Se connecter“I paid for an heir, not a wife. Hand over the child and leave.” Five years ago, I signed a contract with the devil. Desperate to save my dying grandmother, I agreed to be a surrogate for the ruthless billionaire, Liam Sterling. I broke the one rule: I fell in love with him. But the moment I gave birth, he turned into a monster. He took my son, threw a check in my face, and had security drag me out of the hospital. He didn't know the truth—I wasn't just carrying one baby. I was carrying two. I raised my daughter in secret, far away from his cruel world. She is my light, my joy, my everything. But now, fate has played a cruel joke. Liam has found us. He sees his eyes in her face. He wants to take her, too. But he’s about to learn that the timid girl he threw away is gone. If he wants my daughter, he’ll have to go through me. And this time? I’m ready to start a war.
Voir plusThe sound of rain lashing against the floor-to-ceiling glass of the penthouse office was the only thing keeping me grounded. It was a violent storm, but it was nothing compared to the hurricane raging inside my chest.
"Read it again, Ms. Davis. I don’t pay for mistakes."
Liam Sterling’s voice was low, smooth, and terrified me more than the thunder. He stood by the window, his back to me, looking out over the city of New York like a king surveying a kingdom he wanted to burn down. Even from the back, he was intimidating—broad shoulders encased in a charcoal suit that probably cost more than my grandmother’s entire house.
I looked down at the document on the mahogany desk. The paper was heavy, expensive, and cold under my fingertips.
SURROGACY AND PARENTAL RIGHTS RELINQUISHMENT AGREEMENT.
The bold letters seemed to scream at me.
"I’ve read it, Mr. Sterling," I said, my voice barely rising above a whisper. I hated how weak I sounded. I hated that my hands were trembling so badly I had to clasp them in my lap to hide it.
He finally turned around.
If the devil had a face, it would be Liam Sterling’s. He was devastatingly handsome, with sharp, aristocratic cheekbones and eyes the color of shattered ice. But there was no warmth in him. No humanity. He looked at me not as a woman, or even a human being, but as an incubator. A vessel he had rented for nine months because he couldn't be bothered to find a wife.
He walked toward the desk, his movements predatory and graceful. The scent of expensive sandalwood and rain filled my senses, making me dizzy.
"Then you understand Clause 14?" he asked, tapping a manicured finger against the paper. "Once the child is born, you will be compensated. You will hand the infant to my medical team. And then, you will vanish."
He leaned in, his icy blue eyes boring into mine. "You will not visit. You will not call. You will not look for pictures in the tabloids. To this child, you are dead. Do you understand?"
I swallowed the lump in my throat, fighting the urge to vomit. Dead.
"I understand," I choked out.
"Good." He straightened up, adjusting his cufflinks with indifference. "Because if you ever try to claim him, if you ever try to squeeze more money out of me using the press... I will bury you. I have lawyers who can ensure you never work again. I have the power to make sure your sick grandmother is thrown out of that hospital before her next breath."
My head snapped up. "You promised to pay her bills."
"I promised to pay them if you sign," he corrected coldly. "And if you adhere to the contract. The moment you become a liability, the funding stops."
The threat hung in the air, heavy and suffocating.
I thought of Nana. I thought of the beeping machines, the sterile smell of the ICU, the doctor telling me that without the surgery, she wouldn't last the month. She was the only family I had left in this cruel world. She was the one who held me when my parents died. I couldn't let her die. Not when I had a way to save her.
Even if that way meant selling a piece of my soul.
I picked up the pen. It felt like holding a knife.
My other hand drifted instinctively to my stomach. I was barely showing, just a small, firm swell beneath my thrift-store dress, but I felt them. A flutter. A tiny, secret movement that sent a shockwave of electricity through my veins.
I’m sorry, I thought desperately, directing the words inward to the life growing inside me. I’m so sorry. I have to do this.
I pressed the pen to the paper. The ink flowed dark and permanent.
Nora Davis.
It was done. I had just sold my baby.
Liam didn't smile. He didn't look relieved. He simply pressed a button on his intercom. "Bring the check. She’s finished."
A moment later, his assistant, a woman with a face as pinched as a lemon, walked in and placed a slip of paper on the desk. I didn't look at the numbers. I knew it was enough. It was blood money, but it was enough.
"The driver is waiting downstairs," Liam said, turning his back on me again. He was already checking his watch, dismissing me like I was a meeting that had run two minutes over. "He will take you to the private residence. You will stay there until the birth. My doctors will monitor you daily."
I stood up, my legs shaking. I wanted to scream at him. I wanted to tell him that he was a monster, that a child needed love, not just a trust fund and a penthouse. But I was nobody. I was the maid’s daughter who grew up in the shadow of his world, and now, I was just a hired womb.
