If anyone had told me that I’d be signing a marriage contract worth fifty million dollars, I would’ve laughed. I wasn’t the kind of girl who wanted to marry for power or money, but circumstances have dragged me far beyond my morality
And then Frey came back, and for a moment, I basked in the nostalgia of what we once shared, but he wasn’t the same, not anymore.
He laid out the offer in cold, perfect words, and in that moment I realised just how small I was in the kind of world he lived in now. I remembered sitting across from him in that quiet restaurant, not one we could ever afford, the kind with waiters who spoke softly and menus were without prices. It wasn’t a date. It didn’t even feel like a conversation, it felt like a chess board, only that I was a pawn.
“Five years,” he said, his voice as smooth as the glass of scotch in his hand. “No children, no romantic expectations. A clean and mutually beneficial arrangement.”
I had blinked at him. “You’re serious?” He nodded once.
I’d known Frey was rich. That much was obvious the second he stepped back into my life. But I hadn’t known he was this cold controlling and lost. I kept waiting for him to laugh, to say he was kidding. He never did, instead, he slid a small envelope across the table, the same colour as bone, sealed with his father’s crest.
“You can look over the details at home. Take your time, talk to your parents.” Which I did.
That night, the Rhodes house felt smaller than usual. We had long since sold anything we could to stay afloat, the spare car, the backyard tools, even Dad’s signed posters from his racing days. The kitchen light buzzed faintly as I opened the envelope and read the contract under the yellowed glow.
Twenty pages of clauses, restrictions, and promises all for the price of pretending.
“Absolutely not,” my mother snapped the moment I explained it, she didn’t even wait for me to finish. “You are not selling yourself to that boy. To that family”
“Vanessa, please…” my father said quietly, slouched in his wheelchair. His voice was so thin these days.
“Don’t ‘please’ me,” she hissed. “You know who that man is. You know.” Dad was silent.
I did know. I just didn’t know why it mattered so much. My mother got up, pacing the kitchen with her arms crossed. “I don’t trust him. Or his father. Especially his father.”
“Vanessa.” My father’s voice grew sharper now, strained. “We don’t have the luxury of morals. This is the only way to save the company. To save us.”
That was when I realised he had already made peace with it, and in that moment, so did I. Because if saving the people I loved meant losing myself… I’d still do it. And thus my decision to accept the offer.
Two days later, I was standing in front of the Johnson estate, a sprawling mansion of white stone and silence, tucked behind black iron gates and trimmed hedges. It looked more like a courthouse than a home.
Frey’s driver led me through glass doors and marble floors, past portraits of ancestors who had probably bought towns for fun. Everything inside the house whispered wealth and power.
Frey waited at the bottom of the staircase, dressed in another painfully perfect suit. He looked at me like I was already part of the furniture. “My father’s waiting in the study,” he said. No smile, no welcome, just an instruction which I followed.
The hallway was long and lined with memories I didn’t belong in and at the end of it, behind a pair of dark wooden doors, sat Tyler Johnson, who filled the room with his presence despite only occupying a seat.
His eyes were grey, sharp and alive with scrutiny, he scanned me the way a father sizes up the woman who might carry his legacy forward. “So you’re the girl Frey’s been hiding,” he said, voice like dry gravel.
I managed a small, polite smile. “It’s an honour to meet you, Mr Johnson.”
His gaze narrowed, studying my face like he was trying to read a hidden agenda in my eyes.
“You seem… grounded. Not one of those empty-headed heiresses he used to chase around. I take it you're not in it for the money?”
My pulse skipped.
I swallowed. “No, sir. I’m… here because I care about Frey, and given our childhood.”
The lie sat heavy on my tongue, I could feel Frey standing stiff beside me with his arms folded. He didn’t even look at me, but I knew he was listening.
“That’s very good,” Tyler muttered. “He needs someone who can keep him in line, not another party doll with pretty shoes. I want to believe you’ll make a man out of him.” But I said nothing because I didn’t trust my voice.
Tyler sat back and exhaled slowly. “Marriage is a responsibility and discipline. It’s the very first sign of leadership. Frey never understood that, but maybe… with you, he will.”
I lifted my chin slightly, my smile soft but steady. “I’ll do my best, sir.”
He studied me for a moment longer, then let out a low grunt that might have been a chuckle, or the closest thing to one he was capable of. “I like you,” he said finally. “There’s something real in your eyes, don’t lose that.”
The words surprised me, not just because they were kind, but because they felt… sincere, although brief, but genuine.
“Welcome to the family, Catherine.” He added and that was it.
As we stepped out into the hallway, the door closing quietly behind us, I exhaled for the first time in what felt like hours. Frey walked beside me in silence, the marble floors reflecting the soft click of our shoes. At the end of the corridor, just before we turned into the main gallery, he spoke.
“Not bad,” he said.
I glanced at him. “That's your version of a compliment?”
“Believe me is when it comes to my father.”
I let out a small breath, almost a laugh. “I didn’t realise I was auditioning for the role of his ideal daughter-in-law.”
Frey gave a dry smirk. “Even if you were, trust me, you passed.”
There was a pause, and for a brief moment, it felt like the weight of what we were doing settled in the space between us.
