I Caught My Husband Cheating For The 100 Time In Our Manhattan Penthouse, So I Hired A Masked Stranger To Conceive The Child My Dying Grandfather Desperate Craves—never Realizing I’d Accidentally Bought A Billionaire.

PART 1: The Breaking Point
The smell of expensive Chanel No. 5—not mine—clung to the mahogany doors of our Upper East Side master suite like a terminal illness.
Three years. Three years of marriage to Tom Reed, and this was, by my count, the hundredth time I’d walked into the wreckage of my own heart.
The city lights of New York flickered outside the floor-to-ceiling windows, mocking me.
“Aren’t you getting tired of this kind of behavior, Tom?” I asked, my voice terrifyingly calm even as my hands trembled.
Tom didn’t even look up as he adjusted his silk tie. The woman on the bed—some aspiring actress I’d probably seen in a perfume ad—didn’t even have the decency to look ashamed.
“I told you a million times, Evelyn,” Tom sighed, sounding genuinely bored.
“You can’t just barge in here. This is my home.”
“It’s our home,” I corrected, tossing the thick manila envelope onto the duvet.
“And this is a divorce agreement.”
Tom chuckled, a dark, condescending sound that made my skin crawl.
“Don’t play this cat-and-mouse game with me, Evie. You’ve threatened this before. You won’t leave. You need me. Your family’s company needs the Reed name.”
He stepped toward me, eyes cold.
“I’ll give you one chance. Take this back. I’ll pretend it never happened.”
I looked at him—really looked at him—and wondered how I’d ever loved a man who viewed my dignity as a negotiable asset.
“Sign it, Tom. You two have a lovely afternoon. It’s over.”
I walked out before he could see the first tear fall. I had a legacy to protect, a grandfather in a hospital bed at Sloan Kettering who was fading fast, and a soul that needed to be scrubbed clean of the Reed family.
But my grandfather had one dying wish: to see the next generation of the Grant family.
He didn’t care about Tom; he cared about me not being alone. And if I couldn’t give him a grandson with a husband, I’d find another way.
I called Daniel, my most trusted assistant and the only person who knew the true depth of my desperation.
“Daniel,” I whispered into the phone as my driver pulled onto Fifth Avenue.
“I need you to help me find a man. Not a husband. Just someone… for a child. A million dollars. Make it fast. He needs to be perfect.”
“A million, Miss Grant?” Daniel’s voice cracked.
“For… ‘services’?”
“For the best genes money can buy. And Daniel? I never want to see his face. I can’t handle another face I might grow to hate.”
PART 2: The Masked Billionaire
The arrangement was set. A man named “Eric.” 6’2”, top-tier education, athletic build, “impeccable health.”
But he had conditions.
“He’s a bit… shy, ma’am,” Daniel told me, looking at his feet in my office the next day.
“He requests that he wears a mask. And the lights stay off. Entirely off.”
“Mask on, lights off?” I leaned back, a bitter smile touching my lips.
“I guess we all have our little quirks. Set it up for tonight. My apartment. 9:00 PM. And keep pushing Tom’s lawyers. I want that man out of my life before the first trimester.”
What I didn’t know—what I couldn’t have possibly guessed—was that across town, in the glass-and-steel monolith of Brooks Enterprises, Ethan Brooks was looking at the same agreement.
“Mr. Brooks,” his lawyer had asked him, “Are you sure about this? Pretending to be a… call boy? You’re worth eighty billion dollars.”
Ethan, my oldest rival from college, the man who had watched me marry Tom with a silent, burning resentment, stared out at the Manhattan skyline.
“As long as I’m by her side,” he murmured, his voice like gravel and silk.
“I don’t care who I have to pretend to be. I already lost her once. I won’t let her go through this alone.”
The first night was a blur of shadows and the scent of expensive sandalwood and rain.
He didn’t speak much. His voice was a low rumble that vibrated in my chest, strangely familiar, like a song I’d forgotten the lyrics to.
“You’re late,” I whispered into the darkness of my bedroom.
“Business ran long,” the shadow replied. His hand, warm and calloused, found my waist.
“I don’t want to know your life, Eric,” I said, trying to steel my heart.
“You’re here for the money. I’m here for the legacy. After this is over, we never speak again.”
“If that’s what you want, Evelyn,” he whispered.
That voice. It haunted me.
But as the weeks passed, I found myself looking forward to 9:00 PM. While Tom was out flaunting his mistresses at every club in the Meatpacking District, “Eric” was the only person who seemed to listen to me in the dark.
The drama escalated at the Metropolitan Charity Gala. I arrived alone, wearing a gown of midnight blue, only to find Tom there with Melissa—the same woman I’d caught him with.
