LOGINThe solicitor’s office in Holborn smelled faintly of old carpet and printer ink.
Amara Adebayo sat upright in a chair that was trying very hard to be comfortable and failing. The radiator beneath the window hissed intermittently like it disapproved of her presence. Across from her, Yasmin Khan was flipping through a file that was far too thin to contain anything good. Amara hated thin files. Thin files meant there wasn’t much to defend. Yasmin didn’t look up immediately. She adjusted her glasses, scanned a page again, then exhaled through her nose. “Okay,” she said carefully. “We’re going to go through this slowly.” Amara folded her hands in her lap. “When lawyers say that, it’s never good.” Yasmin’s mouth twitched. “You don’t pay me to lie to you.” “I don’t pay you at all.” “Exactly.” They had met four years earlier in a shared kitchen in Stratford, arguing over fridge space. Now Yasmin wore tailored blazers and carried herself like someone who charged by the hour. But when she looked at Amara, there was still something protective in her eyes. Yasmin closed the file. “Your Tier 2 sponsorship ends in three months.” “I know.” “The company restructuring means they’re not renewing your position.” “I know.” “And the new immigration rules make switching sponsors significantly harder unless you meet salary thresholds you currently do not.” Amara inhaled slowly. “I know.” Yasmin leaned back in her chair. “Then you also know this isn’t a paperwork issue. It’s structural.” Silence settled. Outside, sirens wailed distantly — London continuing, indifferent. Amara stared at the wall behind Yasmin’s head. There was a framed quote about justice. It felt ironic. “So,” she said finally. “What are my options?” Yasmin tapped the folder once. “Option one: You find another sponsor willing to process your visa in under three months.” Amara let out a short laugh. “You say that like it’s ordering takeaway.” “It’s possible,” Yasmin said evenly. “No,” Amara replied. “It’s theoretical.” Yasmin didn’t argue. “Option two,” Yasmin continued, “you apply for a different visa category. Innovator visa. Global Talent. Exceptional Promise.” Amara raised an eyebrow. “Do I look exceptionally promising?” “You are,” Yasmin said immediately. “Immigration doesn’t care about that kind of promising.” A beat. Yasmin nodded once. “Fair.” The radiator hissed again. “Option three,” Yasmin said quietly, “you overstay.” The word landed heavy. Amara’s jaw tightened. “No.” “You’d have limited access to employment. No public funds. Risk of detention if caught.” “I said no.” Yasmin studied her carefully. “Okay.” Amara leaned forward. “I did not come here to hide in shadows. If I’m going to struggle, I’ll struggle legally.” Yasmin’s expression softened. “I know.” Another silence. This one thicker. “And option four?” Amara asked. Yasmin didn’t answer immediately. Instead, she reached for a different folder — thicker. Heavier. Amara’s stomach dropped. “Yasmin.” “I have to say it.” “Don’t.” “Amara.” “Don’t.” Yasmin met her eyes. “Marriage.” The word felt obscene in the fluorescent-lit office. Amara stared at her. “You’re joking.” “I’m not.” “That’s not an option. That’s… that’s desperation.” “It’s legal,” Yasmin said calmly. “Spouse visa. Five-year route to settlement. Full right to work. Stability.” “Attached to someone.” “Yes.” “Dependent.” “No,” Yasmin corrected. “Partnered.” Amara stood abruptly and walked to the window. Outside, people moved freely down the pavement. Coats, headphones, coffee cups. No one looked like they were calculating their right to exist in the country beneath their feet. “I will not marry for papers,” she said quietly. Yasmin didn’t flinch. “Then don’t.” Amara turned. “You just said—” “I said it’s an option. I didn’t say it’s your only one.” “Feels like it.” Yasmin leaned forward, elbows on the desk. “Listen to me carefully. Marriage is not romantic here. It’s administrative. People do it for tax reasons, for inheritance, for business mergers. This isn’t a fairy tale. It’s paperwork with rings.” “That’s worse,” Amara said. “Why?” “Because at least in a fairy tale, someone wants you.” Yasmin went quiet. That landed somewhere personal. Amara crossed her arms. “Who would I even marry? Some random British man off the street?” “Obviously not.” “Oh good,” Amara said dryly. “Standards.” Yasmin hesitated. And that hesitation was dangerous. Amara narrowed her eyes. “You already have someone in mind.” Yasmin didn’t answer. “You do.” “It’s not what you think.” “That sentence has never once preceded something good.” Yasmin inhaled slowly. “Edward Harrington.” The name meant nothing at first. Then something clicked. “The Edward Harrington?” Amara asked slowly. “Yes.” “As in, the finance one?” “Yes.” “The one who funds half of London’s private infrastructure?” “Yes.” Amara blinked. “Why on earth would that man marry me?” Yasmin’s gaze sharpened. “Because he needs something too.” Amara laughed. “Of course he does.” “He’s facing… reputational complications.” “That sounds expensive.” “It is.” “And I help how?” Yasmin chose her words carefully. “A marriage — stable, respectable, low-drama — would neutralize certain narratives.” Amara stared at her. “You’re suggesting I become a PR strategy.” “I’m suggesting you become legally secure.” “At the cost of what?” “That depends on the terms.” The room felt