

Description
Serena Vale survived Columbia on scholarships and spite, locked in brutal academic rivalry with Caspian Rothwell-the golden boy who had everything she had to fight for. Seven years later, she has built a life as a financial analyst and single mother to six-year-old Aria, carefully constructed on the ashes of one reckless graduation night she can barely remember. When Rothwell Industries acquires her firm and Caspian walks into her presentation with that same infuriating smirk, their old war reignites-until Aria tugs her skirt and calls her "Mommy" in front of the man who once destroyed her in every debate. Serena watches his face crack with something she can't name as he stares at her daughter, and feels the ground shift beneath her carefully controlled world. Some battles, it turns out, were never finished-they were only waiting.
Chapter 1
Feb 3, 2026
[Serena’s POV]
The text comes at 7:43 AM, ten minutes after I've already buttoned Aria into her favorite blouse (it’s pink and with a bow!).
Emily: Family emergency. Can't make it today. So sorry!
I stare at my phone, watching my carefully constructed morning collapse.
The most important meeting of my career starts in forty-seven minutes. Forty-seven minutes to prove my department's worth to the new ownership, to justify my existence to survive the acquisition bloodbath.
I've rehearsed my presentation until I could recite it in my sleep. I know every vulnerability in their analysis. Every weak point in their restructuring plan.
What I don't know is what to do with a six-year-old right now.
"Mommy?" Aria appears in the doorway. "Can Emy bring fish-creckers ple-e-ease?"
"No, baby, sorry. She can make it today." I crouch down, meeting those intelligent eyes. "How do you feel about coming to work with Mommy today?"
Her face lights up, and leads her to the elevator, where I bribe her with promises.
"Just two hours, baby. You can have the tablet, all your puzzles, and we'll get ice cream after, okay? But you have to be so, so quiet."
She nods solemnly, already swiping through her puzzle app. I watch her small fingers move across the screen—capable, precise, solving problems with the same ruthless efficiency I use on spreadsheets.
‘She's better off than you were,’ I remind myself. ‘You've built something good. Something safe.’
Looking at her dark hair, the way she bites her lip, memory blindsides me.
Seven years ago. Graduation night. Too much cheap champagne and the wild relief of surviving Columbia on rage and scholarships—one night not careful.
I don’t remember her father’s face. Only flashes: calloused hands, a voice making me feel wanted instead of tolerated, my name said like it mattered. I woke alone—tangled sheets and smeared makeup.
A heated July, two months later, a pregnancy test upended my life. And a cold December blessed me with my baby girl.
The elevator doors open and Aria slips her hand into mine, I shove the past back where it belongs.
That night gave me her. Nothing else matters.
The boardroom hums with the strain of people pretending they aren’t fighting for their jobs. Department heads sit rigid, decks polished to a desperate shine. I’ve stashed Aria in the corner with a tablet and a bag of quiet activities, praying she stays invisible.
Gerald from Operations goes first, voice steady as he argues to keep his fifteen-person team. The acquisition reps are stone-faced, taking notes and Patricia from Marketing follows, selling “synergy” even though she doesn’t believe it.
My turn. I stand, smooth my blazer, and deliver the analysis I’ve drilled to perfection: revenue projections, cost-benefit, the math that makes my department not just useful—essential.
I’m mid-counter to their efficiency critique when the door opens. The air shifts.
Caspian fucking Rothwell walks in like he owns the room—soon he will. But it’s more than that. It’s the way he moves, the same predatory grace I remember from Columbia, when we circled each other like opposing generals in every seminar, every debate.
When I spent four years pretending our rivalry was all I felt. Swallowing confessions that burned in my throat every time he demolished my arguments with that sharp, infuriating brilliance.
When I watched him from across lecture halls and told myself the ache in my chest was ambition, not longing. Not love.
When I fantasized about him all night long. About what might happen if I just once admitted I wanted to kiss him more than I wanted to beat him.
Our eyes meet and for a fraction of a second, his composure cracks.
Recognition hits him the same way it's hitting me. Lightning strike of ‘oh fuck, not you, not here, not now.’ Then the mask slides back into place.
That infuriating, aristocratic mask of someone who's never had to fight for anything.
"Serena Vale." His voice is silk over steel, and I hate that I remember exactly how it sounds when he's winning. "Still fighting battles you can't win, I see."
Every eye in the room swivels between us. They smell blood.
Seven years. Seven years since I've seen him last time, and he leads with an attack.
Fine.
"Mr. Rothwell." I keep my voice professional, even as my pulse hammers. "Shall I continue, or would you prefer to hear how your restructuring plan has a twelve percent margin of error that'll cost you millions in the first quarter?"
Something flickers in his eyes. Surprise? Respect? Fury? But before he can respond, before I can press my advantage, I hear the patter of small feet on an expensive carpet.
No. No. No.
Aria materializes at my side, tugging my skirt with the persistence of someone who's been quiet for exactly as long as her six-year-old patience allows.
"Mommy!" she announces to the entire boardroom, "I finished all the puzzles."
The word detonates like a grenade and I immediately watch Caspian's face. See the exact moment his brain processes this information.
His eyes drop to Aria, and something in his expression fractures. He stares at her like he's seeing a ghost. Like she's an equation that shouldn't compute but does.
"I apologize for the interruption." My voice comes out steadier than I feel. "My childcare fell through this morning."
"Clearly." Caspian's tone could cut glass. "Though I'd think someone in your position would understand the importance of professionalism. There are ways to ensure your personal life doesn't interfere with critical business operations."
The room goes silent. Even the other department heads, my supposed colleagues, won't meet my eyes. But fury rises in my throat, hot and clean.
"I understand perfectly, Mr. Rothwell." I keep my hand on Aria's shoulder, anchoring her to me. "I also understand that my analysis is flawless and my ability to manage both professional excellence and motherhood isn't up for debate.”
Oh, I love the way his jaw tightens because he knows there’s nothing he can say.
“So would you like me to continue demonstrating why your acquisition strategy has fatal blind spots, or shall we schedule this for a time when you're prepared to discuss actual data?"
We lock eyes. The same battle of wills from Columbia. From every debate where we destroyed each other with words instead of weapons.
He allows himself to relax. "We'll continue this later."
It's not a suggestion.
I scoop Aria into my arms and walk out, my heart hammering against my ribs. Behind me, I hear the meeting dissolve into uncomfortable murmurs.
In the hallway, Aria studies my face with those too-knowing eyes. "That man was serious. And a little scary."
"Yes, baby. He is."
"But he has pretty eyes." She traces a finger along her own cheekbone. "They're grey with dark spots, like mine!"
My chest constricts. "They're not pretty, sweetheart."
"They are, Mommy."
She then touches the corner of her left eye, where a small birthmark sits like a beauty mark.
"And look—he has the same magic mark as me, right here! Like in my cartoon when people are from the same magician clan. Do you think we could be from the same magic family?"
"I doubt it, baby. Sometimes people just look similar."
But my mind is spinning through memories I've tried to bury. The way Caspian looked at Aria—not with irritation, but with something visceral and stunned. The shock on his face when he heard me being called ‘mommy.’
My phone buzzes. A text from my assistant: ‘Mr. Rothwell wants to see you in his office at 3 PM. Alone. Said it’s non-negotiable.’
I stare at the message, Aria's weight solid and warm in my arms, and know with absolute certainty that my carefully constructed life is about to detonate.
Again.

His Secret Babymama
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