LOGINDr. Ivy Monroe has her life planned down to the minute and falling in love isn’t on the list. But when a once-in-a-lifetime research grant for couples opens up, she realizes she’s missing one key thing: a partner. Desperate, she convinces Lake Hart, a carefree filmmaker in need of quick cash, to pose as her husband for the summer. The two opposites enter a couples’ retreat in the mountains, pretending to be madly in love. Between the awkward therapy sessions, forced intimacy, and their one-bed cabin, their “fake” marriage starts to feel dangerously real. Ivy fights the growing pull between them, while Lake begins to see through her walls — and into her heart. As summer fades, so does the line between truth and lies. But when their secret is exposed, Ivy risks losing both her career and the man who made her believe in love again. Months later, in autumn’s quiet beauty, she gets one last chance to tell Lake the truth — that their love may have started as pretend, but it’s become the most real thing in her life.
View MoreIvy
There’s a very specific kind of panic that hits when you realize you just lied on a government grant application. Not a tiny fib like adjusting your weight on your driver’s license. No, I’m talking about a full-blown, bold-faced lie with consequences, signatures, and potential jail time.
I, Ivy Monroe, PhD in psychology, neurotic overthinker, and rule-follower extraordinaire, just told the Midlake Arts & Wellness Institute that I am married.
Spoiler alert: I am not.
It started innocently. I was scrolling through my academic email while chewing on a stale protein bar and avoiding grading ten research papers on attachment styles. And then—bam. There it was. An email titled: CONGRATULATIONS! Welcome to Midlake's Summer Creative Couples Residency!
I blinked.
Then I blinked again.
The email said I’d been selected for a two-month, all-expenses-paid retreat in the mountains. Just me, my "partner," and our shared creative journey. A $50,000 grant for couples who want to blend art and therapy.
I’d applied on a whim, inspired by a late-night rerun of Eat, Pray, Love and one too many glasses of red wine. I figured they’d never pick a nerdy psychologist whose idea of a wild night was reorganizing her spice rack. But they did.
And there, in neat bold letters, it said:
"Note: This retreat is for couples only. No singles permitted. All selected applicants must arrive with their partner or forfeit the grant."
My stomach flipped.
I reread the line at least twenty-three times, as if it would suddenly change to, "Just kidding! Singles welcome! We love lonely intellectuals with control issues!"
But no.
I was stuck.
I mean... it was just a small lie, right? I wasn’t hurting anyone. And it was for a good cause—my research on emotional intimacy in long-term relationships. I needed this grant. I needed peace. I needed the space. I just… needed a fake husband.
So I did what any sane, rational adult woman would do.
I panicked.
First, I called my best friend, Elise. She’s an ER nurse, always calm in a crisis. Except she laughed so hard, she dropped her phone into a bedpan.
"Wait—you told them you were married? Ivy! You haven't even dated since… what? Brian-the-Barista?"
"It was one date. And he kept quoting Fight Club. It doesn’t count."
"Girl, you need help."
Yes. Yes, I did.
Because with just six days until the retreat, I had one choice:
Find a fake husband, or give up the biggest opportunity of my career.
The solution came in the form of Lake Hart.
Well, more like he barged into my life like a leather-jacket-wearing hurricane with stupidly nice cheekbones and a reputation for being allergic to rules.
I met him once at a university networking event. I was there giving a talk on trauma resilience. He was there filming a documentary on academic burnout. He drank whiskey straight, told inappropriate jokes, and stared at me like I was an alien. I called him arrogant. He called me uptight. We haven’t spoken since.
And yet…
When Elise casually mentioned he was "in between gigs and desperate for cash," I heard myself saying, "Set up a meeting."
Because I needed someone convincing. Someone bold enough to lie through his teeth, kiss me in public if needed, and survive two months of pretending to be married to me without losing his mind—or making me lose mine.
Lake Hart fit the role.
Too well, actually.
We met at a coffee shop two blocks from campus. He was fifteen minutes late, wearing sunglasses indoors, and sipping a Red Bull like he was born to cause chaos.
"Ivy Monroe," he said with a lazy smirk. "Still wound up like a Swiss watch."
I folded my arms. "Still pretending Red Bull is a personality trait?"
He laughed. Bastard.
I laid it all out. The retreat. The lie. The fake marriage. The shared cabin. The shared bed. The shared shower. My voice cracked slightly on that last word.
He leaned back, eyes twinkling. "So you want me to be your husband."
"Pretend husband," I corrected.
"Right. The kind that kisses you in front of people and shares your toothpaste."
I opened my mouth to argue—but technically, yes. That was exactly what I needed.
He scratched his jaw. "Two months in the woods. With you. Playing house."
I narrowed my eyes. "Are you in or not?"
Lake tapped his fingers on the table. Then, slowly, he smiled.
"I'll do it."
Relief flooded me.
"But one condition," he said.
My heart paused mid-beat.
"If we’re doing this, we’re doing it right. That means cuddling. Hand holding. Convincing kisses. I don’t half-ass roles, Ivy. I’m all in."
He leaned in close, his voice low and warm.
"And that includes kissing you—like I mean it."
Oh no.
What have I done?
We signed the forms. Sent our IDs. Packed our bags. And just like that, I was off to the most romantic mountain retreat in the country—with a man who made my brain short-circuit and my stomach feel like it was hosting the Olympic gymnastics team.
