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The Billionaire's Reluctant Tutor

The Billionaire's Reluctant Tutor

img Romance
img 59 Chapters
img H Davis
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About

When a dedicated teacher meets a guarded billionaire, the most unexpected lesson is love. In the aftermath of devastating budget cuts, passionate educator Emma Carter reluctantly accepts a position tutoring the rebellious son of tech billionaire Daniel Dawson. Stepping into the magnificent Dawson Estate, Emma finds herself thrust into a world of opulence, cutting-edge technology, and dangerous family politics.Beneath his defiant exterior, twelve-year-old Alex Dawson is brilliantly gifted but emotionally neglected, acting out to gain his father's attention. As Emma breaks through Alex's walls using her innovative teaching methods, she discovers the root of his troubles: a profoundly broken relationship with his emotionally distant father. Daniel Dawson built his tech empire through ruthless determination and relentless work, but his success has come at a devastating personal cost. Initially skeptical of Emma's unconventional approach, Daniel gradually recognizes her extraordinary ability to connect with his son in ways he never could. When family rivals threaten his control of the company using his bachelor status and parenting capabilities as ammunition, Daniel proposes a dangerous solution-a fake engagement with Emma to project family stability.What begins as a strategic arrangement soon ignites into searing passion that neither can deny. But as their pretend relationship deepens into something real, powerful enemies emerge from the shadows. When an attempted kidnapping targets Alex and Emma bravely intervenes, she earns Daniel's genuine respect. However, the arrival of Daniel's sophisticated ex-girlfriend Olivia Reed introduces a new threat, manipulating Daniel's trust and driving a wedge between the newly-formed family. Sizzling with erotic tension, pulsing with high-stakes corporate intrigue, and rich with emotional revelation, Tutoring the Tech Titan's Heart explores how the most valuable lessons in life are often taught by those we least expect to become our teachers.

Chapter 1 Budget Cuts

The final bell had rung nearly an hour ago, but the clamor of students, their thunderous sneakers and locker slams and whispered confidences, had evaporated.

Now, Emma Carter stood outside the main conference room, the door closing behind her with a soft but definitive click. The hallway stretched before her, a series of fluorescent-lit tunnels.

She moved through them like a ghost, clutching a folder marked Human Resources. The words budget cuts and effective immediately echoed in her mind, a relentless, mocking refrain.

She walked past her friend's classroom-Grace's eyes met hers through the small window, a silent signal of understanding-and she pushed back the tears that threatened to break free. By the time she reached her own room, it felt like a stage stripped bare after the closing night of a modest but sincere play.

Afternoon sunlight came in through the cheap plastic blinds, laying segmented stripes across the dust mites and the rows of empty, battered desks. It made the place feel colder than the thermostat could explain.

Emma sat cross-legged in the center of the battered tiled floor, a moving box to her left, a sheet of bubble wrap draped over her lap like a ridiculous bridal train.

She glanced around the room, cataloguing the remnants with the precise, slightly obsessive inventory of protractors, scientific calculators, and packs of graphing paper she loaned the students when they were missing supplies.

The bulletin board was pockmarked and pale, a ghostly negative of every lesson plan and motivational poster she'd once tacked there. The wall, relieved of its duties, looked both exposed and oddly relieved.

Emma tried not to think about the next teacher-the one who would inherit the classroom, or worse, the one who wouldn't exist at all, since the school was losing two more positions to budget cuts next year.

She tried not to picture her name erased from the mailbox in the faculty lounge, or the silence of her apartment once the last day's adrenaline had receded and the emails stopped coming. She succeeded, for about three minutes.

A tap at the door made her flinch.

The door opened on a wedge of over-bright hallway and the silhouette of Grace Whitman, carrying two cardboard coffee trays and a plastic bag bulging with what looked like contraband pastries.

Grace did not wait for permission to enter. She never did, not in six years of friendship, not even that time she'd found Emma in the storage closet, ugly-crying after a failed observation by the principal.

Grace's first words were, "What did those bureaucratic idiots want this time? Have they finally wised up and offered you that promotion you deserved."

Emma made a noncommittal sound, tucking a loose strand of hair behind her ear as if this gesture could restore order to the rest of her life. "No, instead they've let me go. I'm cleaning up so I don't leave a mess for... whoever."

Grace advanced into the room, her boots leaving faint scuffs on the freshly mopped floor. She wore a tailored navy trench and the kind of lipstick color that made you wonder why you'd ever settle for chapstick. She deposited both coffee cups on the teacher's desk, then fished a pair of bear-claw danishes from the bag. She waved one in the air.

"Here, emergency carbs," she declared. "If there's ever a day for gluten, this is it. You look like you could use a sedative."

Emma reached for the cup. It was, as always, exactly how she liked it, too much cream, one Splenda, scalding. Grace had never forgotten a coffee order in her life.

"I'm fine," Emma said, lying poorly.

Grace raised an eyebrow, taking in the boxed-up memories and the bruised look around Emma's eyes. She flopped into one of the student desks, immediately looking oversized and undignified. She kicked off one boot and curled her leg beneath her, then patted the desk in front of her.

"Come on. Sit. Tell me what the fuck happened."