smaller. “You’ve spoken to him,” Amara said. “Yes.” “About me?” “Yes.” “And he said what?” “That he’s open to a mutually beneficial arrangement.” Amara let out a sharp breath. “Mutually beneficial.” “He doesn’t want romance,” Yasmin said evenly. “He wants discretion. Composure. Intelligence. Someone who won’t embarrass him.” Amara’s voice dropped. “And I need residency.” “Yes.” The truth of it sat between them like a contract already signed. “How long?” Amara asked. “Initial agreement would align with visa requirements. Five years.” “Five years,” she repeated. “That’s the route to indefinite leave.” Amara laughed again — but there was no humor in it. “Five years of pretending to love a man I don’t know.” “You wouldn’t have to pretend love,” Yasmin said. “Just stability.” “That’s worse.” Yasmin tilted her head. “Why?” “Because stability implies intimacy.” Another silence. Yasmin stood slowly and walked around the desk. “Look at me,” she said gently. Amara did. “You are not weak for considering this. You are strategic.” “It feels like surrender.” “It’s negotiation.” Amara’s throat tightened. “My mother would hate this.” “Your mother would hate you being deported more.” That hit. Hard. Amara swallowed. “You’re not selling yourself,” Yasmin continued. “You’re entering a contract. With protections. With boundaries. With an exit.” “And if he falls in love?” Amara asked suddenly. Yasmin blinked. “That’s unlikely.” “That’s not what I asked.” Yasmin held her gaze. “Then you renegotiate.” “And if I fall in love?” That question lingered longer. Yasmin’s voice softened. “Then it stops being a transaction.” Amara shook her head immediately. “No. That’s worse. Feelings complicate leverage.” “So don’t develop them.” “That’s not how people work.” Yasmin almost smiled. “You’re very confident in that.” Amara stepped away, pacing once across the small office. “What does he want exactly?” she asked. “Public appearances. A calm presence. No scandals. No chaos. You maintain separate finances. Separate rooms if you wish. It would be… civil.” “Cold.” “Clear.” Amara stopped pacing. “And what’s the catch?” “There’s always a catch,” Yasmin admitted. “Which is?” “His scandal hasn’t broken yet.” Amara’s eyes sharpened. “Excuse me?” “It’s contained. For now.” “And when it explodes?” “That depends on timing.” “So I attach myself to a ticking bomb.” “You attach yourself to legal stability.” “Wrapped in dynamite.” Yasmin didn’t deny it. Amara laughed softly, almost to herself. “I moved to London for opportunity.” “And you found it,” Yasmin said. “Did I?” “You’re being offered survival.” “That’s not the same thing.” Yasmin’s voice turned firmer. “You don’t get to pretend this country hasn’t cost you something already.” Amara stilled. “You work twice as hard,” Yasmin continued. “You speak softer in meetings. You dress carefully. You over-prepare. You make yourself small enough to be non-threatening but impressive enough to be useful.” Amara’s chest rose and fell slowly. “And now,” Yasmin said, “you’re being asked to choose between pride and permanence.” “That’s unfair.” “It’s real.” The radiator hissed again. Amara sat back down. “If I say no,” she asked quietly, “what happens?” “Then we fight the hard way.” “And if I say yes?” “You meet him.” Amara stared at the desk. Meet him. A stranger with money. A man with a hidden scandal. A solution wearing a tailored suit. “Does he know what I look like?” she asked suddenly. “Yes.” “And?” “He said you seem composed.” Amara scoffed. “That’s not flattering.” “It’s exactly what he’s looking for.” Another long silence. Yasmin checked her watch, then looked back at her friend. “You don’t have to decide today,” she said softly. Amara nodded. But they both knew that wasn’t true. Three months. A country that did not love her back. A contract that might keep her inside it. Marriage as paperwork. Marriage as strategy. Marriage as survival. “Set up the meeting,” Amara said quietly. Yasmin didn’t smile. She simply nodded. “Okay.” And just like that, the cost of staying had a price.The apartment had taken on a rhythm all its own.It wasn’t loud or obvious, nor did it feel like the kind of domesticity people assumed love brought. There were no grand gestures, no sweeping declarations. There was only the quiet, almost imperceptible pattern of shared routines, of small privileges earned over weeks of proximity.Edward moved through the flat with the same calm precision he always had, but now Amara noticed the details—how he brewed his coffee, the exact moment he would pause at the window to glance at the street, the subtle way he arranged his papers before settling into the armchair. She followed these rhythms not as an outsider, but as someone who had learned them, internalized them. The knowledge of his habits made her feel tethered, safe, and oddly necessary.In turn, Edward observed her more closely than he had before. It wasn’t just that she cooked better than he expected, or that her laughter had begun to find its way into the quiet corners of his home. It wa
