LOGINKyra Taylor has spent years dreaming of becoming a mother. After deciding to pursue motherhood on her own, she walks into a fertility clinic believing she’s finally taking control of her future. One devastating mistake changes everything. Instead of an anonymous donor, Kyra is accidentally inseminated with the embryo of billionaire CEO Zaire cruz. A man who never intended for his sperm to be used aside for his person use . When the clinic discovers the error, they’re forced to reveal the truth, throwing two strangers into a situation neither of them chose. Zaire is determined to protect the life growing inside Kyra, while Kyra has to adjust to a life she gave up on when she decided to do her pregnancy journey alone now the one thing she didn’t care about anymore is thrown in her way. What starts as an accident becomes an unexpected journey filled with stolen glances, late-night conversations, impossible choices, and a love neither of them saw coming. But when the truth behind the clinic’s mistake comes to light, Kyra and Zaire must decide whether they’ll fight over the child that brought them together or risk everything to become the family fate chose for them. Sometimes the greatest love stories begin with the biggest mistakes.
View MoreKyra’s pov-
There was something strangely freeing about peeing in a cup at 8:47 a.m. on a Monday morning. No work emails. No forced small talk. Just me, the white walls of the fertility clinic, and the quiet, stubborn hope that my life might finally begin. I set the plastic cup on the counter with slightly trembling fingers, then glanced up at the mirror above the sink. Tired eyes stared back at me. My lips were still a little swollen from crying the night before. But beneath all of that, there was something steadier in my reflection. Determination. At twenty-seven, I had finally stopped waiting for Mr. Right. That man clearly missed the memo that he was supposed to show up in my life. Prince Charming had ghosted me somewhere around my third situationship, and honestly? I was tired of pretending the fairy tale was still loading. I was done waiting. "Kyra Taylor?" A nurse leaned into the waiting room just as I stepped out of the restroom. She had soft brown eyes and one of those calm, patient smiles that made everything feel routine even life-changing decisions. "This way." I followed her down the hallway, my sneakers squeaking softly against the polished tile floors. The walls were lined with framed photos of smiling babies chubby cheeks, tiny fists, gummy grins. Some had little thank-you notes from parents taped beneath them. Miracles, apparently. The nurse opened the door to a small exam room. "Your insemination is scheduled in about ten minutes," she said kindly. "You can undress from the waist down and lie back. Dr. Quinn will be in shortly." "Okay," I said, my voice a little thinner than I intended. The door clicked shut behind her. I stared at the room for a moment. The paper-covered exam table. The tray of neatly arranged instruments. The faint antiseptic smell floating in the air. This was it. No romantic dinner. No nervous laughter across a candlelit table. No awkward foreplay. Just science. And, technically, something that resembled a very expensive turkey baster. Somehow... I was okay with that. By the time Dr. Quinn walked in, I was lying back on the table with a paper sheet draped over my lap. The thin paper crinkled every time I shifted. He looked exactly like the kind of doctor you'd expect to see in a place like this mid-fifties, gentle demeanor, glasses resting low on his nose. Calm. Professional. Reassuring. He didn't look at me like I was strange for doing this alone. "Ready?" he asked. I gave a small shrug. "As ready as I'll ever be." He offered a polite smile before turning to prepare the sample. I shifted my gaze to the ceiling, studying the square tiles like they were clouds drifting across the sky. "You selected donor number 42183, correct?" he asked, glancing down at the chart. "Yep," I replied. "Ivy League education, Jamaican roots, big on family. The sperm bank's golden boy." I tried to sound casual. Like this was just another appointment on my calendar. Like my entire future wasn't quietly sitting in a temperature-controlled vial somewhere in the room. Dr. Quinn paused. It was brief. Barely a second. But I noticed. He scanned the file again before nodding. "That's correct," he said. "Alright. Let's begin." He adjusted his gloves and moved with calm, practiced precision. I focused on breathing slowly while the faint metallic sounds of instruments being arranged filled the quiet room. "This will only take a few minutes," he said. "You may feel a little pressure." "I can handle pressure," I murmured. Pain wasn't what scared me. Disappointment was. The room fell silent except for the soft ticking of a wall clock and the distant sound of children laughing somewhere down the hallway. I stared at the ceiling again. One tile. Two tiles. Three. A strange thought crept in. Somewhere out there, a man existed who shared DNA with the child I might carry. He would never know me. And maybe that was okay. "Alright," Dr. Quinn said after a few quiet minutes. The sound of gloves snapping off broke the stillness. "All done. The procedure went smoothly." I blinked, turning my head slightly toward him. "That's it?" He chuckled lightly. "That's it." It felt almost... anticlimactic. I half expected a bell to ring or angels to start singing. Instead, the room looked exactly the same as it had ten minutes ago. Only now everything had changed. "Lie here