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The Billionaire's surrogate secret
The Billionaire's surrogate secret
ผู้แต่ง: Will_Helsa

Chapter 1: The Silver-Eyed Devil

ผู้เขียน: Will_Helsa
last update วันที่เผยแพร่: 2026-03-27 04:49:19

​Lyra gripped the paper coffee cup until the cardboard buckled. If she drank any more caffeine, her heart might actually fail. It wasn't the caffeine, though; it was the adrenaline. It was 8:01 PM on a Tuesday, and she was on the 42nd floor of Vane Tower, standing outside the massive glass doors of the architectural design studio.

​She was still here. Which meant he was likely still here, too.

​Lyra had taken this junior architect position six months ago, and her life had been a masterclass in strategic avoidance. Julian Vane, the CEO, occupied the 60th-floor penthouse suite. Most junior staff only saw him on the cover of Forbes or through the blurry, terrified lenses of paparazzi cameras. But Lyra knew that "absolute zero" coldness that was rumored to define him. She’d spent five years building a life out of the wreckage of her past, and she had one rule: Never, ever let Julian Vane see her face.

​A low vibration buzzed in her pocket. She pulled out her phone, her chest tightening. It was a FaceTime request from Mrs. Gable, Leo’s sitter. Panic, cold and sudden, spiked through her gut. Mrs. Gable knew Lyra was working an insane deadline. She never called unless it was an emergency.

​Lyra swiped "Accept," stepping deeper into the shadows of the empty corridor.

​"Mrs. Gable? What's wrong?" Lyra’s voice was a harsh whisper.

​The image that resolved on the screen was absolute chaos. Leo, her tiny, four-year-old tornado of a son, was in the background, a streak of red cape flying as he jumped off the couch. Mrs. Gable, looking entirely undone, held the camera close to her face.

​"Oh, Lyra, I’m so sorry! I didn’t know what else to do. My daughter just called—her appendix is bursting. They’re taking her into surgery right now. I have to go, I have to be there."

​Lyra’s breath hitched. "Of course. Go. Yes, immediately. I’m—I’m leaving now."

​"But Lyra..." Mrs. Gable looked pained. "I can't leave Leo here alone. And you're—" She paused, hearing the office noise over the line. "You're still at Vane Tower."

​"I know. Give me twenty minutes. I’ll figure something out."

​"Okay, twenty minutes. I’ve packed his bag. He knows I’m leaving." Mrs. Gable’s voice crackled with tears. "I’m so sorry."

​"Go!" Lyra cut the line.

​Her mind fractured. Vane Tower was twenty minutes from Mrs. Gable’s apartment in Brooklyn. With traffic, maybe thirty. In that thirty minutes, she needed to complete a presentation deck, arrange for immediate, emergency childcare, and—

​Ping.

​The elevator chime echoed in the silent hall. Lyra froze. The set of elevators nearest the studio were the "Fast Track"—reserved for senior VPs and executive leadership. They only stopped on the 42nd floor if they were specifically summoned, or if someone very important was inside.

​She watched the digital display above the polished brass doors. 'G' to '60' was its standard run.

​Then, 60 shifted. 59, 58, 57...

​It was coming down.

​Lyra looked back toward the glass studio doors. Her presentation materials, her laptop, and five years of anonymity were sitting on that desk. She had no choice. She had to grab her things and leave. Now.

​She sprinted. Her heels clattered against the marble, amplified by the emptiness. She burst through the design studio doors, her vision tunneling on her desk in the open-plan office. Laptop. Power cord. Portfolio.

​She didn't stop to shut down. She shoved it all into her leather tote. As she turned, her elbow struck her mug—her '#1 Mom' mug that Leo had made in daycare. It shattered.

​Lyra stared at the ceramic pieces. It’s just a mug. It’s just a sign.

​"Lyra? What are you still doing here?"

​A hand slapped her shoulder. It was Mark, a senior associate. He looked half-dead, his shirt sleeves rolled up.

​"Emergency," Lyra gasped. "I have to leave."

​"Wait, you can't!" Mark's eyes went wide. "Julian Vane is coming down to review the West Bay project in five minutes. If he sees this mess—if he sees you leaving—"

​"I don't care about West Bay, Mark! My son’s sitter just had a medical emergency. I have to go." Lyra ripped her arm free.

​She dashed back through the studio doors and into the corridor. The main bank of elevators—the public ones—were too slow. They stopped at every floor. She needed the express. If she was fast, she could get in before he got out on the ground floor.

​She reached the "Fast Track" elevators just as the brass doors slid open.

​The elevator car was immense, paneled in dark wood and mirrored polished brass, smelling faintly of expensive leather and something ozone-sharp.

​But it wasn't empty.

​A lone figure was silhouette against the back mirror, his back to her. He was tall, perfectly proportioned, wearing an charcoal three-piece suit that cost more than Lyra's entire college tuition. He was typing furiously on a slim black device.

​Lyra hesitated. Take the slow ones. Take the slow ones.

