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usband's dream. I poured my inheritance into his "d
usband, Jordan, is a billionaire heir, and our
him. When I got home, our five-year-ol
he said flatly. "Daddy says
s his and Isabell's child, and I was just a "socialization c
t about my fat
g the immutable record of every hour I worked and every dollar I
pte
Ware
my husband, Jordan Fernandez, is the sole heir to a multi-billion-dollar real estate empire, and
rial-strength coffee and the faint scent of turpentine from my late-night graphic design gigs. My days were a blur of freelance projects, followed by an evening shift waiting tables at a diner where the regula
r him. For Jorda
and business debt that crushed him, my heart ached for him. "We' ll get through this, Jorda
ereal, who patched the holes in our son Leo' s jeans instead of buying new ones. I was the one who sold my own car,
g freelance gigs I took on in the dead of night. My portfolio was stale, my dreams wer
a little longer, Diana. I promise, I' ll make it all up to you," the exhaustion would melt away, replaced by a fierce, protectiv
baby! We' re finally in the clear!" he' d shouted, his laughter echoing in our small living room. He said
ent. We made plans. A small house with a backyard for Leo. A vacation, our first ever. Maybe I could finally quit
e I usually drank. I was sketching a new design in my notebook, feeling a spark of creativity I
nel was on. And ther
y messy look I was used to. He was standing on a stage, a confident, almost arrogant smile on his face that I had never seen before. Beside him, a stunning
y brain: "BILLIONAIRE HEIR JORDAN FERNANDEZ CONQUERS THE UL
e world around me seemed to recede, the cheerful chatter of the café fading into a d
ed by the board to prove his business acumen... living on a simulated low income... a test
The coffee in my st
s. The walk home was a blur. My key fumbled in the lock,
worn-out wooden blocks. He was sitting in the middle of the floor, surrounded by the packaging of a brand-ne
u get that?" I asked, my
ing eyes. Instead, his gaze was cool, appraising. It
aid the test is over," he sai
eized. "T
es holding a coldness that shattered
g to process his words. "What... w
ted, his voice like a recording. "He says you' re o
e fevers I had nursed, whose scraped knees I had kissed, were more brutal than
stumbling towards him. "We had to save money.
terrifying mirror of the man on the television. "Daddy says real partners support dreams, not
e was like poiso
ipped meals to make sure he and Jordan had enough. The crushing guilt I felt every time Leo asked for a toy I couldn' t afford. Al
saw the receipt. It cost five hundred dollars. I could ha
See? You' re doing it again. You
hand hitting the wall to steady myself.
magazine with Jordan' s face o
divorce
ut to me for fifty thousand
bold and flamboyant. It was the signature of a winner, a conque
was him. I answere
om last night was gone, as if it had never existed.
The word was a raw
enge.' A five-year project to prove to my family' s board that I had the determinat
ung in the air, thi
debt?" I asked,
t. I just had to prove I could not only manage it, but grow it while living a 'struggling' lifestyle. You
ather' s inheritance. I wasn'
spat, the rage finally c
re than generous for five years of... role-playing. Be smart. Sign the p
orld crumbled into dust
to a clinical, detached tone. "This is probably for the best, b
reasons I couldn' t be in the delivery room, the documents I s
his 'socialization caregiver.' Part of the experiment was to see if a non-biological maternal figure, under financial duress, could provid
o draw breath. The little boy in the living room, the one whose first
lize the transition," Jordan said briskly. "
ne wen
still pressed to my ear,
just a f
t even a

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