walked into my boss’s office expecting to be fired for bringing my daughter to work, but instead I found the coldest billionaire in Chicago asleep with my little girl

walked into my boss’s office expecting to be fired for bringing my daughter to work, but instead I found the coldest billionaire in Chicago asleep with my little girl

For a long moment, Ethan did not move.

The photograph trembled between his fingers.

The little boy stood beside Caleb in front of a white house with blue shutters. His dark curls were windblown, one shoelace untied, and his expression carried the solemn patience children wore when adults asked them to stand still.

But it was his eyes that held Ethan.

Gray.

Clear.

Unmistakably familiar.

His name is Noah. He is yours.

The words on the back of the photograph seemed to change the air inside the abandoned garage.

I watched Ethan read them again.

His face had gone still in the way it did when he was fighting to keep something enormous from showing.

“That’s impossible,” he said.

Samuel Parker lowered his gaze.

“I thought you might say that.”

Ethan looked up sharply.

“You don’t know anything about me.”

“I know enough to understand why Caleb was afraid you wouldn’t believe him.”

Daniel stepped closer.

“Samuel, we need facts. Who is the boy? Where is he now?”

Samuel glanced toward the back office.

“There’s another room.”

“We searched the office,” Daniel said.

“Not the room behind it.”

He crossed the garage slowly, his shoes scraping over the dusty concrete. At the rear wall, he moved a dented metal shelf aside, revealing a narrow door nearly invisible beneath layers of gray paint.

Daniel gave Ethan a questioning look.

Ethan nodded.

Samuel took the brass key marked PARKER from Daniel and fitted it into the lock.

The door opened with a reluctant creak.

A small room lay beyond it.

No windows.

No furniture except a wooden chair, a low filing cabinet, and a child’s red backpack.

The sight of the backpack made my heart clench.

It was too clean for the abandoned garage.

Too recent.

Ethan saw it at the same time I did.