"Goodbye, Mr. Sterling," I whispered.
He didn't answer.
I walked to the elevator, my heart pounding a frantic rhythm against my ribs. The doors slid open, and I stepped inside, the mirrored walls reflecting a pale, terrified girl with tears streaming down her face.
As the elevator plummeted toward the lobby, I clutched the check to my chest. I had saved Nana. That was what mattered. I repeated it like a mantra. I saved Nana.
But as the floors ticked down, a sharp, sudden pain shot through my side, followed by a sensation I had never felt before. It wasn't just one kick.
It was two.
Distinct. Separate. Simultaneous.
One on the left. One on the right.
I froze, my breath hitching. The doctor Liam had hired... he had done the ultrasound so quickly. He had said "one healthy fetus." But I knew my body. And in that silent elevator, with the ink on the contract still wet, a terrifying realization washed over me.
I looked down at my stomach, my hands trembling.
I didn't know then that I wasn't carrying one soul, but two.
And I didn't know that Liam Sterling had just bought the wrong baby.
The victory over the moonlet felt like a hollow chime in the vast, freezing dark of Callisto. The "Left-Behind" didn't celebrate; they mourned the loss of their stillness. As the Father-Root lay slumped and grey against the Respiration’s cables, the air in the thawing city grew heavy with the smell of wet iron and old regrets.Kael stood at the edge of the central plaza, watching Nora. She was sitting by the base of the Root, her small hands stroking the silver bark as if trying to soothe a dying animal. She looked so much like the photographs of the first Nora Davis—the woman who had broken her own heart to save a species—that it made Kael’s chest ache with a physical, sharp pain."He’s not breathing right, Papa," Nora whispered, her voice cracking. "The Root... it’s not used to the reach. It’s used to the huddle. We’re asking it to be a shield, but all it wants to be is a memory."Kael knelt beside her, the cold water of the melting city soaking into his boots. "Sometimes a memo
The turn of the century did not bring the quiet dawn Kael had hoped for. Instead, the thawing of the Father-Root had acted as a biological flare, lighting up the Jovian dark and signaling to every predator lurking in the radiation belts that the "Heart" of the outer system was finally vulnerable.In the Great Concourse of Callisto, the atmosphere was a thick, sweltering haze of melting ice and ancient, waking spores. The "Left-Behind" stood in huddled groups, their pale skin flushed pink by the sudden surge of heat. They looked at Kael and his crew not as saviors, but as Interlopers—strangers who had broken their holy, frozen silence."You brought the fire of the Earth here," the Keeper of the Father-Root said, his voice trembling as he watched the silver veins of the root writhe against the melting ice. "But fire in a house of ice only brings the collapse. Look at your ship, Kael Davis. Look at what follows the light."The Ice-Breaker’s ShadowOn the Respiration’s bridge, Elia D
The journey to the Jovian system was a descent into a cathedral of ice and silence. Away from the warm, humming pulse of the Awakened Earth, the Respiration felt like a lonely heartbeat in a graveyard of stars. For Kael, the transition was more than physical; it was a stripping away of the armor he had worn since the Shallows. Without the Earth’s Chorus to anchor him, the eighty years of loss, the weight of the "Muted" decades, and the faces of those he had buried began to crowd the quiet corridors of the ship.As the gargantuan, swirling eye of Jupiter filled the viewport—a chaotic, bruised nebula of storms—Nora found her father standing in the observation deck, his forehead pressed against the cold glass."It’s so far from the sun, Papa," she whispered, wrapping a shawl of woven Whisper-Moss around her shoulders. "How did they survive out here for a hundred years without the Mother-Root? How did they keep from going cold in the soul?"Kael didn't turn away from the orange glow o
The celebration of the Homecoming had settled into a rhythmic, peaceful industry. The "Confluence" was no longer a makeshift camp but a living city that breathed with the planet. But for Kael, the peace felt like the eye of a storm. He had spent his life listening for the "Silence," and now that the world was loud with life, he found himself tuned to a frequency that shouldn't exist.Inside the Respiration’s command center—now draped in the flowering vines of the "High-Resonance" moss—Elia Davis was staring at a spectral readout that defied logic."It’s not a broadcast, Kael," Elia said, her voice tight with a mixture of awe and dread. "It’s a Shadow-Pulse. It’s coming from the magnetosphere of Jupiter, specifically the moon Europa. And it’s using a modulation we haven't seen since the very first Davis logs—before the twins were even born."The Pre-Exodus SignalKael leaned over the terminal, his eyes narrowing. The signal wasn't a series of binary codes or a melodic song. It was






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