ログインSophia's POV
My alarm went off at six o'clock sharp. For a few seconds, I lay still beneath the covers, staring at the ceiling.
Then reality came crashing back. The debt. My mother's hospital bills. Victor's deadline. The contract. Today was the day.
I slowly pushed myself out of bed and made my way to the bathroom. The morning routine felt strangely normal considering I was about to agree to something that would change my entire life.
I brushed my teeth. Took a shower. Combed my hair. Applied light makeup.
When I looked up at the mirror, my stomach tightened.
The bruise was still there. Faint but visible.
A reminder of the argument with my father the night before. A reminder that the man who was supposed to protect me had become the person I feared most.
I reached up and touched the fading mark on my cheek. Then I looked away. There was no point dwelling on it. Not today. Today I needed to survive.
By the time I left the apartment, it was already 8:45 a.m. Fifteen minutes. That was all I had before I was expected in Ethan Blackwell's office.
My future is waiting behind a signature.
I hurried down the stairs. And nearly screamed.
"Jesus Christ!" Victor.
He was leaning against the wall outside my building as though he owned the place.
My heart jumped into my throat.
"What are you doing here?" His eyes narrowed.
"Where's your father?"
I let out a bitter laugh. "I haven't seen him since yesterday."
Victor folded his arms. The look on his face made it obvious he didn't believe me.
"He disappeared after stealing my money."
The words slipped out before I could stop them.
For the first time, Victor looked genuinely surprised. "Your father stole from you?"
"Three thousand dollars." His eyebrows rose. "I don't believe Lucas would steal from his own daughter."
I laughed again. This time there was no humor in it. "Believe whatever you want."
Victor studied me for a moment. Then his expression hardened.
"You know your deadline ends today."
My stomach twisted. As if I needed reminding. "I know."
"No more extensions."
"I know."
For a second, neither of us spoke. Then I glanced at my watch. 8:48 a.m. Damn it. "I'm late."
Victor stepped aside. "Good luck."
I didn't answer. I simply walked past him.
Luck had nothing to do with it anymore.
As I made my way through the crowded streets, one thought repeated endlessly in my mind.
I'm about to marry the devil. The thought should have terrified me. Maybe it did. But fear wasn't stronger than desperation. Not anymore. I needed the money. I needed it badly.
The city bustled around me. People hurried to work. Street vendors shouted. Cars honked. Life continued as if my world wasn't falling apart.
A few blocks later, two young boys ran across the sidewalk in front of me.
They were shoving each other while their exhausted mother chased after them. "Stop fighting!"
One of them turned suddenly. His arm collided with mine. The coffee cup in my hand flew sideways. Cold coffee splashed across the front of my blouse.
The boy froze. "Oh no! I'm sorry!"
I looked down at the stain. Wonderful. Just wonderful. "It's okay," I said.
The poor child looked terrified. His mother apologized repeatedly before dragging him away. I sighed. There was no way I could walk into Ethan Blackwell's office looking like this.
Reluctantly, I turned around and headed back home. The apartment was exactly as I had left it. Messy. Chaotic. A reflection of my life.
I hurried to my bedroom and opened my wardrobe. The moment I did, another problem appeared. Most of my clothes were wrinkled.
Some hadn't been washed in nearly two weeks. Between hospital visits, overtime, and family disasters, laundry had become the least of my concerns. After digging through several hangers, I finally found a clean blouse. Not perfect. But acceptable.
At least acceptable by normal standards.
Probably not by Ethan Blackwell's.
I changed quickly and rushed back out.
By the time I reached the subway station, I was already running behind schedule.
The train arrived. Then refused to move.
Five minutes passed. Then ten. Then fifteen. No announcement. No explanation.
Just delay after delay. I wanted to scream.
When the train finally started moving again, I knew I was hopelessly late. By the time I reached Blackwell Enterprises, it was already 9:45. Forty-five minutes late.
My palms were sweating as I crossed the lobby.
I didn't even stop at my office. I went straight to Ethan's floor. Straight to his office. Straight toward my fate. I knocked once.
"Come in."