“Evelyn, dear,” my aunt Vivian hissed, cornering me near the champagne tower.
“I just saw Tom. He’s flaunting that girl. People are talking. The Grant name is being dragged through the mud.”
“Some things are worth the wait, Auntie,” I replied, my head held high.
“Is it true?” Tom sneered, appearing behind me, his breath smelling of bourbon.
“You’re seeing someone? Some… nobody?”
“He’s ten times the man you’ll ever be, Tom,” I snapped.
Suddenly, a hush fell over the room. Ethan Brooks walked in. He didn’t look at the cameras. He didn’t look at the press. He looked straight at me.
“Ethan, the hell are you doing here?” Tom barked. They had been “friends” for years, but the tension was thick enough to cut.
“Just checking on my investments, Tom,” Ethan said, his eyes lingering on me with an intensity that made my heart skip.
Later that night, after the gala, “Eric” arrived at my apartment. He was silent, but he was shaking.
“Are you sick?” I asked, reaching for the light switch.
“Don’t,” he groaned, catching my wrist.
“I’m fine. I just… I saw you tonight. At the gala.”
My heart stopped.
“You were there?”
“I’m always there, Evelyn. Even when you don’t see me.”
The truth began to unravel like a frayed silk thread. My cousin Lillian, fueled by jealousy, tried to sabotage us, telling me Ethan was only using me to get back at Tom. Tom tried to crawl back, begging for forgiveness when he realized the Brooks empire was backing me.
But the final blow came when I found the diary. Not mine—his.
December 24th, 2018. I wanted to invite you to spend Christmas together, but you already made plans with Tom. You looked beautiful. I’ll wait.
He had been the one. Not Tom. Ten years ago, when I was involved in that horrific accident that took my parents’ lives, I had always thought Tom was the one who pulled me from the wreckage. I had married him out of a sense of misplaced gratitude.
But as I looked at Ethan—really looked at him—I saw the scar on his forearm. The same one I remember the “angel” in the smoke having.
“It was you,” I whispered, the rain lashing against the windows of his penthouse.
“All these years. Why didn’t you tell me?”
“Because you looked happy, Evelyn,” Ethan said, stepping into the light, the mask finally gone.
“And I’d rather be a shadow in your life than a ghost in your heart.”
Tom was gone. The divorce was final. But as Ethan took my hand, I realized the “transaction” was over, and the real story was only just beginning.
“So,” Ethan smirked, that familiar, witty glint in his eyes.
“About that raise you promised me if I quit my ‘job’?”
I laughed, truly laughed, for the first time in years.
“I think I’ll just keep you on a permanent contract.”
“Does that include a shower together?” he asked, pulling me close.
“Maybe,” I whispered.
“If you behave.”
PART 3: The Scent of a Lie
It started with the watch.
The “Deep Sea Monster” J11 series. It was a masterpiece of titanium and sapphire, a watch so rare that the waiting list was filled with oil magnates and kings. Only five existed in North America.
And yet, there it was, glinting on “Eric’s” wrist in the pale moonlight of my bedroom.
“That’s a beautiful piece,” I whispered one night, my fingers tracing the cold metal of his watch as he lay beside me.
“A gift from a client?”
I felt him stiffen. “A gift from a friend,” he replied, his voice that low, resonant rumble that always made my heart skip beats it shouldn’t.
“He said I needed to look the part of a man who could take care of someone like you.”
“A million dollars wasn’t enough?” I teased, though a cold shiver of doubt was beginning to settle in my marrow.
“Money is just paper, Evelyn,” he said, and for a second, he sounded less like a man I’d hired and more like a man who owned the world.
“Time… time is the only thing worth spending.”
The next morning, the doubt turned into a full-blown obsession.
I was at the Grant Enterprises headquarters, reviewing the quarterly projections, when Ethan Brooks was announced for our 10:00 AM meeting.
He walked in looking like a god of industry—bespoke suit, predatory grace, and a scent that stopped me mid-breath.
Sandalwood and rain.
It was the same. Exactly the same. I felt dizzy, the edges of my vision blurring. I watched him sit across from me, his movements precise.
Then, he adjusted his cuff.
There it was. The Deep Sea Monster.
“Is something wrong, Miss Grant?” Ethan asked, his dark eyes locking onto mine with an intensity that felt like a physical touch.
“You look like you’ve seen a ghost.”
“I… I just didn’t realize you were a collector of rare timepieces, Mr. Brooks,” I managed to say, my voice sounding thin to my own ears.
“I collect many things, Evelyn,” he said, dropping the formal title.
“Mostly things that people don’t know how to value properly.”
The tension in the room was suffocating. I wanted to scream, to rip the mask off the stranger in my bed and the suit off the man in my office. But then the door burst open. Tom. Of course, it was Tom.
