Share

Chapter 9

Author: Leeyah
last update Petsa ng paglalathala: 2026-07-10 21:05:43

❤️Sophie❤️

The revolving doors glide open as one man steps inside. I don't know why everyone suddenly forgets how to breathe.

The lobby, which has been buzzing with conversations just seconds ago, falls into complete silence.

He’s tall. Very tall.

A perfectly tailored charcoal suit hugs broad shoulders capable of carrying the weight of the world without breaking a sweat. His shirt is open at the collar—no tie, no unnecessary accessories—just an expensive watch wrapped around his wrist.

He walks like he owns the building—actually, he walks like he owns the city.

Every employee immediately lowers their head.

“Good morning, Mr. Blackhood.”

“Welcome back, sir.”

“Your meeting room is ready.”

He acknowledges no one, no smile, no nod—nothing. What a snub. Who does he think he is? He’s rich, so what?

His face is ridiculously handsome in a way that should be honestly illegal—sharp jaw, dark hair, eyes so cold they could probably freeze lava.

Definitely not boyfriend material, more like the type of man who fires people for breathing too loudly.

I quietly step aside to let him pass. Rich people apparently deserve traffic lanes—the billionaire walks past me without so much as a glance.

Good.

I wasn’t planning on looking at him either—liar. I probably looked. Just a tiny bit. Maybe more than necessary. Okay, I stared. Sue me.

The elevators open, and he disappears inside with nearly ten men following behind him.

The doors close, and just like that, life returns to normal. Everyone starts talking again. The pianist resumes playing. People continue drinking their coffee.

I blink. “That was dramatic.”

A passing waiter smiles politely. “It always is whenever Mr. Blackwood is around.”

“I noticed.”

The waiter walks away without replying. I check my phone again—nothing.

Still no message from shadow_23.

My irritation grows. If this idiot stood me up, I swear I don’t know what I’ll do, but it’s probably going to be something horrible.

My eyes start to sting again—pregnancy has turned me emotional. This is stupid. A foolish mistake.

I sit down at table eighteen and glare at my phone as if intimidation might make it ring. It doesn’t. Five more minutes—nothing.

Five minutes later, I lose my patience.

*Where are you?* I send the message.

The reply comes almost immediately.

*Turn around*

My heartbeat skips. Slowly, I turn—nothing. Just people eating breakfast. “What the hell?”

Another vibration. *Not there.*

I frown. Then where? I spin in another direction—still nothing. Someone laughs nearby. Is he watching me? Laughing at me? The thought sends irritation crawling down my spine.

Another text arrives. *Window.*

I look toward the floor-to-ceiling glass overlooking the city—still nothing. My eyebrows knit together. Is this man playing hide and seek?

Another message: *Left.*

I sigh dramatically before turning left. An elderly couple waves at me; I awkwardly wave back. Wrong people. Fantastic.

Another vibration. *Your other left.*

To be honest, I almost throw my phone away in frustration. I’m the one paying him, yet he’s still the one playing with me like I’m a fucking toddler.

“ I’m pregnant, not a compass,” I mutter under my breath. A woman at the next table snorts into her coffee. Wonderful. Now strangers are laughing at me.

My phone buzzes again. *Lift your head.*

Confused, I do—and that’s when I notice someone standing behind the glass railings overlooking the lobby. Far enough that I can see his face, but I know one thing: he’s looking directly at me.

My pulse begins to race. He lifts his phone. Mine vibrates. *Good. You followed instructions.*

Excuse me? Instructions? Like I’m his student or what? Who does this man think he is?

Another message appears before I can reply. *Come upstairs. Private lounge.*

I stare at the words, then at the stairs, then back at the words again. My instincts scream at me to walk away. My father’s echoes fill my head.

Forty-eight hours.

I close my eyes for one brief second. “Congratulations, Sophie,” I mutter under my breath. “You have officially reached the stage of your life where you are willingly following the instructions of a mysterious man into private lounges.”

Taking a shaky breath, I tighten my grip on my handbag and begin climbing the stairs.

My knees wobble with every step. Private lounge—that sounds like the beginning of every crime documentary.

“She was last seen following a mysterious man’s instructions into a private lounge.”

