Iâm scrolling through the photo gallery on my personal message history with Emma. Itâs not the first time Iâve wasted endless minutes doing exactly this. Thatâs why I know there are fourteen pictures from the last few weeks. Iâve got them all memorized.
Most are of the kids. Bike rides in the park. Ice cream at Connieâs Creamery. Reaganâs crayon doodle of me, a masterpiece currently housed on Emmaâs refrigerator. But once in a while, thereâs a picture that includes Emma, beaming from the corner of a photo almost like an afterthought.
Iâve been combing through this gallery a little too often lately. But thatâs only because an idea entered my head a few days ago and now, it wonât budge.
âBrady Sanchezâs team reached out. He wants a meeting with you to discuss the contract for his new building.â
âHm.â
âI checked with Emma. You have some time next week to schedule a meeting.â
âHm.â
I flick to a particularly cute picture of all three kids together. Josh is sitting cross-legged on the grass with Reagan on his lap and Caroline kneeling behind him with her arms around his neck. Heâs smiling for once. I see the faintest traces of new muscle filling out the sleeve of his t-shirt. Heâs been working hard in the gym during our sessions together. The other day, one of his punches jostled some dust loose from the ceiling and I think he still hasnât stopped grinning about it.
Kirill clears his throat. âDrafting the next great American novel?â
Scowling at him, I put my phone away. âJust going over the trial results that Sergey sent me.â
Kirill cocks an eyebrow. âBroâyouâre sitting in front of reflective glass. You were looking at pictures of those kids.â
Fuck. Itâs bad enough knowing you have a problem. Itâs so much worse when youâre called out.
I leave the chair by the window and move to the sofa. This apartment used to be my bachelor pad. Itâs decked out with a game room, a theater, and a gym. Kirill usually crashes here when heâs too lazy to trek downtown to his own apartment. Itâs also become our go-to hangout spot when weâre looking to unwind, away from people and loud music and sleazy fucking reporters with long lens cameras.
âThis thing with you and Emma⦠How serious is it?â
I clench my jaw. âThe contract still stands. That part hasnât changed. Itâs just more⦠exclusive now.â
âA contracted girlfriend.â
âSheâs not my girlfriend,â I snap.
Kirill smirks. âSheâs your something. Why else would you spend so much time with her and those kids when you donât have to?â
Heâs got a point. But itâll take a damn army to make me admit that. âBecause I had an idea recently and, the more I think about it, the less crazy it seems.â
Kirill sits up a little straighter. âIntriguing. Whatâs this idea?ââ
Once you say it out loud, thereâs no going backâ¦
âWell?â he presses. âYou gonna keep me in suspense or what?â
âI was thinking about adding an addendum to the contract.â
His eyebrows rise. âScheduled sex four times a week instead of two?â he asks. âDoggystyle and missionary required in every session?â His chuckle dies when he sees the look on my face. He clears his throat. âOkay⦠so this is a serious addendum?â
âI donât say this often but Vadimâs right: I do need to start thinking about heirs.â
Kirill nearly sprays my designer sofa with a mouthful of gin. He sets the glass back on the liquor cart and slides up to the furthest edge of his seat.
âBrother, are you saying what I think youâre saying?â
âSheâs a good mother. And I can work with her.â
âBy âworkâ with her, do you mean raise children with her? Because that and what she does now are two very different jobs.â
âIâm not interested in doing things traditionallyââ
âThanks for clarifying; I wasnât aware.â
ââso this is the perfect solution.â
Kirill frowns. âI think âperfectâ is the wrong word.â
Iâm jonesing for another drink but I fight the urge. âI know itâs crazyââ
âA baby clause?â he murmurs, dumbfounded. âOr would it be a surrogacy clause?â
âSurrogacy implies she would have no connection to the child after she pushes it out. Sheâs a good mother, Kirill. Iâve seen her in action.â
âSo what youâre suggesting is an additional clause to be engineered into the existing contract that involves you having a baby with your secretary and then raising the child together.â
âYou can ax the tone,â I snap. âI know how it sounds.â
Kirill falls back into his seat. âItâs fucking madness. Especially for you.â
âWhy especially for me?â
âYouâve never wanted a child! Youâve never really thought about it.â
I clench the arm of the sofa. âMaybe thatâs because I never met a woman I could see being the mother of my child. With Emma, itâs⦠different.â
He rests his chin on his fist. âSo then why keep the contract at all?â
âBecause Iâm not interested in romance. I donât want marriage. Iâm not saying I want a family; what I want is an heir, specifically. So far, my arrangement with Emma has gone smoothly. Why shouldnât this be any different?â
âOh, I donât knowâmaybe because it involves the creation of a human being!â
I expected Kirill to be surprised. But his blatant shock is pissing me off. âIf I do this, itâll shut everyone up once and for all. Once I have an heir, I donât ever have to listen to Vadimâs nagging again.â
âAt least until you give the Oryolov Bratva an heir and a spare.â
âLetâs start with one baby first, shall we?â
âYouâre serious about this.â Kirillâs eyes go wide and he whistles softly. âSheâll have no idea what sheâs getting into, Ruslan. She doesnât know everything. She doesnât know who you really are.â
Heâs got me there.
But like the rest of my secondâs inconvenient observations, I donât tell him that.
âI donât plan on tricking her into anything. She will have all the facts before I put a new contract in front of her.â
Iâm a thousand percent certain that Kirill is underestimating her. All he sees is a shy woman who blushes every time anyone looks at her sideways. But I see more than that. I see the steel behind the self-consciousness.
She walked back into the gala ballroom the other night with her head held high. Iâm sure she heard the whispers, saw the curious eyes following her through the rest of the evening, but she never once buckled under the weight. She smiled, she made conversation, she dazzled the room despite the scrutiny she was under.
She may not have been born to this worldâbut thereâs a chance sheâs made for it.
Despite that, thereâs nothing superficial about her. Her charm ripples with sincerity, which is exactly what makes her so irresistible. Not that any man dared look her way after she returned to the ballroom. Iâd gotten my message through loud and clear. Hell, I may as well have tattooed Ruslan Oryolov right on her skin. Come to think of it, the caveman in me likes that idea.
Just not as much as the idea of Emmaâs belly growing bigger and bigger with my child.
âHave you thought this through?â Kirill asks.
I blink myself back to reality. âSheâs the kind of woman I want raising my children. End of story.â
âBut is she the kind of woman you want to tie yourself to for the rest of your life? Because thatâs what having a baby will do, whether you like it or not.â Kirill meets my eyes. âI can see youâre set on this. Just promise me one thing: take some more time. Really think about it. Once you bring this up with her, thereâll be no going back.â
Itâs annoying how many good points heâs making tonight.
âVery well,â I acquiesce. âIâll give it a little more time.â
Kirillâs right; itâs the smart thing to do. A necessary step to ensure Iâm not making a huge mistake.
But the caveman in me doesnât like waiting at all.