⭐4.6 | Peal's pen/151 Chapters
BillionaireRomance • ForbiddenDesire • LoveAndBetrayal • HeirGame
"You aren't pure enough to carry my heir" Damian only needs one thing, an heir. Not love, not wife, just a child to secure his inheritance. Marriage? Off the table. Love? A distraction. And Vanessa, his friend with benefits is too impure in his eyes to be the mother of his child. Evelyn, beautiful, innocent, and desperate enough to sign a contract that says she’ll carry his child… the natural way.Everything is going according to plan, until Vanessa started attending social events and saying she's pregnant too. With Damian's child. Now two women are carrying his heir. One is fighting for love. The other is fighting to win. And Damian? He’s about to discover that some deals come with unexpected consequences."The Billionaire's Virgin Surrogate" is a sizzling slow burn billionaire romance filled with passion, betrayal, and a dangerous game of hearts—where trust is fragile, and love cuts the deepest.
Chapter 1
Evelyn’s POV
Evelyn Carter learned early that exhaustion didn’t excuse failure. It didn’t matter how little she slept, how much her body ached, or how tightly anxiety wrapped around her chest, life didn’t pause for anyone. Bills still came, rent still waited, and hunger still demanded attention.
That morning, she woke before her alarm. The ceiling above her bed was cracked in three places, faint lines spreading like veins. She stared at it for a moment, counting her breaths, before swinging her legs over the side of the mattress. The floor was cold beneath her bare feet.
Across the small room, Carmen was still asleep, curled on her side with her phone clutched loosely in her hand. Evelyn moved quietly, careful not to wake her. Carmen worked late shifts too, and sleep was precious.
Evelyn dressed quickly—plain jeans, a faded blouse, flats she’d owned far longer than she should have. She tied her hair back in a simple bun, studied her reflection briefly in the mirror, then looked away. She didn’t linger in front of mirrors anymore.
The kitchen was barely big enough for two people to stand in without touching. Evelyn poured herself a glass of water, drank it slowly, then checked her phone. She had three missed calls, and one voicemail.
Her chest tightened as she pressed play.
“Miss Carter,” the man’s voice said smoothly, unpleasantly familiar. “This is a reminder. Your payment deadline has passed, we expect the full amount by the end of the week. Failure to comply will result in further action.”
Then the line went dead. Evelyn lowered the phone slowly. End of the week. She did the math automatically, even though she already knew the answer. Tips from last night, half her paycheck coming in two days, what was left in her savings. It still wasn’t enough.
By the time she left the apartment, the weight of it sat heavy in her chest. She walked fast, shoulders squared, refusing to let panic show on her face. Panic never helped, panic made mistakes.
The restaurant was already busy when she arrived.
“Morning, sunshine,” the manager called out distractedly as she clocked in. “You’re on doubles again.”
Evelyn forced a smile. “Of course.”
She tied on her apron and got to work. Carmen arrived later. The day moved fast with orders. Plates. Polite smiles. Apologies she didn’t owe. Compliments she didn’t believe. By noon, her feet throbbed, and her back ached, but she kept moving. She always did.
At table seven, a man snapped his fingers to get her attention. She pretended not to notice until he raised his voice.
“Miss? My coffee is cold.”
“I’ll replace it right away,” she said calmly, even though it wasn’t.
As she turned away, she heard him mutter, “Figures.” She swallowed the sting and carried on.
During a brief break, Carmen leaned against the counter beside her, lowering her voice. “You look pale.”
“I’m fine,” Evelyn said automatically.
Carmen didn’t believe her. “You heard from them again, didn’t you?”
Evelyn hesitated, then nodded. Carmen sighed. “Evie… you can’t keep doing this alone.”
“I don’t have a choice.”
“There’s always a choice.”
Evelyn almost laughed. Instead, she focused on wiping down the counter, her movements precise. “What choice would you suggest?”
Carmen hesitated. “The agency.”
Evelyn’s hand stilled. “Don’t,” she said quietly.
“I know it scares you,” Carmen continued gently. “But it’s legal, safe, and they pay more than anything else you could do in a year.”
“It’s not that simple.”
“Why not?”
Because it wasn’t just a job. Because it involved a child. Because it meant carrying something precious for someone who would never look back. Because what if she couldn’t let go? Evelyn didn’t say any of that. She just shook her head and went back to work.
The rest of the day blurred together. When her shift finally ended, the sky outside had darkened, the city glowing with evening lights. She changed quickly and stepped back onto the street, exhaustion dragging at every one of her muscles.
She walked home instead of taking the bus. She needed the time, the air, and the movement. By the time she reached the apartment, her legs felt like lead.
Inside, she dropped her bag, kicked off her shoes, and sank onto the edge of the bed. The silence pressed in around her. She stared at the wall. Then, slowly, she reached for her phone.
Her thumb hovered over the contact Carmen had saved weeks ago—the one Evelyn had sworn she wouldn’t touch. She told herself she just wanted information, and nothing more. Just to understand what it meant, just to see if it was even possible.
Her thumb pressed down. A website loaded. Words like *discretion, medical care, financial security* stood out sharply on the screen. Her heart pounded as she scrolled. Requirements. Health screenings. Contracts.
The compensation figures made her breath catch. Nine months. One decision. A way out. Evelyn set the phone down, her hands trembling.
“No,” she whispered to the empty room.
She stood abruptly and paced, trying to shake the thought off. It clung to her anyway, relentless. She remembered the debts, the calls, and the fear of falling behind again.
Her phone vibrated suddenly. It was an email notification. She froze. With shaking fingers, she picked it up and read the subject line:
**New Inquiry – Surrogacy Program Application**
Evelyn stared at the screen, her pulse roaring in her ears. She hadn’t applied. Had she?
Her breathing came shallow as the realization settled in. At some point—exhausted, desperate, and barely thinking—she had filled out the preliminary form.
Her finger hovered over the email. Once opened, there would be no pretending this wasn’t real. Evelyn swallowed hard. And tapped the screen.
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Table of Contents
×1
Chapter 1
2_3
Chapter 2–3
4_8
Chapter 4_8
9_13
Chapter 9_13
14_18
Chapter 14_18
19_23
Chapter 19_23
24_28
Chapter 24_28
29_33
Chapter 29_33
34_38
Chapter 34_38
39_43
Chapter 39_43
44_48
Chapter 44_48
49_53
Chapter 49_53
54_58
Chapter 54_58
59_63
Chapter 59_63
64_68
Chapter 64_68
69_73
Chapter 69_73
74_78
Chapter 74_78
79_83
Chapter 79_83
84_88
Chapter 84_88
89_93
Chapter 89_93
94_98
Chapter 94_98
99_103
Chapter 99_103
104_108
Chapter 104_108
109_113
Chapter 109_113
114_118
Chapter 114_118
119_123
Chapter 119_123
124_128
Chapter 124_128
129_133
Chapter 129_133
134_138
Chapter 134_138
139_143
Chapter 139_143
144_148
Chapter 144_148
149_151
Chapter 149_151