​But she thought of Leo, scared and waiting. She thought of her ruling.

​Never let him see her face.

​He was facing the other way.

​She stepped inside.

​The doors closed behind her, locking her into the space. The ascent back up to the 60th floor—or the descent to the lobby—seemed to take an eternity. She stood by the control panel, facing the closed doors, counting the seconds.

​The man didn't move. He didn't acknowledge her presence. He just kept typing, a quiet, rhythmic tap-tap-tap.

​Then, he spoke. The sound was low, a velvet threat that made the very air vibrate.

​"You're architectural staff. Junior, by your footwear."

​Lyra’s entire body went rigid. How? She was wearing practical, $60 sensible heels.

​"Yes, Mr. Vane," she said, her voice sounding thin and small. She kept her eyes locked on the elevator door.

​"You're still here at eight o’clock. Why?"

​"Finishing a deadline... sir."

​"You shattered ceramic in my building, didn't you?"

​Lyra felt the color drain completely from her face. Mark must have called up. Or Julian Vane simply knew everything that happened in his kingdom.

​She took a breath. "A mug. My son made it. It was... sentimental."

​The tapping stopped.

​For the first time, he shifted. Lyra saw his movement in the mirror reflection—a subtle turning of his shoulders. She was still facing the doors, but she could feel his attention, heavy and oppressive, land directly on her back.

​"Sentimental," he repeated. It was a word he clearly didn't understand. "Is that why you're currently vibrating with panic? Sentimental loss?"

​Lyra’s hands were shaking so hard she had to fist them inside her sleeves. "My son’s childcare has collapsed, Mr. Vane. I am anxious to leave and get to him."

​The car was passing the 20th floor. Almost there.

​Then, the man did the last thing Lyra expected. He hit the 'Emergency Stop' button.

​The car lched to a halt, the sudden G-force slamming Lyra’s heart into her throat.

​"I don't appreciate junior staff using family emergencies as a shield for unprofessional behavior, Ms..."

​"Stone. Lyra Stone."

​"Ms. Stone." He stepped fully into her line of sight.

​It had been five years.

​She had studied every grainy paparazzi photo. She had seen him on magazine covers. She thought she was ready for the reality. She wasn't. Julian Vane wasn't handsome; he was a landscape of harsh angles and calculated, aristocratic dominance. His hair was jet black, and his jawline was cut from granite.

​But it was his eyes. They were the color of refined silver, impossibly piercing, looking not at her, but through her, calculating her worth in real-time.

​Lyra felt her lungs seize. He was looking right at her.

​And she was looking at him. At Leo’s eyes.

​She quickly dropped her gaze, staring at the polished tips of his charcoal oxfords.

​"You think a ceramic mug justifies leaving work early?" he asked, his voice entirely flat.

​"No, sir. I understand the requirements of Vane Enterprises. But I also understand the requirements of a four-year-old child." Lyra finally forced her chin up, meeting his silver gaze. "He is waiting for me. He is the only family I have. I will not compromise his well-being for any contract."

​She saw something flicker in his gaze. Not respect—that was too big a word for him to give a junior architect. It was surprise.

​He stared at her for a long, heavy moment. It was the moment she had feared for sixty months. It was the moment he might see something. She felt the secret—the $500,000, the masked stranger, the medical clinic, the lie—trying to escape her pores.

​Then, he swiped his thumb across his screen and hit the 'Emergency' override. The car groaned and began its smooth, fast descent again.

​When the car reached 'G,' the brass doors slid open to reveal the cavernous, glass-walled lobby and the city night.

​Julian Vane stepped out. He didn't look back at her. He spoke as he walked, his velvet voice projecting perfectly into the vast space.

​"Submit your resignation by morning, Ms. Stone. Since your familial duties require your full compromise, I am releasing you from your professional ones."

​Lyra stepped out of the elevator. She watched his long, predatory stride carry him across the lobby. She was fired.

​Her mind was a fog. But one thought cut through it clearly.

​I survived.

​She ran past the security desk, her legs shaking, her bag swinging, her heart pounding. She needed to get to Leo. She needed to see his face. She needed to see those silver eyes that she had just met for the first time, not in a mirror, but in reality.

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  • The Billionaire's surrogate secret    Chapter 55: The Salt-Crust Horizon

    ​The northern battlements didn't collapse; they slid. As the ancient stone ledge broke free from the sinking core of the fort, it acted like a massive sled, carrying Lyra and her family down the sloping wall of the expanding sinkhole. They hit the outer edge of the Taoudenni basin with a bone-jarring thud, tumbling onto the hard, unyielding salt crust just as the last of the carbon-fiber towers vanished into the swirling vortex behind them.​Then, the desert fell absolutely silent.​The roar of the collapsing aquifer subsided into a low, hollow hiss as the sand settled into a massive, smooth bowl where the fortress had stood just minutes before. The scorching Saharan sun beat down on the open salt flat, reflecting a blinding white glare that made the horizon blur into a watery heat haze.​Julian was the first to his feet, his tactical boots leaving white, chalky prints on the baked earth. He turned, offering a hand to Lyra and pulling her up. "Is everyone whole?" he asked, his voice r

