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I Confessed I Was Still a Virgin at 28—Then the Billionaire CEO Behind the Door Stopped Signing His Contract M1

articleUseronJune 28, 2026

Part 2

The phone kept ringing in Nathan’s hand.

For a few seconds, neither of us moved.

The river flowed beside us, black and silver beneath the Chicago lights, and the warmth from his hand still lingered around mine. A moment ago, he had looked at me as if I were the only honest thing left in his world.

Now his face had closed like a locked door.

“Nathan?” I whispered.

He looked at the screen again.

Then he silenced the call.

Not declined.

Silenced.

Like whoever was calling him had power, but not enough to make him answer in front of me.

“There’s something you need to know before you trust me,” he repeated.

My heart beat once, hard.

“Then tell me.”

His jaw tightened. “Not here.”

The words sent a chill through me.

Around us, people passed with takeout bags and office badges, laughing into the night as if nothing had changed. But something had. I could feel it in the way Nathan kept scanning the street, the riverwalk, the shadows beneath the bridge.

For the first time since I had known him, Nathan Carter looked hunted.

He led me to a small private lounge in a hotel overlooking the river. He did not order wine. He did not sit close enough to touch me. He stood by the window with his hands in his pockets while I sat on the edge of a velvet chair, waiting for the fantasy to collapse.

“The contract I was signing the day I overheard you,” he said at last, “was not just a business deal.”

I swallowed. “What was it?”

“A merger agreement.”

“That doesn’t sound like a secret.”

“It involved Northstar’s artificial intelligence division, a private investment group, and a company called Vale Dynamics.”

The name meant nothing to me, but the way he said it made my stomach twist.

“Vale Dynamics is run by Adrian Vale,” Nathan continued. “He’s powerful, dangerous, and very good at making people disappear without ever touching them.”

I tried to laugh, but no sound came out. “Disappear?”

“Careers. Reputations. Companies. Families.”

His eyes finally met mine.

“And he wants you gone.”

The room became suddenly too quiet.

“Me?” I said. “I’m an analyst. I build forecasting models and drink terrible office coffee. Why would a man like that care about me?”

Nathan walked to the table between us and placed his phone down, screen facing up.

There was a voicemail notification.

He tapped it.

A man’s voice filled the room, smooth and cold.

“Nathan, don’t be sentimental. The Bennett file is still active. Either remove her from Northstar by Friday, or the board will learn exactly why you hired her.”

My blood turned cold.

The Bennett file.

My file.

I stared at Nathan. “What does that mean?”

He looked at me with something like pain.

“I didn’t hire you, Maya. Not directly. But I made sure your application wasn’t buried.”

My breath caught.

“When?” I asked.

“Three years ago.”

I stood so quickly the chair scraped behind me.

“Three years ago?” My voice shook. “You knew who I was before the cafeteria?”

“Yes.”

The word hit harder than it should have.

All those elevator conversations. His questions about my work. The way he listened. The way he looked at me like I mattered.

Had any of it been real?

“Why?” I whispered.

Nathan’s face tightened. “Because your father once worked with mine.”

I stopped breathing.

My father, Daniel Bennett, had died when I was sixteen. He had been brilliant, gentle, absent-minded, always scribbling formulas on napkins and telling me that numbers had memories if you knew how to read them. He had left behind notebooks, debts, and a silence in my mother that never fully healed.

“My father was a high school math teacher,” I said.

Nathan shook his head. “That was after everything fell apart.”

I wanted to tell him he was wrong.

But my father had always been vague about the years before teaching. My mother never liked talking about them. Whenever I asked, she said, “Some doors stay shut for a reason.”

Nathan reached into his coat and removed a folded document.

He placed it on the table.

I did not touch it.

“What is that?”

“A patent filing from twenty-two years ago. Daniel Bennett and Richard Carter.”

My knees weakened.

Richard Carter.

Nathan’s father.

“My father helped create the foundation of Northstar’s predictive intelligence,” Nathan said. “But he didn’t do it alone. Daniel Bennett wrote the original adaptive forecasting architecture.”

I stared at the paper until the words blurred.

Bennett.

Carter.

Both names side by side.

“No,” I said softly. “If that were true, my mother would have told me.”

“Not if she thought it would put you in danger.”

The room seemed to tilt.

Nathan continued, each sentence careful, like he was walking across broken glass.

“My father and Adrian Vale pushed Daniel out before Northstar went public. They buried his ownership, erased his name from the research, and gave him a settlement tied to a lifelong nondisclosure agreement.”

I gripped the back of the chair.

“My father was cheated?”

“Yes.”

