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Because Blake Harrington had just learned he was a father—and men like Blake did not accept being shut out.
Ethan finally burst out, “Is that man really our dad?”
“Yes,” Emma said.
Emma sat with them. “When I found out I was pregnant, I tried to tell him. But people around him kept me away. He didn’t know.”
“Was he mean to you?” Oliver asked.
“Did you hurt his?”
“Are we going to live with him?” Ethan asked.
Then her phone rang from a blocked number.
Blake.
“No.”
“They’re my children.”
“I know. I’m sorry.”
“They need time,” Emma said.
“I’m not asking to take them. I’m asking to understand.”
Finally, she agreed to meet him the next day in a public park. One hour. No lawyers. No security. No Marissa.
“Marissa no longer works for me,” Blake said coldly.
Emma froze.
He had checked the archived security logs. Emma had indeed come to his office five years earlier. She had stayed seventeen minutes before guards removed her on Marissa’s orders. Her calls had been redirected. Her emails filtered. Her letters destroyed.
“I told you,” Emma whispered.
“I know,” Blake said, and those two words carried more weight than any apology.
Then he asked about Daniel Reyes—the man he had believed was Emma’s lover.
“He wasn’t my lover,” Emma said. “He was a genetic counselor.”
Her mother’s neurological disease might have been hereditary. Emma had been getting tested before trying for children. The messages Blake had found were about clinic appointments and results.
“You never let me explain,” she said.
He had seen phrases like “I can’t tell Blake yet” and assumed betrayal. But the truth was fear. Emma had been afraid she might carry a dangerous genetic marker.
“The results were negative,” she told him. “I was going to tell you that night. I bought baby shoes. The blue box on the table.”
Blake whispered, “I threw it away.”
“I know.”
The next day, Blake arrived at the park without an entourage, wearing a navy sweater and holding three small bags from a toy store. He looked nervous.
Ethan approached first. “What’s in the bags?”
“Books,” Blake said. “And an apology.”
Oliver narrowed his eyes. “Do you know how to apologize?”
“I’m learning.”
Blake crouched carefully, giving them space.
“I’m Blake,” he said. “I know you learned something big yesterday. I’m sorry it happened that way. I didn’t know about you, but I should have listened to your mom.”
Oliver studied him. “Are you our father?”
“Yes.”
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