The Midlake shuttle picked us up in front of my apartment. Lake arrived with a single duffle bag and two cameras.
"You know this isn’t a documentary, right?"
"You never know when real life gets interesting," he said.
I stared out the window as the city disappeared and pine trees took its place. The air smelled fresher already—or maybe that was just the scent of impending doom.
We pulled up to the retreat grounds by sunset. Rolling hills. Wooden cabins. A lake so still it looked painted. Couples wandered the grounds hand-in-hand, smiling like they’d never argued about dishes or in-laws.
Lake whistled. "Romance Disneyland."
A perky staffer named Willow handed us a welcome packet and two lanyards that read: "Dr. Ivy & Lake Hart – Couple #7"
My stomach dropped.
Couple #7.
It was real now.
We followed Willow to our cabin. It was nestled in the trees, cozy and private. Cute. Until she opened the door.
One bed.
ONE BED.
"Oh!" Willow chirped. "I almost forgot to mention—the cabins are set up to encourage intimacy and togetherness. So there's no divider. And the shower’s a full-glass eco model! Just like nature intended!"
I choked.
Lake smirked. "Togetherness. Right."
Willow left. I stood frozen, staring at the single bed like it had personally betrayed me.
"Well," Lake said, tossing his bag on the mattress. "This is going to be fun."
I turned slowly. "You think this is fun?"
He grinned. "Come on, Dr. Monroe. What's the worst that could happen?"
The worst?
Falling for him. That would be the worst.
But I didn't say that.
I just gritted my teeth and started unpacking.
Two months. One bed. Zero chance of survival.
Let the pretending begin.
LakeI woke to the soft, golden light of late morning spilling across the cabin. The beams of the old pine ceiling glowed like they were lit from inside, highlighting the grains of wood, the dust motes floating lazily through the air. The faint smell of pine mixed with coffee lingered in the corners, comforting in its way, yet paired with a subtle prickling tension in my chest I couldn’t shake.I turned on my side and looked at Ivy. She was still curled under the duvet, her hair a chaotic halo across the pillow. Even in sleep, she had this impossible presence—delicate, fragile, yet somehow untouchable. Her lips parted slightly, murmuring words I couldn’t hear, and I felt a swell of something deep and unnameable: protectiveness, affection, and something dangerously closer to love.We were married. I repeated the word in my head like a mantra, but it didn’t settle my thoughts. Married. Ivy. Us. Words that should have felt secure, final, comforting. And yet, there was a tension lurking b
IvyThe morning air had a crisp bite that hinted winter was not far behind. I was in the kitchen, still in my wedding dress-sweatshirt hybrid—Ivy Monroe Hart, newly married, with satin still clinging to parts of me like a second skin. Lake had already disappeared downstairs, murmuring something about making breakfast, and I lingered at the top of the stairs, hesitating.Hesitating wasn’t my usual MO. I plan, I organize, I control. But mornings like this, mornings after vows and whispered promises and an almost too-perfect night, mornings where the world still felt fragile, I couldn’t summon control. Not over him, not over the cabin, not over… everything else.I took the stairs quietly, trying to gauge the mood. The kitchen smelled of coffee and something sizzling—the comforting, familiar smell that made my stomach clench for reasons that weren’t entirely hunger.Lake stood at the stove, sleeves rolled up, the dark navy suit jacket from yesterday draped over a chair. His shirt was rump
IvyThe morning sunlight slipped through the cabin blinds in thin, golden streaks, casting lazy shadows across the wooden floors. I had woken before Lake, as usual, and now crouched on the edge of the bed, trying to sneak a quiet moment for myself before the outside world came knocking—or before Lake decided that "morning chaos" was code for “I’m awake and I have something to say.”He wasn’t in the room yet, but his phone lay face-up on the bedside table, buzzing faintly. Notifications: emails, texts, unread messages stacked like a tiny tower of obligations he would eventually ignore. I was about to reach over and grab mine when a glimpse of his screen caught my eye.A message, half-written, still open. Sent to someone I didn’t know.Lake Hart. My husband. Typing something that wasn’t for me.My stomach knotted. I shouldn’t have looked. I really shouldn’t. But curiosity is a dangerous companion, and I’d been sneaky long enough to know exactly how it feels when someone’s heart—or at le
IvyThe coffee was lukewarm, the mug heavy in my hands, and the autumn light spilling through the cabin window felt almost hostile in its brightness. Not that I blamed the sun—it had no idea what kind of chaos it was illuminating.I stared at my phone on the counter.Her name flashed: Mom.I swallowed hard, fingers hovering over the green button. It buzzed again, insistent, demanding. I had known it would come. I had known that somewhere beneath the bliss of last night, beneath the warmth of Lake’s skin and the quiet hum of the forest, reality was waiting, leaning in, and ready to lecture me.Ivy Monroe Hart. Married. Newly minted. And apparently, still a child in her mother’s eyes.I exhaled slowly and picked the phone up. No. Not yet. I didn’t want to hear her voice, not today. Not when everything else felt so fragile. I set it back down.The phone buzzed again.Lake’s arm slid around my waist from behind, warm and grounding, and I leaned into him despite the anxiety clawing at my r












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