“Ethan! What the hell are you doing in my wife’s office?” Tom barked, looking disheveled, his eyes bloodshot. He’d clearly been on a bender since the gala.
“Ex-wife, Tom,” Ethan corrected without even looking back.
“And we’re discussing a merger. Something you clearly know nothing about—both in business and in marriage.”
“You think you’re so much better than me?” Tom stepped toward him, fists clenched.
“I’ve known you since we were kids, Ethan. You always wanted what I had. The captaincy of the team, the corner office… and now her?”
Ethan stood up slowly, towering over Tom.
“I don’t want what you have, Tom. I want what you wasted.”
PART 4: The Serpent in the Garden
While I was drowning in the mystery of Ethan and Eric, a deadlier storm was brewing. My cousin, Lillian, had always lived in my shadow, and she was tired of the dark. She had been seeing Tom behind my back for months—not for love, but for the Reed bank account.
“He’s playing her, Tom,” Lillian whispered, her voice recorded on a device Daniel had planted in Tom’s suite.
“Ethan Brooks doesn’t do ‘charity.’ He’s using Evelyn to get to the Grant land in the Hamptons. If you want her back, you have to break her trust in him.”
I listened to the recording in the back of my town car, my heart turning to stone.
Was it all a game?
Was Eric just a plant? Was Ethan just a predator?
The sabotage started that evening. A series of leaked photos hit the New York Post. Headlines screamed: “GRANT HEIRESS: DIVORCE DEBAUCHERY OR SECRET SCANDAL?”
The photos showed me entering a “disreputable” building—the one where Daniel had set up the first meeting with Eric.
My phone wouldn’t stop ringing. The Board of Directors was panicking.
My grandfather’s doctors called to say his blood pressure was spiking from the stress of the news.
I was at my breaking point when I arrived at my apartment to find Tom standing in the lobby.
“See, Evie? This is what happens when you try to fly without me,” he said, a smug grin on his face.
“But I can make it go away. Sign a retraction. Tell the press we’re reconciling. I’ve already talked to the editors.”
“Get out, Tom,” I whispered.
“You’re alone, Evelyn! Your ‘masked man’ is probably selling his story to the highest bidder right now. You think a guy like that stays loyal?”
Suddenly, the elevator doors opened. Ethan stepped out. He didn’t say a word. He just walked up to Tom and handed him a folder.
“What is this?” Tom sneered.
“Eviction papers, Tom,” Ethan said calmly.
“I bought this building ten minutes ago. You’re trespassing. And if you ever mention Evelyn’s name to the press again, I’ll release the forensic audit of your father’s firm. We both know where that money went.”
Tom’s face went pale. He looked at me, then at Ethan, and scrambled for the door like a cornered rat.
Ethan turned to me, his expression softening.
“Are you okay?”
“Who are you?” I demanded, tears finally spilling over.
“Are you the man in the office, or the man in the dark? Because I can’t live in both worlds anymore, Ethan.”
He reached out, his hand hovering near my cheek before he pulled it back.
“I’m the man who’s been waiting ten years for you to remember the truth.”

PART 5: The Ghost of the 10th Year
The truth came out in a hospital room, under the hum of heart monitors and the smell of antiseptic. My grandfather had taken a turn for the worse.
“Evelyn,” he wheezed, clutching my hand.
“The accident… the fire… I never told you because I wanted you to move on.”
“What are you talking about, Grandpa?”
“It wasn’t Tom,” he whispered.
“The boy who pulled you from the car… he was burned, badly. Tom arrived later, when the sirens were already close. He took the credit because he wanted the Grant alliance. But the other boy… he never asked for anything. He just watched from the shadows to make sure you were alive.”
I felt the world tilt. 10 years ago. The night of the gala. The rain. The smell of smoke and gasoline.
I remembered a silver lapel pen—a stylized Brooks eagle—clutched in my hand as I was loaded into the ambulance. I had forgotten it in the trauma. Tom had claimed he lost it in the struggle.
I ran from the hospital, my heart hammering against my ribs. I didn’t call a car. I ran through the rain, past the tourists in Rockefeller Center, all the way to the Brooks Building.
I bypassed security. I didn’t care. I burst into his penthouse office on the 80th floor. Ethan was standing by the window, looking out at the city he conquered, but his shoulders were slumped.
“It was you,” I gasped, drenched and shivering.
“The fire. The lapel pen. The reason you’ve been watching me all these years.”
Ethan turned around.
For the first time, he looked vulnerable. He rolled up his sleeve, revealing a jagged, silver scar that stretched from his wrist to his elbow—the mark of an old, deep burn.
“You were so happy with him,” Ethan said, his voice cracking.
