Masuk❤️Sophie❤️
I have exactly forty-eight hours. Forty-eight hours to find a man whose name I don't know. Forty-eight hours before my father throws me out of his house if I can't find the so-called man. My life has officially become a disaster. “I still think we should go back to the club.” Sandy folds her legs beneath her on the bed as she watches me pace across her bedroom for what has to be the hundredth time today. “We already did.” “We need to do it again.” “We've been there three times, and he wasn’t there.” I stop pacing and drag both hands through my hair. “He could have been working another shift.” “He wasn't a bartender. He was a customer,” I say, feeling utterly stupid. Sandy sighs. “Exactly, customers don't disappear forever.” “I actually asked the bartender the first time we went.” “What did he say?” “He said he doesn't know him. The security too, they said they can't share the CCTV footage.” I groan loudly before throwing myself face-first onto Sandy’s bed. “This is hopeless.” The mattress bounces beneath me. “I don't even know his damn name.” Sandy remains silent. After a few seconds, she says carefully, “What if….” I turn my head. “What?” “What if you stop looking for him?” What the hell is that supposed to mean? “What do you mean stop looking?” “I mean you don't actually need him.” Shit, my best friend has lost her mind. “I don't need him?” I exclaim. “I just told you my parents gave me forty-eight hours to find him, or I'm no longer their child, and you're telling me I should stop looking?” She continues, “What I mean is, you don't actually need the man from the club, you just need a man.” I blink. “I don't like the look on your face.” She grins. “I have an idea.” “Your ideas usually end with someone crying.” She ignores me. “Your father doesn't know who the father is. He only wants to meet the man.” “Yes. So?” my brow rises, almost touching my forehead. She clasps her hands together excitedly. “So we hire a man.” I nearly choke on my own saliva. “Hire someone?” “Exactly.” “To do what?” “Pretend.” She has indeed lost her mind. I stare at her with my jaw on the floor. “You can't be serious.” “No, hear me out. You need a fake boyfriend.” “What I need is the actual father.” “You can't find him.” Unfortunately, yes. “I know.” “So we improvise.” My shoulders sag. “You make it sound so simple.” “It’s simple.” I hate this. I hate it a lot. This is my life we’re talking about, not some joke. How am I supposed to let another man pretend to be the father of my child? That’s ridiculous. “We are talking about marriage, Sandy. This is not Hollywood; it’s reality.” “A fake marriage.” “My father wants a real wedding, a loud one.” She points at me. “So give him one. You said he only demanded that you bring the man home. He never said it has to be the biological father.” “That’s because he assumes it is.” “Exactly.” My pulse quickens. It sounds completely stupid, yet… “What if the fake boyfriend changes his mind?” “We pay him.” I think for a moment. “Okay, but what if he runs away?” “We sign a contract.” “He might eventually tell people. Look, I don't want this. It’s too risky,” but deep down, I know there are no other options. “We can make him sign a confidentiality agreement.” I blink. “You really have thought this through.” “For the last hour.” A groan escapes my throat. “This is insane. The worst idea you’ve ever come up with.” “It also might be the one to save your life.” I fall silent because she's right. I have no other choice. If I truly want to avoid embarrassing my parents and the entire family, I need to do this. Unless, magically, I find the stranger before tomorrow night. Which is likely impossible. Sandy snaps her fingers. “I know how to go about it. We can post an advertisement online.” “No sane person will answer.” “We are offering money, like two million dollars. Someone will definitely accept that kind of payment.” My eyes nearly pop out of their sockets. “Two million dollars!” “Yes, so you said your trust fund becomes available at twenty-five, so we can pay five hundred thousand now and promise to pay the rest later. It will be in the agreement.” I stare. “You are planning my financial ruin.” “I'm planning your survival.” Before I can argue, she grabs the laptop from the table and begins typing. “What should it say?” “I can't believe we are doing this.” She starts typing without answering. SEEKING CONFIDENTIAL MARRIAGE ARRANGEMENT Single male. Age: twenty-three to twenty-five. Must be willing to enter a legal two-year marriage. Compensation: two million dollars. Strict confidentiality required. Serious applicant only. I read it twice, okay maybe three times, and I still refuse to believe my life has to come to this. “Nobody is going to believe this.” The advertisement disappears into the screen, and she smiles proudly. “There, now we wait.” Thirty minutes later, nothing. One hour later, nothing. Two hours pass, still nothing. I slump further into the couch. “I told you this is ridiculous. No one will believe such a thing.” Sandy refreshes the page again. “I still have hope.” “You are delusional,” I murmur, feeling hopeless. My phone buzzes, and both of us freeze. I grab it so fast I almost drop it. Spam. A groan escapes before I can stop it. Another hour passes, the sun begins to set beyond the windows. Still, there is nothing. I bury my face in my hands. “It’s over. One way or another, by this time tomorrow, I will be homeless.” My child will grow up without a home. Maybe I deserve it. Maybe one stupid reckless night is enough to destroy a whole life. Sandy doesn't answer. Instead, she refreshes the page again, then gasps. “Sophie.” My head snaps up. “What?” “I think someone replied.” Every muscle in my body goes stiff. “What?” She turns the laptop toward me. One applicant. No name, no picture, only a username. Shadow_23 Beneath it are six simple words: I’m interested, when do we meet?