The familiar deep voice sent a strange tension through me. I opened the door.
Ethan stood beside the floor-to-ceiling windows overlooking the city.
His hands rested casually inside his pockets. Even from across the room, he looked intimidating. Powerful. Untouchable.
Another man stood beside him. Similar height. Similar confidence. Slightly older. And considerably more approachable.
Ethan turned toward me. "You're late."
I swallowed.
"Traffic." His eyes moved over my appearance. Slowly. Assessing. Judging.
The coffee stain was mostly hidden beneath my blazer. Mostly.
"Unprofessional." Of course.
I resisted the urge to roll my eyes. Instead, I remained silent. The older man chuckled softly. Interesting. Apparently someone found Ethan entertaining.
"This is Dante Romano," Ethan said. "And my lawyer."
Dante offered his hand. I shook it. His smile was warm. A complete contrast to Ethan. Ethan walked toward the desk.
"You're moving into my penthouse this week."
No greeting. No small talk. Straight to business. Typical.
"You'll attend events with me."
I nodded.
"Galas."
Another nod.
"Board dinners."
Still nodding. "Business meetings."
I understood.
"You will accompany me wherever necessary." His expression hardened. "And under no circumstances will you tell anyone this marriage is contractual."
The room became silent. I met his gaze.
"Not even my family?" "No one."
The answer was immediate. "If this arrangement becomes public knowledge, the deal is terminated."
I looked away. "I understand."
"Do you?"
"Yes."
Dante leaned against the desk. "Wow." We both looked at him. "Listen to this romance."
Ethan ignored him completely. Dante grinned.
"Move into my penthouse. Attend meetings. Keep my secrets." He looked at me dramatically. "Every woman's dream."
I laughed despite myself. Ethan looked annoyed. For some reason, that made me laugh harder.
"I'm right here," Ethan said dryly. "Unfortunately." Dante handed me a thick document. The contract.
My smile disappeared instantly. The papers felt heavier than they should have.
As if they carried the weight of my future.
Dante began explaining the terms. Public appearances. Business functions. Confidentiality clauses. Financial arrangements. Living requirements. The words blurred together.
Because in the end, none of it changed the reality. I was selling two years of my life. For my mother. For Leo. For survival.
When Dante finished, he slid a pen across the desk. I stared at it. My hand felt strangely numb. Then, before I could change my mind, I signed. Sophia Hart.
The ink dried almost immediately. And just like that, there was no turning back. I remained in Ethan's office for another thirty minutes discussing logistics. Moving arrangements. Schedules. Announcements. Plans.
The entire time, I felt detached. As though I were watching someone else's life unfold.
Eventually, I left.
The elevator ride down felt endless. My reflection stared back at me from the mirrored walls. I barely recognized the woman looking back. Was I really doing this for my mother? I thought about her hospital room. Her smile. Her illness. Yes.
Of course I was.
Then another memory surfaced. The fire exit. Ethan's hands. His voice.
The night that had changed everything. I quickly pushed the thought away. This wasn't about that. It couldn't be. This was about money. About survival. About saving my family.
I repeated those words silently all the way home. Again. And again. Until eventually, I almost believed them.