“Or I thought you were. I told myself that if he made you smile, it didn’t matter that he was living my life. But then I saw him hurting you. I saw him breaking you piece by piece. And I couldn’t stay in the shadows anymore.”
“So you became Eric?”
“I couldn’t just walk up to you and say, ‘I’m the one you should have loved,'” he said, stepping toward me.
“I had to give you a choice. I had to let you find your way back to me without the weight of the past.”
“You spent a million dollars to sleep with your own wife-to-be?” I asked, a hysterical laugh bubbling up in my throat.
“I’d spend every cent I have just to hear you say my name in the dark one more time,” he replied.
PART 6: The Final Contract
The ending wasn’t a corporate merger; it was a revolution.
We didn’t wait for a society wedding. We went to City Hall three days later. Lillian was disgraced when the “scandal” she tried to create was turned against her—Ethan leaked the evidence of her and Tom’s embezzlement from the Grant foundation. They were last seen fleeing to a non-extradition country with nothing but the clothes on their backs.
My grandfather lived long enough to see the sonogram. A strong heartbeat. A new legacy.
We were sitting on the balcony of our new home—a quiet estate away from the noise of the city—watching the sun set over the Hudson.
“So,” I said, leaning my head on Ethan’s shoulder.
“The contract. It said I had to live with you.”
“Strictly professional,” he teased, kissing the top of my head.
“And it said I had to acknowledge our relationship publicly.”
“Well,” he said, pulling a small velvet box from his pocket.
Inside was the most beautiful diamond I had ever seen, set in platinum.
“I think a change in last name covers that.”
I looked at him—my rival, my stranger, my savior.
“You know, I still haven’t paid you that million dollars, Eric.”
Ethan laughed, a warm, genuine sound that echoed across the water.
“Keep it. Consider it a down payment on the next sixty years.”
I smiled, finally at peace.
The masks were gone. The lights were on. And for the first time in my life, I wasn’t just a Grant or a Reed.
I was exactly where I was meant to be.
“I guess we all have our little quirks,” I whispered.
“And I love every single one of yours,” he replied.
The city that once felt like a battlefield had finally become our sanctuary. One year later, the headlines no longer screamed about scandals or “cast-off wives.”
Instead, they whispered in awe of the Grant-Brooks Dynasty.
The Heir to the Empire
It was a crisp spring morning at our estate in the Hamptons—the very land Tom and Lillian had tried to steal. I stood on the porch, watching the sunlight dance over the Atlantic, when I felt Ethan’s arms wrap around my waist.
In his arms was Arthur “Artie” Grant Brooks, named after the grandfather who had lived just long enough to see his blue eyes open. Artie didn’t have a million-dollar price tag anymore; he was priceless. He had Ethan’s stubborn jaw and, thankfully, my ability to actually sleep through the night.
“He’s doing it again,” Ethan whispered, his voice thick with a warmth I once only knew in the dark.
“Doing what?”
“Looking at me like he knows I’m a fraud who pretended to be a call boy just to get his mother’s attention.”
I laughed, leaning back against his chest.
“Technically, you were a very expensive call boy, Ethan. I believe I still owe you a performance review.”
Justice, Served Cold
The world had moved on from Tom Reed. After the forensic audits and the embezzlement charges, the Reed name had withered.
Tom was last heard of working for a mid-level logistics firm in a flyover state, a far cry from the penthouses of Park Avenue.
Lillian, after a failed attempt to sell a “tell-all” book that no publisher would touch, had disappeared into social exile in Europe.
They were ghosts of a life I barely recognized. Without the venom of their greed, the Grant company hadn’t just stabilized; it had soared. Our collaborative jewelry line, “The Masked Collection,” had become a global phenomenon—pieces of sapphire and obsidian that celebrated the beauty of the things we hide until we find someone we trust.
The Final Ledger
That evening, as Artie slept in his nursery, I found Ethan in the library. He was looking at a framed piece of paper on the wall. It wasn’t a masterpiece or a deed to a skyscraper.
It was the original $1,000,000 check I had written to “Eric.” It was never cashed.
“You know,” Ethan said, turning to me with that familiar, predatory-yet-playful glint in his eyes.
“That contract was for professional services. I believe I’ve exceeded the scope of work.”
“Is that so, Mr. Brooks?” I stepped into his space, my hands finding the lapel of his jacket—no silver pin tonight, just the heartbeat I’d known for ten years.
“And what does the CEO of Brooks Enterprises suggest as a bonus?”
He pulled me close, the scent of sandalwood and home enveloping me.
“A lifetime extension. No masks. Full lights. And maybe… a sister for Artie?”
I smiled, pulling him down for a kiss that tasted like the future.
“I think I can negotiate that.”






