☠️Adrian☠️ The first thing I notice is her hand, curled protectively over her stomach, and the second is the fear that shines so brightly in her hazel eyes. Then everything else disappears—the leather interior of the Rolls Royce, the voice crackling through the intercom, the bodyguard outside, and the smell of vomit on my suit. It all fades away. Because somewhere inside my head, a door I buried eighteen years ago creaks open. Eighteen years earlier…… “Dad?” My voice is barely above a whisper, young and trembling. Silence greets me—a deep, suffocating silence—and I push the study door open softly. My gaze roams around the familiar room until it lands on my father. My feet dart further forward. “Dad, Mom said breakfast is……” The words die before they can fully form. My father sits behind his desk, his chair turned toward the window. For one ridiculous second, I think he’s asleep. “Dad?” I keep walking, not stopping until I'm standing so close to him. That’s when I see it—some
❤️Sophie❤️ My fingers curl against the leather seat. Outside, the bodyguards move with frightening precision. One disappears behind the SUV ahead. Another speaks quietly into the microphone clipped beneath his collar. No one is shouting. No one is running. That somehow makes it worse. I look at Adrian; he’s not looking out of the window. He’s staring at me. “Stay where you are,” his voice is calm. Too calm. “What…what’s happening?” “I don't know yet.” “You don't know?” My voice rises despite myself, “Your men are pulling out guns.” “They are doing their job.” His answer should have reassured me, but instead, it sends another wave of fear crashing through me. The words from yesterday suddenly echo in my head. Emergency. Kidnapping. My enemies. I actually laughed when I heard those words. I'm not laughing anymore. My breathing becomes uneven. This is not happening. I'm not supposed to get dragged into whatever dangerous billionaire game this is. I just needed someone to prete
❤️Sophie❤️ For a moment, no one says anything. The dining room falls into a strange silence as my father’s question hangs in the air. “When should we begin planning the wedding?” My heartbeat stutters. Wedding? I thought we were discussing breakfast, not planning the fastest marriage in history. I slowly turn my head toward Adrian. Don't answer. Please don't. Think about it. Pretend you didn't hear him. Lose your hearing for five seconds. Adrian calmly folds his napkin and places it beside his plate. “The day after tomorrow.” The orange juice in my hand almost slips. “What?” I squeak. Every pair of eyes turns toward me—wonderful. Now I look like the only person who wasn't informed about my own wedding. Adrian finally looks at me. “Is there a problem?” There are approximately three thousand problems. But my parents are watching. I force a smile so painful my cheeks begin to ache. “N…no.” Dad beams. “Excellent.” Mom clasps her hands together. “Oh, that’s wonderful.” Wonde
❤️Sophie❤️ For the first time since Adrian entered the dining room, everyone actually freezes. My father's eyes are fixed directly on him. My mother’s fork hangs mid-air above her plate. My aunt’s jaw drops. And me? I'm trying really hard not to kick him in the leg again. My father is the first to recover. “Advertisement?” Adrian nods, unbothered. “Yes, a business advertisement.” I let out a snort. This man can lie. He calmly takes another sip of coffee. “One of her designs catches my eye. I asked to meet her.” I cough so violently tears fill my eyes. I’ve never designed anything in my life. Adrian hands me a glass of water. “Drink.” I glare at him. This is your fault. My mother smiles warmly. “She never told us she was interested in designing.” That’s because I don't design! I force a smile that probably looks more painful than convincing. Then scan my brain for a reasonable lie. “Well…” Before I can invent a career my parents don't know for myself, Adrian res
❤️Sophie❤️ I don't think I ever really sleep. At some point, I close my eyes, but every time I drift off, I dream of contracts, kidnapping, annoying billionaires, and my father throwing my suitcase out onto the street. By the time sunlight slips through the curtains, I already have a headache. A loud knock lands on my bedroom door. “Sophie!” Dad’s voice echoes through the hallway. “It’s seven thirty.” “ I know what time it is!” “ Good. Then don't make your boyfriend wait.” “ I highly doubt he’s the one waiting.” “ Seven forty-five.” “ I heard you the last time!” Footsteps fade away, and I flop back onto my pillow. “I'm going to die.” Five minutes later, Mom walks in carrying breakfast. “You should eat.” “ I’d rather panic.” She sighs. “Your father has been pacing the living room since six.” “Has he always been this dramatic?” “ He ironed the tablecloth.” I sit upright. “That was a joke, right?” “ I wish it were, but no—that’s not the end. He polished
❤️Sophie❤️ “Dad, leave me the hell alone!” I slam the door so hard that the entire room shakes, then rest my back against it. Yet his voice rings through the living room: “If he’s not here by 8 o'clock, you are leaving this house tomorrow.” I ignore him, my pulse pounding loudly in my ears. I almost forgot my house isn’t really my house right now. I should have gone to Sandy’s instead. Actually, I never expected my father to be such a pain in the ass. Even after telling him my boyfriend is coming tomorrow, he still refuses to let me breathe. “I'm not the first person to get pregnant without a father, so why have you all ganged up against me?” The sound of footsteps echoes through the hallway. I already know who it is before they get close. A few seconds later, a knock sounds on the door, and my mom’s voice drifts through, “Sophie.” I stay still against the door. “Sophie, it’s your mother.” After what feels like forever, I yank the door open. Sure enou







