ログインSophia's POV
I 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 handbag on my shoulder and walked inside. The lobby alone was larger than my entire apartment. Crystal chandeliers sparkled overhead. Soft music drifted through the air. Everything smelled expensive. A young woman standing behind the reception desk immediately smiled when she saw me. "Good morning, Miss Hart." I blinked. She knew who I was. "Good morning." "Please follow me." I followed her toward a private elevator. The doors opened almost instantly. Within seconds, we reached the third floor. As soon as the elevator doors slid apart, another woman was waiting. She looked polished and elegant in a fitted black uniform. "Good morning, Mrs. Blackwell." I nearly tripped. Mrs. Blackwell. The title hit me harder than it should have. Not because it was true. Because it would be soon. I forced a smile. "Good morning." "This way." She led me down a long hallway lined with private suites. Through one of the glass walls, I caught glimpses of wealthy women sipping champagne while stylists worked on their hair. I suddenly felt underdressed. Again. Eventually she stopped outside a large room. The moment I stepped inside, I forgot how to breathe. The room was beautiful. Cream-colored furniture. Floor-to-ceiling mirrors. Fresh flowers. Soft lighting. The chair positioned in front of the vanity looked more comfortable than my bed. "Please make yourself comfortable." After she left, I sat down cautiously. I felt like an imposter. Like someone would eventually realize I didn't belong here. A few moments later, a man in his forties entered. He wore black designer clothing and carried himself with effortless confidence. "Miss Sophia Blackwell." The title again. I smiled awkwardly. "Hello." He shook my hand warmly. "I'm Marcus." Unlike most people in Ethan's world, he immediately made me feel comfortable. "So," he said, studying my face. "When was the last time you had professional makeup done?" I hesitated. His expression softened. "Oh no. That's never a good sign." I laughed despite myself. "A year ago." He placed a hand dramatically against his chest. "A year?" I nodded. "As in twelve months." He looked horrified. "As in a crime." That made me laugh harder. For the next hour, we talked while he worked. About work. About family. About terrible first dates. About life. By the time he finished, it felt like we had known each other for years. "Ready?" he asked. I swallowed nervously. "No." "Good. That's the correct answer." He turned the chair toward the mirror. My breath caught. The woman staring back at me looked familiar. Yet completely different. My features looked softer. More refined. More confident. The exhaustion I carried every day seemed less visible. For the first time in a long while, I looked like someone who wasn't constantly fighting to survive. I slowly touched my cheek. "Wow." Marcus grinned. "I'll accept your gratitude in cash." I laughed. Then looked at myself again. Maybe Ethan had a point. Maybe appearances mattered. Not because I wanted to impress him. But because for the first time, I could actually imagine standing beside him at Saturday's gala without feeling invisible. My phone vibrated. Then again. And again. I picked it up. Seven missed calls. All from Emeka. I sighed. Then opened my messages. Emeka: Hello? Emeka: Tell me the rumors aren't true. Emeka: Everyone is talking about you. Emeka: How did you do it? Emeka: Sophia! Emeka: Call me now. I closed the screen immediately. The office gossip machine had officially exploded. Wonderful. Marcus eventually finished his work and left. A few minutes later, another woman arrived. This time she focused on my eyebrows and nails. Everything felt surreal. As if I had accidentally stepped into someone else's life. Halfway through the appointment, my phone rang again. Emeka. I stared at the screen. Then finally answered. "Hello?" His voice exploded through the speaker. "Sophia!" I winced. "Why are you shouting?" "Because the entire company is talking about you!" I closed my eyes. Of course they were. "Is it true?" he demanded. "What exactly?" "Don't do that." I smiled despite myself. "Do what?" "Pretend you don't know what I'm talking about." I laughed softly. "You'll have to be more specific." "Are you seriously engaged to Ethan Blackwell?" The question hung in the air.bI looked at my reflection. The perfectly styled hair. The expensive makeup. The luxury suite. The life-changing contract. Everything suddenly felt very real. "I'll explain later." "Sophia—" "Later." He sighed dramatically. "I knew something was happening." "You know nothing." "I know enough." I shook my head. If only he knew the truth. If only he knew what I had agreed to. What I was risking. What I was hiding. The conversation ended shortly afterward. When my final appointment finished, I thanked everyone and left. The afternoon sun warmed my skin as I stepped outside. For the first time all day, I felt lighter. Not happy. Not exactly. But lighter. My phone buzzed again. This time it was an unknown number. I opened the message. A car will pick you up at seven tonight. Your wardrobe fitting has been scheduled. You will return tomorrow for final preparations. The gala is on Saturday. I stared at the message for several seconds. Then smiled. A small smile. One I couldn't quite explain. Maybe this was madness. Maybe agreeing to marry Ethan Blackwell would become the biggest mistake of my life. Or maybe it would save it. I slipped the phone back into my bag and started walking down the street. The message lingered in my mind. A wardrobe fitting tonight. Another appointment tomorrow. The gala on Saturday. The beginning of our performance. I shook my head and laughed quietly to myself. Maybe the devil wasn't completely heartless after all.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







