Billionaire’s Grey Eyes Exposed My Son’s Secret In A Café Booth-Teptep

The billionaire believed he could never have a child—until my five-year-old son looked up from a diner booth and asked him, “Sir, why are your eyes wearing my face?”

The whole café went quiet in a way I had only ever heard once before.

Not silence exactly, but the careful British version of it, where no one wants to stare and everyone absolutely does.

Image

A fork paused halfway to someone’s mouth.

The coffee machine hissed behind the counter as if it had chosen the worst possible moment to carry on living.

Rain stitched silver lines down the windows, blurring the wet pavement and the red post box outside into a smear of ordinary colour.

I stood between the counter and Booth Seven with two dinner plates balanced along my forearm and a bowl of chicken soup threatening to scald my wrist.

The tea towel in my apron pocket brushed against my knee.

The kettle clicked off behind me.

And my son, my bright, curious, disastrous little Theo, was leaning over the edge of his booth as though he had simply asked whether the man wanted sugar.

“Sir,” he repeated, softer this time, “why are your eyes wearing my face?”

There are questions children ask because the world is still new to them.

Why is the sky grey?

Why do grown-ups say they are fine when they are not?

Why does the lady at the chemist call everyone love?

Theo had asked hundreds of those.

I had answered them all.

But this one had no answer that would not pull our life apart.

“Theo,” I said, and I was proud that my voice did not break. “Love, don’t bother the gentleman.”

He turned to me with sauce at the corner of his mouth and rain still caught in his dark curls.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *