“What is it?”
She glanced at the boys.
Alex stood.
“Clara, could you take them to the cafeteria?”
Lucas immediately narrowed his eyes. “Why?”
“Because,” Clara said gently, “I need coffee, and you two need muffins.”
Noah perked up. “Chocolate?”
“Possibly.”
Once they left, Margaret handed Alex a tablet.
“The story leaked.”
On the screen was a headline from a gossip site.
SECRET SONS? BILLIONAIRE ALEXANDER STERLING’S SHOCKING LOBBY SCANDAL
There was a blurry photo from the lobby: Lucas and Noah clinging to his legs.
Alex felt cold fury rise in him.
“Find who took it.”
“Already working on it. But that is not the worst part.”
She swiped.
A second headline appeared.
STERLING FAMILY SOURCE CLAIMS CHILDREN ARE PART OF EXTORTION PLOT
Below it was a quote from an unnamed family insider.
Alexander is vulnerable due to past trauma. Certain individuals may be exploiting his grief and medical history.
Medical history.
Alex’s jaw clenched.
Only a handful of people knew enough to phrase it that way.
Vivian had moved first.
“She wants public doubt before the DNA results,” Margaret said.
“She wants custody complications,” Alex replied. “She wants me defensive.”
“Why?”
Alex looked toward the hallway where his sons had disappeared.
“I don’t know yet.”
His phone rang.
Vivian.
He answered.
“You leaked it.”
“Good morning to you too, darling.”
“Do not call me that.”
A soft sigh. “You are making a spectacle of yourself. I was trying to protect the company.”
“You mentioned my medical history.”
“People will ask questions. Better they hear concern from family than accusations from enemies.”
“You’re my enemy now?”
“That depends entirely on whether you regain your senses.”
Alex walked to the window.
Far below, Manhattan moved as if nothing sacred had been touched.
“I read Emma’s letter.”
This time, Vivian did not pretend confusion.
When she spoke, the warmth was gone.
“Emma was always dramatic.”
“You threatened her.”
“I corrected a problem.”
“She was pregnant.”
“She was unsuitable.”
Alex closed his eyes.
There it was.
Not denial.
Not shame.
Just the old Sterling cruelty dressed as order.
“You cost me seven years with my sons.”
Vivian’s voice sharpened. “Your sons? A pair of small-town accidents appear in your lobby, and suddenly blood means everything?”
“Yes,” Alex said. “Blood means a great deal to people like you. That’s why you’re afraid.”
A pause.
Then Vivian laughed once, quietly.
“You have no idea what this is about.”
“Then enlighten me.”
“Ask yourself why your father changed the family trust three months before he died.”
Alex froze.
Vivian continued, each word precise.
“Ask yourself why he added a biological-heir clause to the controlling shares. Ask yourself who inherits voting power if you die childless. Ask yourself, Alexander, why I would care about a historian from Brooklyn unless she was carrying something that belonged to Sterling.”
The call ended.
Alex stood motionless.
The family trust.
After the accident, after his parents died, Vivian had helped him navigate the estate. His grief had been a fog. Lawyers spoke. Papers moved. He signed where they told him.
He remembered one phrase now.
In absence of direct biological issue…
His stomach turned.
If Alex died without children, a massive block of Sterling voting shares would eventually pass to Vivian’s branch of the family.
But if Lucas and Noah were legally recognized…
Everything changed.
The boys were not just his sons.
They were heirs.
And Vivian had known before he did.
That afternoon, the preliminary DNA results arrived.
Probability of paternity: 99.9998%.
Alex read the report once.
Then again.
The numbers blurred.
Margaret smiled through tears. Clara covered her mouth. Dr. Mehta placed a hand on Alex’s shoulder.