Wonderful. Exactly how I imagined my Tuesday.

I keep walking anyway because, unfortunately, homelessness sounds slightly worse than being featured on evening news.

The second floor is even more intimidating than the lobby.

Thick carpets swallow my footsteps, expensive paintings decorate the walls, and crystal chandeliers hang from the ceiling.

A hostess smiles politely. “Can I help you, Miss?”

“ I… private lounge?”

“Straight ahead.”

I step in front of a pair of enormous double doors. Gold letters read: PRIVATE EXECUTIVE LOUNGE.

I swallow. Nope. This is definitely the wrong place. Taking a deep breath, I push the door open and step inside—and immediately freeze.

The room is enormous. Floor-to-ceiling windows overlook the city. Men in expensive suits are scattered around discussing business over coffee.

Several bodyguards stand against the wall.

Everyone turns to look at me. My heart hits the floor.

Every single pair of eyes is on me.

I force an awkward smile. “Wrong lounge.” I bow politely. “I’m sorry. I think I’m lost.”

No one answers. I laugh awkwardly—these people are weird.

Before I can embarrass myself further, I rush out of the room, stumbling into a waitress with a tray of red wine. Red wine pours over me from head to toe. Then the glasses and tray hit the floor with a loud crash.

Wow—today is the best day of my life. Why stop at ruining my life when the universe can ruin my outfit, too?

“I’m so sorry,” the waiter gasps.

“No, I’m the one who’s sorry,” I say, bending to help pick up the broken glasses.

“Don’t.” The single word makes the entire lounge freeze.

I slowly lift my head. At the end of the room, the billionaire from downstairs is watching me.

His expression is unreadable, and the men around him haven’t moved. The bodyguards haven’t moved. Even the waitress looks terrified.

Why is everyone acting like this man is a president?

He reaches into his pocket, pulls out his phone, and mine vibrates.

I stare at the notification.

Shadow_23: You are at the right lounge.

My brain completely shuts down.

Patuloy na basahin ang aklat na ito nang libre
I-scan ang code upang i-download ang App

Pinakabagong kabanata

  • I ordered a baby daddy, not a crazy billionaire.    Chapter 9

    ❤️Sophie❤️ The revolving doors glide open as one man steps inside. I don't know why everyone suddenly forgets how to breathe. The lobby, which has been buzzing with conversations just seconds ago, falls into complete silence. He’s tall. Very tall. A perfectly tailored charcoal suit hugs broad shoulders capable of carrying the weight of the world without breaking a sweat. His shirt is open at the collar—no tie, no unnecessary accessories—just an expensive watch wrapped around his wrist. He walks like he owns the building—actually, he walks like he owns the city. Every employee immediately lowers their head. “Good morning, Mr. Blackhood.” “Welcome back, sir.” “Your meeting room is ready.” He acknowledges no one, no smile, no nod—nothing. What a snub. Who does he think he is? He’s rich, so what? His face is ridiculously handsome in a way that should be honestly illegal—sharp jaw, dark hair, eyes so cold they could probably freeze lava. Definitely not boyfriend material, more

  • I ordered a baby daddy, not a crazy billionaire.    Chapter 8

    ❤️Sophie❤️Sleep and I have officially parted ways. I spend the night staring at Sandy’s ceiling, counting every terrible decision that brought me to this moment.Number one: Dating Sebastian.Number two: drinking enough whiskey to drown my common sense.Number three: sleeping with a stranger.Number four: realizing one night can ruin me for nine months. Or maybe for the rest of my life.Number five: posting an online ad looking for a fake husband.I groan and bury my head in the pillow as every thought swirls through my mind. This is crazy. I can't believe my life has come to this after spending three years loving a single man.Only to catch myself screwing someone old enough to be his mother, It’s pathetic. Well, I'm pathetic too because now, I'm about to enter financial ruin after offering two million dollars to a fake baby daddy.What if my dad finds out he’s a fake baby daddy? No. He can't.I'm not going to tell him, and neither is my soon-to-be baby daddy, so there’s no way he’l