Morning came slowly.The city outside their windows was quiet, gray, and still wet from last night’s drizzle. The soft hum of early traffic and the occasional flutter of birds outside the tall window panes were the only sounds. Inside, the apartment was even quieter. The light that filtered through the blinds fell softly across the spare room, illuminating the neutral walls, the neatly made bed, and the two of them lying there.Edward stirred first. Not fully awake, but aware. He shifted slightly, careful not to disturb the space between them. The warmth beside him was unmistakable. Amara’s hair was fanned across the pillow, her face partially turned toward him, eyelashes resting gently against her cheeks. The quiet rise and fall of her breathing reminded him of something fragile, something he had long felt compelled to protect.He looked down at his own hands resting lightly on the bed. For a moment, he considered moving—sitting up, leaving the room, returning to his usual morning ro
The bookstore café was quieter than usual that afternoon. Rain had started again outside, a soft steady drizzle that tapped lightly against the large windows and kept most people indoors. The warm smell of coffee and paper hung comfortably in the air, and the low murmur of conversations blended with the faint sound of pages turning. Amara sat at a small corner table with a cup of tea and an open notebook in front of her. She wasn’t writing. She had been staring at the same page for nearly five minutes. Across the room, Edward stood near the counter speaking to the barista about something. From the distance, his calm posture and precise gestures made the conversation look far more serious than it probably was. Amara watched him for a moment. It still surprised her sometimes how easily he fit into spaces like this. Tall, composed, quietly c
The bus stop was almost empty. A faint yellow streetlamp cast a small pool of light over the pavement, illuminating the metal bench and the timetable that flapped slightly in the cold night wind. The rest of the street faded into quiet darkness, interrupted only occasionally by the distant sound of cars passing on a larger road somewhere beyond the block. Amara pulled her coat tighter around herself. “I didn’t realize buses ran this late.” “They run later than you’d think,” Edward replied. They had been walking for nearly twenty minutes after leaving the small Nigerian restaurant in South London where Amara had insisted they go earlier that evening. It had started as a simple dinner—Amara claiming she needed to prove that her cooking at home had not been an exaggeration. Edward had agreed immediately. Now it was well past eleven.
The smell reached Edward before he even opened the front door. It wasn’t unpleasant—far from it. It was rich, warm, layered with spices he couldn’t immediately identify. Something earthy and smoky mixed with a deep savory aroma that filled the hallway the moment he stepped inside. Edward paused with his keys still in his hand. He closed the door slowly behind him and inhaled again. The scent was unfamiliar, but compelling. It was coming from the kitchen. He loosened his tie and walked down the hallway, curious. The closer he got, the stronger the smell became—pepper, onions, something roasted, something simmering. The air itself felt warmer than usual. Edward stepped into the doorway and stopped. Amara stood at the stove. The kitchen looked nothing like its usual orderly state. Several ingredients were spread
The rules had been written clearly. Edward remembered the evening they had drafted them with unusual precision. It had happened at the dining table only two days before the wedding—documents spread neatly between them, pens placed carefully beside a printed agreement that looked more like a corporate contract than the foundation of a marriage. No shared bedroom. No physical intimacy. Public affection only when necessary. Clear financial separation. Absolute honesty during immigration interviews. Minimal emotional involvement. It had all seemed sensible at the time. Efficient. Safe. Now, weeks later, Edward realized something uncomfortable. The rules had not been broken. But they had begun to… soften. And the strange part was that neither of them had announced the change. It happened in quiet moments. Small adjustments. Almost invisible shifts. Like furniture slowly being moved in a room until the entire shape of the space felt different. Edward noticed the first cha
The café was louder than Amara expected.It was one of those narrow London places that tried very hard to appear casual while secretly being extremely popular. The tables were close together, the air smelled strongly of coffee and toasted bread, and the line at the counter curled halfway toward the
The rain had stopped sometime after midnight. By morning, London carried that soft, washed-clean stillness that followed a night of steady rain. The pavement outside the apartment building gleamed faintly beneath the pale sunlight, and the air drifting through the cracked kitchen w
The kitchen smelled faintly of polished wood and faint citrus—the remnants of yesterday’s cleaning ritual. Amara Adebayo moved carefully across the floor, avoiding the small scuff of a polished corner that might betray her presence. The morning sunlight slanted through the blinds, highlighting th
The rain had returned that morning, tapping gently against the tall windows of Edward Harrington’s townhouse. The patter was steady, rhythmic, almost meditative. Amara Adebayo sat at the dining table with her phone cradled in one hand, her tea cooling slowly in a delicate ceramic cup. The kitchen