“Thanks,” I said quietly.
“Don’t thank me yet,” he replied, voice low. “We’re only just getting started.”
The next morning, I dressed carefully, soft cream blouse, tailored slacks, and my hair pinned back. I looked the part, even if I felt like a stranger inside the costume. Frey barely said two words as we stepped out together for a charity breakfast with the city’s elite. He smiled when the cameras appeared, gripped my waist like it was scripted, but the tension in his jaw gave away the lie.As we walked down the red carpet of the hotel lobby, reporters called our names, flashing bulbs catching the glitter of my earrings. One reporter shouted, “You look radiant, Catherine! What’s your favourite thing about Frey?”I glanced sideways at him. He didn’t return the look. His smile was already aimed at another camera. So I smiled too and answered, “He knows how to make silence feel comfortable.” But that was a lie.Later that afternoon, I sat alone in the dressing room, rehearsing my lines for the next media appearance at a dinner the next night, the biggest one yet, and I was going to be the
POV: CatherineWith barely any time to spare, the demands of playing soon to be CEO’s wife started to line up. Business meetings, dinners, and congresses, everywhere Frey went, I had to follow. Our wedding preparations was in full swing alongside. This I was looking forward to, I needed the first $10 million pay like my life depended on it, because it did. And not just mine but my entire family’s life as well.We had our weddings photographs taken earlier and the gown was returned in a garment bag like it had never existed, no proof left of the way it clung to me like a warning, how it shimmered beneath studio lights like it was made from truth polished into glass. I stared at the bag lying on the couch in Frey’s private residence where I had been staying, its elegance now seemingly mocking.The silence in the room pressed down on me, a suffocating thing that pooled in corners and echoed off marble. Frey was seated on the far end of the dining table, scrolling through his phone. The f
The music hit like a riot in my chest, pulsing and relentless. A heavy rhythm of bass and light that made everything else blur into meaningless movement. The sound waves circulating in an endless loop transcended every being into realms they couldn’t recognise, making them lose touch with their senses.Inside Havana Lounge was alive, bodies packed tight, drenched in sweat and perfume. Neon-blue strobes carved through the smoke like starlight, flashing over laughing mouths and glassy eyes. It wasn’t a place for thought; it was a place for forgetting, and that was exactly why I was there.Javier slapped my back, his grin far too wide as he shouted something I couldn’t hear over the music. I didn’t bother asking him to repeat it. I just raised my glass and downed the rest of the tequila in one breath, it scorched my throa,t but the fire helped.Another round appeared within minutes, handed to me by pretty blonde in a silver dress, her fingers brushing mine longer than necessary, her soft
Frey’s POV | Chicago, EveningLater that evening, after the meeting with the board I called Catherine to meet me. It rained all day, although it had subsided, the streets still shimmered like wet glass, mirroring the glow of streetlights and the weight I carried behind the wheel. The city hummed around me, honks, passing sirens, voices swallowed by distance, but inside the car, everything was still.Catherine sat in the passenger seat beside me, arms folded tightly over her coat, the tip of her nose red from the cold. She hadn’t said much since she stepped in. Just looked ahead like she was bracing for bad news.I tapped the steering wheel, trying to find the right words. “The board meeting happened this afternoon.”She glanced at me. “And?”I exhaled. “They want me to take over. They practically handed me the seat”“Then what?” she asked hurriedly“Then my father decided to drop the hammer,” I answered.“He refused?” she asked again with vested curiosity.“Absolutely. He said I haven
Frey’s POV | Johnson Group Headquarters – Executive BoardroomThe elevator ride to the 48th floor was silent, but I could feel the weight in the air, thick and suffocating like the storm clouds brewing outside the glass skyscraper. Rain lashed against the tall windows, streaking down like nature’s version of sweat. A storm was raging outside, and an even bigger one was brewing inside.I stepped into the boardroom, and every pair of eyes turned to me: grey suits, dark ties, glinting cufflinks. Twelve men and women who had once answered to my father without blinking were now staring at me as if my shadow already belonged in that chair at the head of the table.Except I wasn’t sitting in that chair, not yet. It was still my father’s, and he sat in it. He was propped upright, pale under the collar, an oxygen aid discreetly clipped under his nose; he looked like a ghost of the man who once walked into this room like he owned gravity. But his eyes, those eyes, were still steel; he wasn’t le
Catherine’s POV | Rhodes Residence, ChicagoThe rain had started just before noon, light at first, a misty drizzle veiling the windows like breath on glass. By the time I reached home, it had thickened into a steady curtain, the kind that blurred the streets and soaked through to the soul.I stepped out of the car and into the chill, the hem of my dress clinging to my legs as I hurried up the porch steps. One of the Johnson drivers gave a curt nod before pulling away, leaving me in the fading drone of rainfall and the tight ache in my chest that hadn’t left since Frey’s call.The door creaked as I pushed it open. The scent of jasmine tea and furniture polish met me like a familiar memory as I stepped inside. My mother sat in the living room, carefully folding laundry with tired fingers. Dad was in his recliner, covered in a light blanket, his face pale but peaceful in sleep.Vanessa looked up immediately, concern tightening the corners of her mouth. “You’re home early. Is everything ok