The Billionaire Who Regretted Letting Me Go

The Billionaire Who Regretted Letting Me Go

last updateÚltima actualización : 2026-07-03
Por:  IbrahimActualizado ahora
Idioma: English
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"Sign the papers, Sophia. We both know this was never a real marriage." Five years ago, those words were the last thing Alexander Knight said to her before she walked out of his penthouse — and out of his life. He never knew she was already carrying his son. Sophia Hart rebuilt herself from nothing: a name, a career, and a son who has his father's eyes, his father's stubborn jaw, and absolutely no idea who that father is. She swore she'd never let Alexander Knight back into either of their lives. Fate didn't ask her permission. When Alexander spots a little boy throwing the exact tantrum he used to throw at five years old, the resemblance stops him cold — and the math isn't hard to do. His son. The one thing his money, his name, and his empire never bought him a say in. For the first time in his life, Alexander Knight isn't in control of anything. He wants Sophia back — not the polished, guarded woman standing in front of him now, but the version of her only he ever knew, the one who used to fall asleep mid-sentence on his shoulder during late-night work calls. He's willing to burn down every deal, every rival, every lie his own family has been hiding, just to get her back. But Sophia has spent five years learning how to survive without him. Trust isn't something she's willing to hand over twice. And somewhere in his own boardroom, someone has known about his son for years — and has every reason to make sure father and son never find their way back to each other. This time, if Alexander loses her, he won't just lose the woman he loves. He'll lose his son before he ever really had him.

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Capítulo 1

Chapter 1:The woman He Lost

The city hadn't changed. That was the first thing Sophia noticed when her car pulled up outside the glass tower on Lexington, and it irritated her more than it should have.

Five years. Five years of telling herself she'd torn this place out of her chest for good. Yet here it stood, indifferent and gleaming, daring her to admit she'd lost.

She didn't move right away. Her driver opened the door, but she sat there a beat too long, watching her reflection ghost across the tinted glass. She looked composed. Her expensive coat was immaculate, her hair pulled back into her usual meeting style. It was armor she'd learned to put on long before she realized how badly she would need it.

The woman in the glass looked nothing like the girl who'd left this city with a single suitcase, a broken heart, and a secret she hadn't shared with a soul.

Good. That was the point.

"Ms. Hart?" the driver asked, glancing back. "We're here."

"I know where we are." Her voice came out softer than intended. She stepped out onto the sidewalk before he could ask if she was alright.

She wasn't. Her hands were steady, but her stomach was knotted.

New York in early spring smelled like rain and cold concrete. For one unguarded second, it was five years ago again. She remembered a hand low on her back, warm through silk, and a voice murmuring against her hair, promising things he never meant to keep.

She felt the memory physically, a traitorous ache behind her ribs. She shut it down immediately. Quick. Clean. No lingering.

She had a company now. A name that meant something on its own—Hart Design. Three locations and a client list that never asked about her family or whose last name she used to carry. She'd built every brick of it herself in a different city, as a different version of herself. She wasn't about to let five-year-old ghosts shake her foundation in the first ten minutes of being back.

*Six weeks,* she reminded herself as she climbed the marble steps. She kept her chin up and spine straight, just as she'd practiced in a hundred mirrors. *One project. A very large check. Then you're gone.*

She almost believed it.

◆ ◆ ◆

By the time she returned to her rented townhouse, five-year-old Ethan was sprawled across the rug surrounded by building blocks. He was negotiating bedtime with her nanny, Priya, as seriously as a CEO closing a merger.

"Five more minutes," he argued. "I'm building a roof. You can't stop building when there's no roof, Priya. It'll rain inside."

"It is not going to rain inside the living room, Ethan."

"You don't know that."

Sophia leaned against the doorway and smiled, her first genuine expression all day. Ethan had Alexander's stubborn mouth—she'd noticed it the day he was born and had never quite forgiven either of them for it. He also shared her habit of arguing a point until the opposition gave up from pure exhaustion.

"Mama!" He abandoned the half-built roof the instant he saw her, launching himself across the room with full-body joy.

She caught him and breathed him in—apple shampoo, crayons, and the scent that was purely *him*. The day's tension finally loosened in her chest.

"Hey, baby. Did you build something good?"

"It's a fortress. It has a roof now. Except Priya said I have to stop."

"Priya's right. Fortresses need well-rested architects."

He considered this gravely. "Okay. But tomorrow I'm adding a moat."

"A moat?" she asked, deadpan.

"For protection."

"From what?"

He shrugged, already losing interest as he reverted to a typical five-year-old. "Dragons, probably."

She laughed, surprised by the sound, and carried him up to bed herself. Some nights, she needed his weight against her shoulder more than he needed the ride. Halfway up the stairs, he went quiet against her neck. She held him tightly—the way she always did right before this city tried to take something from her.

Ethan didn't know why they were here for six weeks. He didn't know his father's name had once been hers to say a hundred times a day, back when she believed it meant something. He only knew his mama built beautiful rooms and loved him more than anything. For now, that was the only truth he needed.

