At Christmas parties, employees would bring toddlers in velvet dresses and tiny bow ties, and Alex would crouch down, shake their little hands, and pretend his chest wasn’t cracking open.
He had become very good at pretending.
At thirty-five, Alexander Sterling owned the top forty-two floors of Sterling Tower in Manhattan. His company made smart-home technology, child-safety software, school communication apps, and family calendars used by millions of American parents who were always running late, always packing lunches, always trying to remember soccer practice and dentist appointments.
He built tools for the life he had once wanted more than anything.
A life doctors told him he would never have.
The accident had happened three years earlier on a rain-slick highway outside Greenwich. His parents died before the ambulance arrived. Alex survived after six surgeries, two months in the hospital, and one conversation with a specialist who used a gentle voice to deliver a sentence that destroyed him more quietly than the crash ever could.
“Mr. Sterling, I’m sorry. The injuries are permanent. Biological fatherhood is extremely unlikely.”
Extremely unlikely.
That was how rich people were told “never.”
After that, Alex stopped dating seriously. He stopped going home before midnight. He stopped imagining a nursery in his penthouse or a child’s hand in his on the first day of kindergarten. He became precise, controlled, untouchable.
Then, on an ordinary Tuesday morning, while he was reviewing a quarterly report that meant absolutely nothing compared to what was about to happen, his assistant’s voice trembled through the intercom.
“Mr. Sterling?”