.
That’s all it takes.
The strength I’ve been pretending to carry collapses.
I drop my suitcase. I drop the paper. I drop to my knees in front of her like something inside me has been cut loose.
“I’m dying Clara,” I choke.
The word tastes metallic.
Clara doesn’t hesitate. She falls with me, wrapping her arms around my shoulders as I bury my face against her legs like a child.
“I’m going to lose it,” I sob. “They’re going to take it away. I won’t have— I won’t ever—”
She grips my face firmly, forcing me to look at her.
“You are not dying,” she says sharply. “Do you hear me? You are not dying.”
But her eyes glisten.
She pulls me inside.
Clara has always been strength in heels.
She grew up two streets from mine. Her father drank his disappointments. Her mother worked three jobs and still smiled like exhaustion was a choice. Clara learned early how to survive in silence.
Now she sits across from me at her marble kitchen island, reading my diagnosis with tight lips.
“How long?” she asks quietly.
“Months before surgery,” I whisper. “Maybe less.”
Silence stretches between us.
She sets the paper down slowly.
“We’ll get second opinions.”
“I already did.”
“We’ll get third.”
I almost laugh.
Her phone buzzes on the counter. She ignores it.
“I won’t let this break you,” she says, voice low and steady.
That’s the thing about Clara.
She believes control is something you seize, not something you wait for.
Night falls quickly.
We sat on her balcony overlooking the city lights. I watch the skyline shimmer. Somewhere below, someone is falling in love. Someone is celebrating. Someone is planning a future.
I press my hand against my stomach.
My body feels like borrowed time.
“I don’t want it to end like this,” I whisper.
“It won’t.”
“I don’t want cancer to be the last thing my body remembers.”
Clara turns to me slowly.
“What are you saying?”
I don’t answer.
Because I don’t know yet.
But something is forming.
The next morning, sunlight filters through the sheer curtains.
Clara is on a business call when I walk into the kitchen. Her voice is sharp, authoritative, efficient.
She ends the call when she sees my expression.
“What is it?”
I stand in the middle of her pristine kitchen, barefoot, wearing one of her oversized shirts.
“I’ve made a decision,” I say.
Her eyes narrow slightly.
“Celyne…”
“If they’re going to take my womb,” I continue, my voice steadier than I feel, “then I’m going to use it one last time.”
The silence that follows is suffocating.
“What does that mean?” Clara asks carefully.
“It means I’m going to carry a child.”
Her face drains of color.
“For who?” she whispers.
I swallow.
“For someone who can’t.”
Clara stares at me as if I’ve just detonated something invisible between us.
“You’re not thinking clearly.”
“I’ve never been clearer.”
“You’re sick.”
“I’m alive.”
She steps toward me, her composure cracking for the first time.
“Celyne, this isn’t empowerment. This is desperation.”
“Maybe,” I say softly. “But it’s mine.”
The air thickens.
“You’re serious,” she breathes.
I nod.
“I’m going to become a surrogate mother.”
POV: Alexander I couldn’t focus. Not on work. Not on meetings. Not even on the endless reports sitting on my desk. My thoughts kept returning to the same thing. Celyne. I leaned back in my chair and rubbed my forehead. Why did I stand up for her? The question had been bothering me all day. I could have ignored it. I could have stayed silent. I could have looked away and acted as if nothing had happened. Wouldn’t that have been easier? Wouldn’t that have been the smart thing to do? After all, that was what I had done countless times before. Ignored things. Avoided things. Pretended not to see things. But this time… This time I couldn’t. The image of Elara grabbing her. The slap. The accusation. Something about it felt wrong. Very wrong.
Celyne povI needed air.That was the only thing running through my mind as I left the Hale mansion.The walls felt too close.The rooms felt too crowded.Every hallway felt like a trap waiting to close around me.Ever since the confrontation with Elara, I hadn’t been able to think clearly.The image of her holding my medication bottle kept replaying in my head.Again.And again.And again.I wrapped my arms around myself as I stepped through the entrance of the amusement park.The place was quieter than usual.Children laughed in the distance.Music drifted through the air.Families walked together.Couples held hands.It should have been comforting.Instead, it only reminded me of everything I had lost.My feet carried me toward a small corner hidden behind an old carousel.Nobody knew about this place.At least, nobody important.Whenever life became too much, I came here.Whenever I needed to think, I came here.Whenever I needed to escape reality, I came here.I slowly lowered my
Elara POVThe bottle shook in my hand. Not because I was nervous. Because I was angry. Furious. After everything, I had done to protect that child, after all the money spent on doctors, treatments, specialists and care. she had the audacity to hide medication from us. And somehow expected nobody to notice. I stared at Celyne. Her face had gone completely pale. Interesting. Very interesting. That wasn’t the face of an innocent person. That was the face of someone caught. “What is that?” she asked quietly. I laughed. “What is it?” “Give it back.” The moment those words left her mouth, I knew I was right. Whatever this medicine was, she desperately didn’t want anyone seeing it. “Not until you explain.” “There is nothing to explain.” “Really?” I held the bottle high
Celyne pov Three weeks. Three whole weeks had passed since the accident. Three weeks since I woke up in that hospital bed. Three weeks since someone tried to destroy everything. Yet somehow life had returned to normal. Or at least everyone pretended it had. The investigation had gone nowhere. No suspects. No answers. No justice. Just silence. Sometimes I wondered if they had truly searched at all. Because I knew what I felt that day. I knew I hadn’t simply fallen. Someone had touched me. Someone had pushed me. Someone wanted me gone. The thought still sent chills through me. Yet every day the mansion carried on as if nothing had happened. Breakfast. Lunch. Dinner. Meetings. Preparations. Check ups. Smiles. The same ro
Celyne povThe strange thing about getting what you ask for is realizing it doesn’t always feel the way you imagined. Ever since the night in the library, Alexander had done exactly what I wanted. Exactly. He kept his distance. No unnecessary conversati
Damien povIt had been weeks. Or maybe months. At this point, I wasn’t even sure anymore. Time had become strange ever since the last time I saw Celyne. Every day felt longer. Every thought seemed to lead back to her. And every decis
Alexander povThe mansion was unusually quiet.Too quiet.I sat alone in my room, staring at the glass of whiskey on the table.Untouched.My thoughts were elsewhere.On her.Thinking, something is wrong somewhereA frustrated sigh escaped my lips.Did she really think I joined them for dinner?The
Celyne povThe dining room was probably full by now.Vivian.Elara.Alexander.The same faces.The same conversations.The same reminders.I couldn’t do it.Not tonight.For the first time since returning to the Hale mansion, I decided to skipped dinner.No excuses.No explanations.I simply stayed












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