  • The Billionaire's surrogate secret    Chapter 54: The Sinking Desert

    ​"We’re losing speed," Julian rasped, his back pressed against the rock wall as he held Leo steady. His tactical gear was soaked in the hyper-saline water, the salt already drying into a white, chalky crust across his chest. "Lyra, the cables are stretching."​"The whole shaft is compressing," Lyra said, her eyes locked on her tablet. The screen was a web of red warnings. "The structural collapse of the cisterns below has triggered a massive subterranean vacuum. The sand on the surface isn't just sitting there anymore it’s draining downward like an hourglass."​"An hourglass?" Leo looked up, his face pale under the dim auxiliary light. "You mean the fort is going to sink?"​"The fort, the basin, the entire ridge," Lyra confirmed, her fingers flying over the emergency commands. "The pneumatic resonance grid Cain buried under the dunes... when the power grid shorted out, it didn't just turn off. It is locked into a localized tectonic loop. The sand is liquefying on a massive scale."​A

  • The Billionaire's surrogate secret    Chapter 53: Ninety Seconds to Drown

    ​A blinding sheet of blue electrical arcs erupted from the water as the high-voltage servers short-circuited. The massive satellite terminal overhead died instantly, its hum replaced by the terrifying sound of rushing liquid. The subterranean aquifer had breached.​"The grid is down! The broadcast stopped!" Lyra yelled over the deafening roar of the incoming water. She checked her tablet, but the screen was a chaotic mess of structural alerts. 84 seconds. "Julian, the northern wall is pancaking! The elevator platform is our only way out, but the pressure is going to flood the shaft!"​"Leo, Eniola, run!" Julian roared, shoving his son toward the narrow catwalk that led back to the elevator.​But Cain wasn't finished. Despite the synthetic blood pooling at the collar of his coat and the violent tremors racking his left side, the Prototype lunged through the smoking mist. He didn't go for Julian; he went for the data drive protruding from Lyra’s tablet the offline backup of the Vane sta

  • The Billionaire's surrogate secret    Chapter 52: The Shattered Mirror

    ​"You think you’re an architect, Lyra?" Cain’s voice scraped through the cavern, his flat silver eyes shifting from Julian to her tablet. "You build cages of glass and concrete and call them homes. But Silas built us. He mapped the scaffolding of the human genome. You can't dismantle a legacy that runs through our very blood."​"Silas didn't build a legacy, Cain. He built an assembly line," Lyra said, her voice steady despite the trembling of the metal grating beneath her boots. She didn't look at him; she looked at the digital blueprint scrolling across her screen.​The northern column was heavily reinforced, but the salt water from the aquifer had been slowly corroding the base for a decade. It was a structural time bomb, and Cain had placed his primary server array directly in its shadow.​"Julian, the baseline load is shifting," Lyra muttered into her comms, her fingers inputting a series of overloads into the facility’s ventilation system. "If we can force the pneumatic vents on

  • The Billionaire's surrogate secret    Chapter 51: The Subteranean Aquifer

    ​When the elevator finally lurched to a halt, the safety grates didn't slide open smoothly—they slammed back into the rock face with a violent crash.​Before them lay a subterranean cavern of terrifying proportions. The ancient French colonial cisterns had been hollowed out, replaced by a massive, multi-tiered laboratory that looked like a high-tech rib cage supporting the weight of the desert above. But the most striking feature was the water.​A massive, black subterranean lake stretched out beneath the steel catwalks, its surface perfectly still and thick with crystallized salt. The air was frigid, the cold moisture stinging Lyra's face after the blistering heat of the surface.​"Look at the stress load on those pillars," Lyra whispered, her architect’s mind immediately mapping the structural dangers. She pointed her tablet toward the massive concrete columns anchoring the ceiling to the lake bed. "They're pulling immense weight. Cain hasn't just built a lab; he’s tunneled directly

  • The Billionaire's surrogate secret    Chapter 50: The Iron Gate of Taoudenni

    ​"It’s a kill box," Julian said, his voice flat as they reached the base of the ridge. His rifle remained pressed against his shoulder, tracking the perimeter wall. "The walls are angled specifically to eliminate blind spots. If those gates close behind us, we’re entirely dependent on whatever fallback plan you can sketch on that tablet, Lyra."​"Then we don't let them close," Lyra said. Her boots crunched against the thick white crust of the salt floor. She was looking at the massive, oxidized iron gates. They were ancient, but the hydraulic arms holding them open were brand new, gleaming with synthetic grease. "The hydraulics are connected to a localized pressure loop. If I can puncture the primary line, the gates will jam in the open position."​"I'll buy you the line of sight," Julian replied.​"No," Eniola stepped forward, her silver eyes reflecting the dark sheen of the fortress walls. She had pulled the indigo tagelmust completely away from her face. "He doesn't want a firefigh

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