for about fifteen minutes," he continued. "After that, you're free to go. Just take it easy today no heavy lifting, minimal stress." Minimal stress. Right. As he turned toward the door, he glanced at my chart again. That flicker of confusion crossed his face once more. A small crease formed between his brows. He hesitated. Then tucked the file under his arm. "Everything okay?" I asked. He looked up quickly. "Yes," he said. "All good. Just double-checking notes." Something about the way he said it felt... slightly rushed. Before I could press further, he slipped out of the room. Fifteen minutes later, I was fully dressed again, heading back to the waiting room with my purse resting in my lap and a tiny, hopeful smile tugging at my lips. My heart fluttered softly in my chest. This was the beginning of something. Finally. Across the room, through the glass window of the nurses' station, I noticed Dr. Quinn speaking quietly to another staff member. A nurse leaned closer as he whispered something to her. Her eyebrows knit together. Then her eyes shifted. They landed directly on me. For a split second, our gazes locked. The nurse immediately looked away. Dr. Quinn followed her glance and quickly turned his back. A small knot formed in my stomach. But a moment later, they both continued their conversation like nothing had happened. Maybe I was imagining things. Maybe it was nothing. I gathered my bag and walked out of the clinic with the strange, hopeful lightness of someone stepping into a brand-new life. Behind me, the glass doors slid closed with a quiet hiss. Leaving the building that morning my life changed.Kyra** The automatic doors of the clinic slid open with a soft whoosh, letting in warm air and the faint sound of city traffic. I stepped out first, arms crossed, sunglasses low on my nose, my purse clutched a little too tightly. Zaire followed behind, his long strides relaxed but his mind wasn't. We walked in silence toward the parking lot. Both unsure of what to say now that the news had been spoken aloud. I was pregnant. He was the father. And neither of us knew the first damn thing about each other. I stopped at my car, digging for my keys, but my fingers were shaky. Zaire noticed. "You alright?" "I'm fine," I said too fast. He didn't call me on it. Just leaned against the passenger side of my car, watching me with unreadable eyes. "You want me to drive you home?" he asked, low. I scoffed. "No offense, but I still don't know you well enough to let you behind my wheel." Zaire cracked a small smirk. "Fair." I finally looked up at him, crossing my arms
**Kyra** The clinic lobby was exactly as I remembered it, too clean, too white, too cold. Even the air felt sterile, like it didn't want to carry emotion. I sat in the waiting area with my hands folded tightly in my lap, thumb rubbing against the edge of my sweater sleeve. My stomach was in knots. I hadn't slept. Barely ate. Two weeks had felt like two years. Every morning had been a guessing game, was that nausea or nerves? Did my breasts hurt from PMS or something more? I had refused to take a test at home. I needed to hear it from a professional. I needed it to be real, or not real. No guessing. No wishful thinking. The receptionist finally called my name. "Kyra Taylor?" I stood, legs stiff, and followed the nurse into the same hallway, past the same neutral artwork, into the same room where my life had possibly shifted without warning. "You can sit here. Dr. Quinn will be in shortly," the nurse said, offering a kind smile before closing the door behind her. I
Zaire’s pov- By the time the elevator chimed, I was out of the tub and wrapped in a dark gray towel, steam still rising behind me. I padded across the penthouse with slow, measured steps, my phone left behind on the marble bath tray. I opened the door just before Savannah knocked. She walked in like she always did, heels clicking against polished floors, long legs wrapped in a champagne colored trench, lips glossed, skin glowing. Her hair was bone straight tonight, falling over one shoulder. A red designer clutch swung from her hand. "You're always so dramatic with the lighting," she said with a smile, glancing around. "It's giving mood." I didn't say much. Just stepped aside and let her pass. Savannah paused to set her purse down and then turned to face me, her eyes sliding over my towel covered body. "You're quiet." I moved toward the mini bar without responding, pouring myself another bourbon. "You want anything?" I asked. "Yeah, I'll take the usual," she said, sl
Zaire’s pov- My blacked-out Escalade rolled to a slow stop in front of the towering residential building downtown, my sanctuary in the sky. The doorman opened the vehicle door with a respectful nod. "Evening, Mr. Cruz." I nodded, phone pressed to my ear, jaw tight. "Tell them I'll review the proposal in the morning. I'm done for today." I stepped into the building, past marble floors and gold accents, into a private elevator that only required my fingerprint to operate. The doors closed. Silence. I finally let out the breath I hadn't realized I was holding. By the time the elevator opened into my penthouse, floor to ceiling windows, curated modern art, low lighting, I had already pulled off my tie and tossed it on the marble island in the kitchen. I didn't feel like myself lately. The calls, the meetings, the performance, it all still ran like a machine. But something in me was out of sync. I poured myself a drink, neat bourbon, and sank into the soft leather of












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