Ethan's POVI sat alone in my office, staring at the file spread across my desk. Sophia Hart. Thirty-two pages.Everything there was to know about the woman who would soon become my wife. I should have been reviewing acquisition reports. Preparing for the next board meeting. Monitoring the latest investor projections.Instead, I was reading about her life.Again. My eyes drifted over the details.Mother: diagnosed with Stage Three cancer.Younger brother: enrolled in a community school.Father: Lucas Hart. Unemployed. Chronic gambling addiction. Outstanding debts.Medical bills. Collection notices.The deeper I looked into her life, the more I understood why she had accepted my offer.At first, I thought it was desperation.Now I realized it was a sacrifice. Everything she did revolved around keeping her family afloat. Even when they didn't deserve it. Especially her father.I closed the file and leaned back in my chair. Most people would have broken under that kind of pressure. Sophi
Sophia's POV"Hospital," I told the driver instead of giving him my apartment address.The wardrobe appointment, the makeover, the expensive beauty treatments—none of it felt real. Every time I thought about the money sitting in my account, I expected to wake up and discover it had all been a dream.The driver nodded and pulled into traffic.I spent the entire ride staring out the window. For the first time in years, I wasn't calculating bills in my head. I wasn't wondering how to pay for Mom's next treatment. I wasn't panicking over Leo's school fees. I wasn't afraid of Victor showing up at my door. The problems were still there.But for once, I had a way to solve them.The thought should have made me happy.Instead, all I could think about was Ethan Blackwell. And the contract I had signed.Two years. Two years of pretending. Two years of lies. Two years of being married to the devil. The hospital came into view. I thanked the driver and stepped out.A few minutes later, I pushed op
Sophia's POVI sat in the back of the taxi and stared up at the five-story glass building towering above the busy street.The mirrored exterior reflected the city, the traffic, and a woman I barely recognized me. Maybe Ethan was right. The thought annoyed me. For years, I had survived on practical decisions. Drugstore shampoo. Discount clothing. Comfortable shoes. Everything I owned had been chosen for necessity, not appearance.When your mother's hospital bills were swallowing every spare dollar, luxury became a foreign language. Still, looking at my reflection now, I couldn't deny it. The woman staring back at me looked tired. Completely out of place beside someone like Ethan Blackwell.The taxi came to a stop. I paid the driver and stepped onto the sidewalk.The building's entrance gleamed beneath the morning sun. A luxury beauty and wellness center. The kind of place I normally walked past without even glancing through the windows.Today, however, I was expected. I adjusted my han
Ethan's POVThe resignation letter landed on my desk with surprising finality. I looked down at the envelope, then up at Sophia.She stood across from me in a fitted navy dress that looked nothing like the clothes she normally wore to work. Dante's team had clearly done their job. Her hair fell in soft waves around her shoulders, and the subtle makeup highlighted features I had somehow never paid attention to before. Or perhaps I had noticed them. I had simply chosen not to."What's this?" I asked, even though I already knew."My resignation letter." Her voice remained professional. Calm. Controlled.As though resigning from a job she'd held for three years didn't matter. As though agreeing to marry her boss wasn't completely insane. I glanced at the envelope again. The resignation had always been part of the arrangement.Once our engagement became public, she couldn't continue working directly under me. The board would question it. The media would question it. Everyone would question
Sophia's POVFor the first time in months, I sat beside my mother's hospital bed without feeling like the world was about to collapse. It was Thursday morning.Sunlight streamed through the hospital window, casting soft golden light across the room. The machines beside her bed hummed steadily, no longer sounding like countdown clocks to disaster.The difference wasn't the room. It wasn't the doctors. It wasn't even my mother's condition. It was me. For the first time in a very long time, I wasn't terrified of the bills.Mom's treatments were covered. Leo's school fees had been paid. Victor was no longer calling my phone every hour demanding money. The crushing weight that had followed me for years had finally loosened its grip. At least for now.I looked over at my mother. She was still asleep. The chemotherapy had exhausted her again. Even in sleep, she looked fragile.The sight made my chest ache. No matter how much money appeared in my bank account, I couldn't buy her health. I cou
Sophia's POVDante leaned back in his chair, studying me as though we were old friends catching up over coffee instead of discussing a contract marriage worth millions of dollars."The engagement party is on Saturday," he said casually. "Which means you're moving into Ethan's penthouse this week."I blinked. "So soon?""Mrs. Blackwell, nothing about this arrangement is slow."I almost choked. "I'm not Mrs. Blackwell yet."Dante grinned. "Not yet. But you will be."The title sounded strange. Wrong, even.Mrs. Blackwell. I had spent three years calling Ethan "Mr. Blackwell." Now everyone expected me to become Mrs. Blackwell. The thought alone felt surreal."But Saturday is only four days away.""It's in the contract," Ethan said from across the room.His voice was calm, as though announcing a quarterly budget meeting instead of a life-changing engagement. I turned toward him.He stood beside the window again, hands in his pockets, looking out at the city. That seemed to be his favorite