“And you knew?”

“I found out after my father died.”

“When was that?”

“Four years ago.”

I stared at him.

Four years ago.

He had known for four years that my father had helped build his empire.

He had known for three years that I worked beneath him, invisible in a department full of people who had no idea my family’s name had once belonged on the walls.

“You said Vale wants me gone,” I said. “Why?”

“Because the merger would transfer Northstar’s core AI assets to Vale Dynamics. Once that happened, any old claim connected to your father would become a liability. Especially if you ever found proof.”

A bitter laugh escaped me.

“Proof? Nathan, I didn’t even know there was anything to prove.”

“I know.”

“You knew everything. You watched me work there for three years, and you never told me.”

“I thought I was protecting you.”

The words landed badly.

I turned away.

Outside, Chicago glittered like nothing could touch it. Buildings rose proud and clean, hiding the rot beneath their foundations.

“Protecting me,” I repeated. “By letting me remain a junior analyst in the company my father helped create?”

Nathan flinched.

“I couldn’t promote you too quickly without drawing attention.”

“So you drew attention by walking me through the executive floor and taking me to lunch?”

His silence answered before he did.

“That was different,” he said.

“Because you overheard I was a virgin?”

His eyes snapped to mine. “No.”

I hated how badly I wanted to believe him.

I hated how much the confession in the cafeteria suddenly felt less like fate and more like a file opened on a desk.

“Was any of it real?” I asked.

Nathan stepped toward me, then stopped himself.

“All of it.”

“How can I know that?”

“You can’t,” he said quietly.

That honesty hurt more than denial would have.

My phone buzzed in my coat pocket.

I almost ignored it, but something made me look.

It was a message from Harper.

MAYA. Where are you? Someone from HR came looking for you. They said your access badge has been suspended.

Then another message appeared.

Also… there are security guards at your desk.

My hands went cold.

I showed Nathan the screen.

His expression changed instantly.

“Vale moved faster than I expected.”

I backed away from him. “Or you did.”

“Maya—”

“No. Don’t.” My voice cracked. “I trusted you.”

He looked at me like the words had struck him in the chest.

“I know.”

“No, you don’t. You have no idea what trust costs when you’ve spent your whole life feeling like one wrong choice will ruin you.”

For a moment, the mask fell completely.

Beneath the billionaire, beneath the ruthless CEO, there was only a man standing in front of the wreckage he had helped create.

“You’re right,” he said.

The simplicity of it made my eyes burn.

I wanted anger. I wanted excuses I could hate.

Instead, he gave me truth.

And truth was harder to run from.

Nathan picked up the folded patent document and held it out to me.

“Take this.”

I stared at it.

“Why?”

“Because if you leave with nothing else tonight, leave with proof that your father was not who they made him become.”

My fingers trembled as I took it.

The paper felt impossibly light for something that could split my life in two.

“There’s more,” Nathan said.

“Of course there is.”

“The original research notebooks disappeared after your father signed the settlement. Vale has been looking for them for years. He believes your mother has them.”

A memory rose so suddenly I nearly staggered.

My mother in the attic, sitting beside a locked cedar trunk.

Her face pale when I asked what was inside.

“Old grief,” she had said.

I pressed my hand to my mouth.

Nathan saw my expression.

“You’ve seen something.”

“I don’t know.”

“Maya, listen to me. If Vale thinks the notebooks are still in your family’s possession, he won’t stop with your job.”

Fear moved through me, clean and sharp.

“My mother lives alone.”

Nathan was already reaching for his phone. “I’ll send security.”

“No.” I grabbed his wrist. “Not your security. Not your people. I don’t know who I can trust.”

He froze beneath my touch.

Then slowly, he nodded.

“Then we go ourselves.”

I should have said no.

I should have taken a cab, gone to Harper, called my mother, called the police, done anything except step into Nathan Carter’s car again.

But fear has its own logic.

And whatever he had hidden, whatever he had ruined, Nathan knew the shape of the danger better than I did.

We drove through the city in silence.

I called my mother five times.

No answer.

By the sixth, my hands were shaking so badly I could barely hold the phone.

Nathan drove himself, knuckles white against the steering wheel. The billionaire’s sleek black car cut through traffic, past glass towers and late-night diners, past people who had no idea that somewhere in a quiet neighborhood west of the city, my mother might be in trouble because of a past she had never confessed.

When we reached the small house where I grew up, the porch light was off.

It was never off.

I was out of the car before Nathan killed the engine.

“Maya, wait.”

I didn’t.

The front door was unlocked.

That alone nearly broke me.

“Mom?” I called.

No answer.

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