With my 9 month pregnant belly, I ran and hid under a bridge. When labor started, a homeless woman appeared. Not knowing I was a millionaire, she helped me give birth and took me and my baby in. The next morning one piece of news shook the entire city…
My name is Ava Montgomery. I’m 32, nine months pregnant, and a millionaire.
Or at least, I was—until last night.
Everything fell apart after I discovered the truth. My husband, Blake, had forged my signature to transfer ownership of my company—my family’s legacy—to a dummy corporation. He had been siphoning money, preparing to vanish with my so-called best friend, Alisha. I overheard them in our penthouse, planning to “remove” me after the baby was born.
I didn’t wait to find out what “remove” meant.
I ran.


Clutching my swollen belly, I slipped out of the apartment barefoot, wearing only a thin maternity dress and coat. It was nearly midnight. I hailed a cab, but then I remembered: he had trackers on my cards and phone. I dumped both in a trash can and disappeared into the shadows of the city.
I wandered for hours in the cold, heart racing, belly aching. No hospitals. No police. I didn’t know who to trust. Eventually, I stumbled into a forgotten part of downtown, beneath a cracked freeway bridge. My legs gave out. I crawled behind a concrete pillar, breath shallow.
That’s when labor began.
At first, I thought I was dying—the pain ripping through me like fire. I screamed. No one heard.
Then, out of the darkness, a woman appeared.
She looked rough—skin weathered, clothes threadbare. But her eyes were steady.
“Breathe,” she said, kneeling beside me. “You’re having that baby right here, honey. Let’s go.”
She worked fast. Pulled a blanket from her bag. Propped me up. Talked me through every contraction. Her hands were worn but sure. She told me her name was Marlene. She never asked for mine.
After what felt like an eternity, I heard the cry.
My son.


Tears blurred my vision as she placed him on my chest, wrapping him in her scarf. “You did good,” she whispered, wiping my face with the edge of her sleeve.
I passed out in her arms.
When I woke, it was morning. We were under a tarp, my son beside me, sleeping. Marlene sat nearby, heating soup over a small fire.
“I didn’t want you to freeze,” she said. “Cops came by but didn’t see us.”
Then I heard it—the faint buzz of a nearby radio. A man’s voice said:
“Breaking news: Millionaire heiress Ava Montgomery reported missing. Husband suspected of foul play. FBI involved.”
Marlene’s eyes flicked to mine.