My Six-Year-Old Looked at My Ice-Cold Billionaire Boss and Said, “You’re Too Handsome to Be Alone—Be My Daddy.” I Thought I’d Lose My Job. Instead, It Started the Love Story That Changed Our Lives.
Part 1
“You’re really handsome,” my daughter declared, standing in the middle of the executive hallway like she owned the building. Her chin tipped up with the confidence of a tiny queen. “I think you should be my dad.”
For one long, suspended second, everything froze.
Assistants stopped typing.
A passing associate nearly dropped his tablet.
And the most intimidating man I had ever worked for—the one who could silence a boardroom with a single look—actually laughed.
Not a polite chuckle. Not a controlled breath.
A real laugh.
Deep. Warm. Completely unexpected.
I stood a few feet away, barely holding myself together, and thought, Well… this is how I get fired.
That morning had already been unraveling before I even left my apartment.
At 6:02 a.m., my nanny called in tears—flooding in her building. At 6:10, my mom texted from Dallas: flight delayed. At 6:18, my best friend Brooke sent a selfie from an airport lounge with the caption: Tell me you don’t need me today.
Of course, I did.
My name is Hannah Brooks. I’m thirty-two, a senior creative strategist at Halstead & Co., one of the most demanding branding firms in New York. I hadn’t taken a day off in nearly two years.
I’m also a single mom to a six-year-old girl named Lily, who listened selectively and spoke with alarming honesty.
Calling out of work wasn’t an option. We had a critical presentation that afternoon, and my boss—Alexander Hale—did not tolerate disruption.
Alexander Hale was thirty-seven. Billionaire. CEO. Known in business circles as ruthless, brilliant, and impossible to read.
He was also… unfairly handsome.
Tall. Dark hair. Impeccably dressed. The kind of face that made you forget your train of thought if you weren’t careful. His gray eyes missed nothing, and his calm presence alone made people straighten their posture.
In two years, I’d spoken to him maybe thirty times.
Every conversation had been brief, efficient… and emotionally frozen.
So naturally, that was the day I had to bring my child to work.
By some miracle, Lily behaved—for exactly one hour.
Then I had a meeting.
Then she disappeared.
And then—
I heard laughter.
His laughter.
It echoed down the hallway, unfamiliar and impossible.
I turned the corner and saw my daughter standing in front of Alexander Hale, hands behind her back like she was negotiating a treaty.
He was crouched in front of her.
Smiling.
Actually smiling.
“You’re very handsome,” she repeated, as if clarifying her earlier point. “And tall. I like tall. So you should be my dad.”
I nearly walked straight out of the building.
Instead, I stepped forward. “Lily.”
She turned, beaming. “Mom! I made a friend.”
“I can see that.”
“I think he needs help,” she added, whispering loudly. “He looks lonely.”
I wanted the floor to open and swallow me.
“I’m so sorry,” I said quickly, addressing him. “She wasn’t supposed to—”
“It’s fine,” Alexander said.
His voice was calm, but his eyes… were different. Softer.
He looked at Lily again, studying her like she was something unexpected and rare.
“She’s… direct,” he said.
“That’s one word for it.”
He almost smiled again.
That should have been the end of it.
It wasn’t.
Part 2
Three weeks later, a cup of coffee appeared on my desk.
Exactly how I liked it.
Black. Splash of oat milk. No sugar.
I stared at it suspiciously.
My assistant, Claire, leaned against the doorway, trying—and failing—to hide a grin.
“You didn’t order that?”