Emma hesitated, then crossed to the desk, coffee in both hands like a lifeline. She perched on the edge, feeling the seat's ancient, adolescent graffiti under her palm. Someone had etched "poop" into the surface in all caps. Someone else, perhaps in a spirit of redemption, had tried to sand it away with the rough side of a pencil eraser.

"It's not complicated," Emma said after a swallow. "The school's test scores were lower than the district average. Three consecutive years, thanks to the turnover rate and the-" She gestured vaguely, as if the entire socioeconomic climate could be distilled in a single flick of the hand. "Budget cuts. The reading program is gone, math intervention's a joke, and now the state wants proof of 'growth' so the numbers look better for their reports."

She sipped again, searching for the language that would reduce her disaster to something clinical and manageable. "They called it 'elimination of redundant personnel.' Apparently, my strong stance on making sure social standing and money doesn't matter in my classroom costs the school donors."

Grace's gaze softened, a rare thing. "You made a difference. You were the only thing standing between half these kids and total academic extinction."

Emma felt the ache behind her eyes then, a rising tide. She pressed her lips together, hard.

"I failed, Grace. I know you want to make it sound heroic, but I failed them. I don't know what I'm going to do." She stared at her hands, fingers mottled with ink stains and resignation. "With more and more teachers competing with a robot, how am I going to find a job?"

Grace took a bite of pastry, chewed contemplatively. She waited, as if the silence itself was a kind of anesthesia. Then, around a mouthful, "Private sector?"

Emma's laugh was brittle. "I don't own a blazer, and I refuse to speak in acronyms.."

"You could tutor," Grace pressed. "You're a goddamn miracle worker. You could charge fifty bucks an hour and have desperate parents lining up."

Emma stared at the chipped tile floor. "I became a teacher to make education accessible, not to pad my bank account helping rich kids ace their SATs."

"Why not both?" Grace challenged, but her tone was more gentle than mocking. "You can't save the world living in the streets, Em."

Emma's jaw set. "There are kids at this school who can't afford their own glue sticks. Kids with parents working two jobs and-" She swallowed the rest, not trusting her voice.

Grace looked at her with a mix of pity and exasperation. She dug into her coat pocket and produced a folded sheet of paper, sliding it across the desk.

"I think this is more about how you were raised than about the kids economic struggles," she said, more command than suggestion.

"Maybe you're right." Emma plopped down into her chair. "It's just...you know what it was like for me growing up. Despite my talent, because I was the housekeepers daughter, that arrogant family prevented me from getting into Halvard."

"Yes, I know. But this isn't that, Em." Grace reached into her pocket and pulled out a flyer. "I was going to look into this for myself, but you need it more than I do."

Emma took the paper, unfolded it. The letterhead was some upmarket agency in the city. The opening lines were clipped and formal, "Seeking experienced educator for full-time academic intervention and enrichment support, one-on-one, for exceptionally gifted adolescent. Competitive compensation; immediate placement. Discretion required."

She blinked, once, twice. Her heart thudded in her chest. "You want me to babysit some rich kid?"

The paper crumpled in Emma's hand. The memory of sixteen, explaining derivatives to Cassidy, resurfaced. Cassidy leaned over Emma's work and later accepted praise. Emma's acceptance letter was torn up in Cassidy's trash after Tyler cornered her. Emma's trip to the dean office explaining her case, while Cassidy smiled with satisfaction.

That family cost her everything.

Grace snapped her fingers to bring Emma back to reality. "I want you to make rent. Look, it's six months. Maybe less. They're desperate. You need a job and they need a teacher. You could do this standing on your head."

Emma tried to hand the paper back. Grace refused to take it.

"I don't know, Grace. It just feels-"

"-like failure?" Grace finished. "Because it's not. It's a job. It's a bridge. Take the money, pay your bills, and you can come back to changing the world when the world gets its act together." She held Emma's gaze, unyielding. "Don't martyr yourself over some ideal. You still have to live."

Emma looked at the paper again. The words wavered in her vision, or maybe her hand was trembling.

"God," she said softly. "I'm really not as brave as you think."

"Nobody is," Grace said, voice gone almost gentle. "Least of all the ones who pretend they are."

Emma folded the paper and tucked it into the pocket of her worn cardigan. The cardigan, she realized, was the same one she'd worn for the interview that got her this job.

She remembered being told that its color-pale teal-made her look "approachable." She wondered what color would make her look like a person who belonged in the homes of billionaires.

Grace finished her pastry, then stood, smoothing her coat. "You can come over to my place and we'll talk about it over a few drinks," she offered, as always. "I'll even let you pick the next movie. But only if you agree to at least call this number and try. Or else, I'll submit your resume myself."

Emma forced a half-smile, the kind she reserved for kids who scraped their knees but insisted they were fine. "Thanks. I'll think about it."

Grace touched her shoulder, a brief, reassuring pressure. Then she was gone, trailing the scent of cinnamon and assertiveness. The door swung closed behind her, and the silence reclaimed the room.

Emma sat a moment longer, cradling the coffee. She gazed at the framed crayon portrait, at the bright sun and the little pink figure in the center. It looked, in the harsh stripes of light and shadow, like a memory already fading.

She exhaled, a long, steady breath, and reached for the next box.

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