Single Mom * Brooding Billionaire

Single Mom * Brooding Billionaire

last updateLast Updated : 2026-07-08
By:  Maccadie LaucrettaUpdated just now
Language: English
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Adia Mbeki is running on no sleep, no money, and no backup. Single mom. Coffee shop night shifts. A baby who cries more than she sleeps. She can’t afford to be late on rent. Not again. Enter Kael Sterling: cold, brooding billionaire CEO. Her landlord. The man who signs eviction notices before breakfast. But when he finds her asleep behind the counter at 3AM with her baby, something shifts. His deal is simple: Move into his penthouse. Be his “fake” live-in nanny. Let him pay the bills. No touching. No feelings. Just 90 days. The problem? He’s too quiet. Too careful with her daughter. Too good at showing up when she’s breaking. And Adia’s rule is clear: Billionaires break hearts. Single moms can’t afford that.

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Chapter 1

His 3AM Deal

She was three months postpartum, two jobs short of rent, and one missed payment away from losing the only roof over her daughter’s head. He was a billionaire CEO who bought her rundown coffee shop to tear it down and build glass towers.

He was supposed to evict her. Instead, he found her at 3am, shaking, breastfeeding in the back room because her sitter cancelled again. Instead, he learned her daughter’s name before he learned her lease terms.

Adia Mbeki doesn’t trust rich men. Especially not the one who holds the pen to her eviction notice. But when Kael Sterling starts showing up with coffee, diapers, and a rule that says “no one touches you when you’re tired,” she starts to wonder if some deals aren’t written on paper.

He called it a business arrangement. She called it survival. Neither of them called it love until it was too late to stop.

--

The bell above the coffee shop door hadn’t rung in twenty minutes, which meant it was 2:47am and New York had finally decided to be quiet for once, and Adia was grateful for the silence because silence didn’t ask questions about why her eyes were red or why her blouse had milk stains near the shoulder that no amount of scrubbing could hide.

She was supposed to close at midnight, but the landlord said if she stayed open late she could keep half the tips, and half of something was better than all of nothing when rent was due in three days and her daughter, Lila, was asleep in the carrier under the counter with her tiny fist pressed against Adia’s knee like it was the only safe place in the world.

Three months postpartum, two hours of sleep, and one cold cup of coffee later, Adia was counting crumpled dollars when the door opened without a sound, and in walked a man in a black coat who looked like he owned the entire block, because he probably did.

Kael Sterling. CEO. Billionaire. The man who had sent the letter that morning saying “Property Acquisition Effective 30 Days,” and she hadn’t opened it until after Lila’s 1am feeding because fear could wait, but hunger could not.

He didn’t say anything at first. He just looked at her, at the baby carrier, at the stack of unpaid bills under the register, and for one second Adia thought he was going to tell her to pack up now.

Instead he walked to the counter, set down a paper bag, and said, “You’re still here.”

And Adia, who had not slept, who had not been touched gently in months, who was running on fumes and motherhood, whispered, “I don’t have anywhere else to go.” Got you.

The paper bag hit the counter with a soft sound, and Adia didn’t reach for it because rich men didn’t bring gifts without a reason, and she was too tired to pretend she believed in kindness that didn’t cost something later.

Kael didn’t sit. He didn’t smile. He just stood there like he was used to rooms rearranging themselves around him, and the shop, which had always felt too small, suddenly felt even smaller with him in it.

“I bought this building three weeks ago,” he said, and his voice was low, clipped, the kind of voice that ended meetings early. “The plan was demolition. Condos. New tenants in six months.”

Adia’s throat closed, because that was the sentence she’d been dreading since the letter came, and hearing it out loud made it real in a way paper never could.

“So this is it,” she said, and her voice cracked on the last word, and she hated herself for it, because Lila was finally asleep and crying would wake her, and crying would make her look weak in front of the man who held her future in a folder she was sure he had in his coat.

“Not tonight,” Kael said.

Two words. That was all he gave her.

He opened the bag himself, and inside wasn’t an eviction notice or a check or some cold business offer. It was a bottle of warm formula, a fresh pack of newborn diapers, and a coffee from the shop across the street, the one she couldn’t afford anymore because they raised prices last month.

“I have a sister,” he said, like it explained everything, and maybe it did, because his eyes dropped to Lila for half a second and something in his face shifted, just barely, before he locked it down again. “She had twins last year. I learned what 3am looks like.”

Adia stared at the diapers like they were a trick. “You’re not supposed to be nice to me.”

“I’m not,” he said quickly, too quickly, and for the first time he looked almost irritated, like she’d caught him doing something he didn’t plan to do. “I’m here to discuss terms. You stay. You keep the shop open during construction. You pay reduced rent. In exchange, you don’t make this messy.”

“Messy how?”

He finally looked at her then, really looked, and his gaze caught on the milk stain, on the dark circles under her eyes, on the way her hands were shaking because she hadn’t eaten since noon.

“Don’t fall apart in front of me,” he said. “Don’t make me care.”

And that was the moment Adia understood something she didn’t want to understand.

He wasn’t here to evict her. He was here because he was afraid he might not be able to. The bell above the door didn’t ring when he left.

But he left the bag. And he left his business card on top of it, with three words written on the back in black ink:

_Call me. Anytime._

Adia didn’t sleep after that.

She sat behind the counter until sunrise, holding Lila, holding a card with a billionaire’s number, wondering why a man who owned the whole block had come into her broken little shop at 3am to say don’t fall apart in front of him.

End

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