  • I ordered a baby daddy, not a crazy billionaire.    Chapter 7

    ❤️Sophie❤️ I stare at the screen so long that my eyes begin to sting. For a full five seconds, neither Sandy nor I breathe. Then… “Oh my God!” Sandy shrieks so loudly I nearly drop my phone. “He replied.” She squeals, bouncing on the bed, “Someone actually replied.” I blink twice, still convinced this has to be a prank. “No,” I whisper, “There is no way.” “There is a way!” She snatches the phone from my trembling hands, “Sophie, somebody wants to marry you.” I swallow hard, “What if he’s a serial killer? What if he’s broke? What if he’s eighty?” Sandy rolls her eyes, “You can’t be serious.” “ I am. I can’t believe someone accepted just like that. What if he’s ugly? Or he’s secretly married?” She lowers the phone, “You really know how to ruin a moment.” “I’m serious!” She thrusts the phone back into my hands, “Reply.” “I can’t.” “You have to.” “What do I even say?” “Tell the truth.” I glare at her, “That truth got me pregnant.” She rolls her eyes again, “Fine. Just ask

  • I ordered a baby daddy, not a crazy billionaire.    Chapter 6

    ❤️Sophie❤️I have exactly forty-eight hours. Forty-eight hours to find a man whose name I don't know. Forty-eight hours before my father throws me out of his house if I can't find the so-called man.My life has officially become a disaster.“I still think we should go back to the club.”Sandy folds her legs beneath her on the bed as she watches me pace across her bedroom for what has to be the hundredth time today.“We already did.”“We need to do it again.”“We've been there three times, and he wasn’t there.”I stop pacing and drag both hands through my hair. “He could have been working another shift.”“He wasn't a bartender. He was a customer,” I say, feeling utterly stupid.Sandy sighs. “Exactly, customers don't disappear forever.”“I actually asked the bartender the first time we went.”“What did he say?”“He said he doesn't know him. The security too, they said they can't share the CCTV footage.”I groan loudly before throwing myself face-first onto Sandy’s bed. “This is hopele

  • I ordered a baby daddy, not a crazy billionaire.    Chapter 5

    ❤️Sophie❤️ I’ve never seen my father as angry as this before in my twenty years. Yet here he is, pacing the living room with fire blazing in his eyes. While the rest of the family stares at me with their jaws on the floor—especially my mom, since I'm her only child—I can't imagine how disappointed she is right now. I can't even look at them in the eyes; my head is hung low as I stare at my folded hands on my lap. “You are a disappointment,” my father’s voice booms through the room, making me flinch a little. Tears wet my lashes. This is a stupid mistake. I just wanted to prove something, and I ended up making the worst mistake of my life. “You are not even out of college yet. What do you want people to say about me—about this family? That my daughter got pregnant without finishing her education?” My throat burns. “I'm sorry.” “Sorry?” Mom throws her hands up exasperatedly. “You need to be kidding.” Words catch in my throat, so I watch silently as my life crumbles before

  • I ordered a baby daddy, not a crazy billionaire.    Chapter 4

    ❤️Sophie❤️ Six weeks later “If you keep staring at your food as if it offended you, it won't magically disappear,” my cousin teased, her voice barely reaching me. I blink and force myself back into reality. The dining room is unusually crowded this morning. My parents sit at opposite ends of the long mahogany table, while my aunts, uncles, and cousins occupy the remaining seats. Family weekend breakfasts have always been a tradition in this house. Usually, they are loud and fun. Today, every smell coming from the table makes my stomach twist — the bacon, the fried eggs, even the freshly baked bread. I swallow hard. “Eat,” my mother says without looking up from her plate. “I'm not hungry,” I reply. That earns me several curious looks. My father lowers his newspaper. “Not hungry?” “I had something earlier,” I lie, even though I know it’s a pathetic excuse. The truth is, I've barely been able to keep food down for almost two weeks now. Every morning starts

Higit pang Kabanata
Galugarin at basahin ang magagandang nobela
Libreng basahin ang magagandang nobela sa GoodNovel app. I-download ang mga librong gusto mo at basahin kahit saan at anumang oras.
Libreng basahin ang mga aklat sa app
I-scan ang code para mabasa sa App
DMCA.com Protection Status