*Get in, finish the project, and get out before anyone connects the dots.*

She smoothed his hair once his breathing turned slow and even. She had no idea how badly that plan was about to fail.

◆ ◆ ◆

The Whitmore ballroom was already half full of New York's worst-kept secrets by the time Sophia arrived the next evening. Old money pretended not to notice new money, designers air-kissed rivals whose taste they privately despised, and a string quartet worked hard to be ignored.

Sophia had dressed for the occasion: a deep emerald gown with sharp shoulders. It didn't beg for attention, but it held it. Armor, again. She was getting tired of needing it so much.

"Ms. Hart." A silver-haired woman draped in diamonds caught her arm past the second pillar. "I have been *dying* to meet you. The Bellweather lobby—that was you?"

"That was me."

"It's the only hotel lobby in this city that doesn't look like every other hotel lobby," the woman said, offering an accusation and a compliment at once. "I'm redoing my house in the Hamptons, and I won't have anyone else touch it."

Sophia had spent five years learning how to accept a compliment without flinching, quote a price without apologizing, and walk into a room like she'd never been abandoned in it. None of it had come naturally, but it had all become true anyway—one client, one contract, one sleepless night at a time.

"I'd be happy to take a look," she replied, allowing herself a quiet moment of pride.

She was listening to the woman's assistant discuss square footage when a voice cut through the background noise. It was low, unhurried, and commanded absolute attention.

Every muscle in Sophia's body froze before her mind could process it.

She knew that voice like her own heartbeat. She had heard it murmured against pillows, raised across boardroom tables, and, finally, flattened into a cold blade across a kitchen counter when he told her their marriage was a mistake. She hadn't heard it in five years, yet her body hadn't forgotten.

She didn't need to turn around to know who it was. Her pulse answered for her, turning cold and electric as every nerve she'd trained into silence suddenly jolted awake.

*No. Not here. Not tonight.*

◆ ◆ ◆

She turned anyway. She had to. Some small, stubborn part of her—the part she'd never managed to talk out of being twenty-two and in love—needed to see if she had imagined it.

She hadn't.

Alexander Knight moved through the ballroom the way he moved through everything: as if the world automatically rearranged itself around him. He had always possessed that effortless confidence, but five years had sharpened it into something colder and harder.

His jaw was more severe. His broad shoulders filled his dark suit as if he'd stopped softening himself for anyone's comfort long ago.

Whatever warmth had once lived in his eyes when he looked at her was gone, replaced by the calculating stillness of a man who had learned not to want things out loud.

A young woman in a red dress touched his sleeve as she passed, saying something that made the surrounding men laugh. Alexander didn't smile. He barely registered her presence, yet an unwelcome twist of jealousy hit Sophia's chest—an old, embarrassing reflex she thought she'd buried.

*Not your business who touches him. Not anymore.*

His eyes moved past the woman, scanning the crowd the way he always did—cataloging, calculating, looking for the next angle or exit.

Then his gaze found her.

And stopped.

◆ ◆ ◆

For one unbearable second, neither of them moved.

The room kept moving around them—glasses clinking, the quartet sliding into a slower melody, a waiter slipping past with a tray—but for Sophia, the noise faded into an underwater silence. Her pulse climbed into her throat, immediate and traitorous, exactly as it used to when he walked into a room and she still believed they had forever.

She hated that her body remembered him before her mind could object. She hated that an old corner of her heart still recognized him as *home* before she could remind herself what that home had cost her.

Alexander's expression did something she had never seen it do. It cracked. Just slightly, like a hairline fracture spreading through glass. His drink stopped halfway to his mouth. The investor talking beside him might as well have been speaking to an empty chair.

*He didn't know I was back.*

She realized it with a distant shock—and beneath it, something far more dangerous. Relief.

She should have looked away. Every protective instinct told her to turn back to her client, finish the conversation about the Hamptons, and disappear into the crowd before he could react.

Instead, she remained frozen.

Alexander set his glass on a passing tray without looking. He murmured a brief dismissal to the man beside him and started walking.

Straight toward her.

Her heart slammed against her ribs.

*Don't. Don't do this here. Not in front of everyone. Not when I haven't decided how much I'm allowed to feel.*

He crossed the ballroom as if the five years between them were nothing, as if no one else mattered, as if he'd been waiting for her to step back into his world. People parted around him without realizing it.

He stopped a foot away. He was close enough for her to see the faint gray threading through his temples and the new lines at the corners of his eyes. Close enough to catch the scent of the cologne she used to steal off his jacket on cold mornings.

Close enough that her carefully built composure threatened to unravel, stitch by stitch, in front of a roomful of strangers.

For a long moment, he just looked at her, as if verifying she was real—as if he'd spent five years convinced he'd never see her again.

Then, his voice came out quietly, rough at the edges the way it only used to sound late at night in the dark, when he forgot to guard it.

"Sophia?"

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