LOGINEthan's POV
The 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 it. The secretary becoming the CEO's wife was already scandalous enough. The least we could do was eliminate the conflict of interest. Still, seeing the letter sitting there left an unexpected feeling in my chest. For three years, Sophia had been the first person I saw every morning. The last person answering emails at night. The person who somehow kept my schedule, my meetings, and occasionally my sanity from collapsing entirely. Now there was an empty space waiting where she used to be. I didn't particularly like that realization. "Everything is arranged?" I asked. She nodded. "Human Resources already has the paperwork." Efficient. Of course she did. Sophia never left loose ends. For a moment, neither of us spoke. Then she turned toward the door. "I should go." I watched her walk away. Halfway across the office, something strange happened. For the first time, I truly looked at her. Not as my secretary. Not as the woman signing a contract. Not as the solution to my inheritance problem. I looked at Sophia Hart. Really looked. The confidence in her stride. The stubborn determination that never seemed to leave her. The quiet strength she'd carried through years of impossible circumstances. And, unfortunately, the fact that she was beautiful.bNot in the polished, predictable way of actresses and socialites I'd dated before. Not in the carefully manufactured way women in my world often presented themselves. Sophia's beauty felt different. Unexpectedly. Real. My gaze lingered longer than it should have. Before I could stop myself, I spoke. "Sophia." She paused. Then turned. "Yes?" I leaned back slightly. "Did you enjoy the makeover?" The corner of her mouth lifted. A genuine smile. "I survived it." I almost smiled back. Almost. "Dante spent four hours arguing with a stylist." That earned a soft laugh. "I noticed." The sound lingered in the room long after it faded. Then she shook her head. "I should go." This time I didn't stop her. I simply watched her leave. The door closed. Silence followed. My office suddenly felt larger. Empty. I stared at the resignation letter. For some reason, I didn't open it. Instead, I left it exactly where she'd placed it. Minutes passed. Then twenty. I returned to reviewing documents. Answering emails. Preparing for Saturday's announcement. The usual distractions. Until something caught my attention. A handbag. Resting against the chair Sophia had occupied earlier. I frowned. She'd forgotten it. That wasn't like her. Sophia rarely forgot anything.I picked it up. Definitely hers. For a brief moment, I considered having someone return it. Then dismissed the idea. The elevators were faster. I caught her before she left the building. Without thinking further, I grabbed the bag and headed downstairs. The lobby was crowded. Employees moved through the revolving doors. Visitors crossed the marble floors. Security personnel stood at their stations. I spotted her immediately. Sophia was already halfway across the lobby. Walking toward the exit. I increased my pace. "Sophia." No response. She continued walking. Either she hadn't heard me or was ignoring me. Probably the first option. Hopefully. "Sophia!" Still nothing. People were beginning to glance in my direction. Wonderful. I moved faster. Then, for reasons I still couldn't explain later, a completely different word left my mouth. "Mama!" The entire lobby froze.bIncluding me. Sophia stopped instantly. Slowly turned around. Her eyes widened. Employees openly stared. Someone near reception nearly dropped a folder. For a second, complete silence filled the lobby put the Then my phone started ringing. I didn't need to check the screen. I already knew who it was. Dante. Of course. I answered. "What?" His laughter exploded through the speaker. "What did you just do?" I closed my eyes briefly. "Nothing." "You called her mama." Several nearby employees looked increasingly interested. I lowered my voice. "Keep your voice down." "You called her mama in public." "Yes." Dante laughed harder. "I genuinely can't decide if you're desperate or an idiot." I looked toward Sophia. She was still staring at me. Clearly waiting for an explanation. "I'm trying to make it look real." There was a pause. Then Dante spoke. "You're insane." I hung up. Immediately. Before he could continue. When I looked up again, Sophia was still waiting. I approached her. Holding out the handbag. "You forgot this." Understanding immediately crossed her face. "Oh." She accepted it. "Thank you." The faint embarrassment in her voice almost made me feel guilty. Almost. People were still watching us. Still whispering. Exactly what we needed. A public image. A believable relationship. Without thinking too much about it, I took her hand. Her eyes widened. The reaction was immediate. Unexpectedly intense. For both of us. I lowered my head and pressed a brief kiss against her knuckles. The gesture lasted only a second. Two at most. But the effect was immediate. Several employees gasped. Someone near reception smiled. Another pulled out a phone. Perfect. The rumor mill would handle the rest. Sophia looked completely stunned. Which, admittedly, was slightly amusing. Her cheeks flushed. A beautiful shade of pink. Interesting. Very interesting. "See you tomorrow," I said. She blinked. Then nodded. "Tomorrow." And just like that, she left. I watched her disappear through the revolving doors. Only then did I return upstairs. The moment I entered my office, my phone rang again. Dante. I answered reluctantly. "Now what?" "I leave you alone for ten minutes." I sat behind my desk. "And?": "And somehow you've created enough gossip to fuel the company for six months." I opened Sophia's resignation letter. Finally, "You're welcome." Dante groaned. Sgohü "I'm serious, Ethan." "So am I." There was a pause. Then his tone softened. "Just don't screw this up." Saturday.Two days away.The engagement announcement. The beginning of the lie. Or perhaps the beginning of something far more complicated. After ending the call, I leaned back in my chair. My gaze drifted toward the city beyond the windows. Then, unexpectedly, toward the memory of Sophia standing in the lobby. Surprised. Flustered. Beautiful. I pictured her at Saturday's event. The dress. The cameras. The attention. My future wife. The thought should have felt ridiculous. Instead, it felt dangerously easy to imagine. And for the first time since this arrangement began, I wasn't entirely sure that was a good thing.Sophia Pov The drive home was quiet, the city lights blurring past the tinted windows. I sat in the passenger seat with my hands folded tightly in my lap, unable to stop replaying that moment in the boardroom. Ethan’s cold voice cutting through the air as he faced Penelope: “My mother is long dead.” The words had hit me harder than I expected. I had always seen him as this impenetrable wall of ice and power. Now I kept wondering how much pain was buried behind that cold exterior.I stole a glance at him. His jaw was set, eyes fixed on the road ahead. The corporate mask had returned, but something had shifted between us tonight. The silence wasn’t uncomfortable. It felt heavy with everything we weren’t saying.Ethan didn’t speak until we pulled into the private underground garage beneath his building. “We’re here,” he said simply, turning off the engine.I nodded. “Thank you. For tonight.”He gave a small shrug. “Make yourself comfortable when we get up there. I have a few emails to a
Ethan's POVEthan stared at Sophia the moment he stepped out of the boardroom.She stood a few feet away, clutching his laptop with both hands. Her hair was tied into a simple ponytail, and she wore the same oversized sweater and slippers she had been wearing that morning. His brows drew together."You shouldn't have dressed like this."Sophia blinked. "What?"Ethan walked toward her, his gaze moving over her outfit once more."Your slippers... your sweater." He frowned. "What about the clothes I bought for you? Why didn't you wear them?"She looked down at herself before lifting her eyes to his."So..." Her voice became quieter. "Are you looking down on me?"The question caught him off guard."No." He answered almost immediately, his tone losing its usual coldness. "No, Sophia." He rubbed the back of his neck before speaking again. "I didn't mean it that way."She remained silent."I only meant..." he paused, searching for the right words. "People know who you are now. Reporters are
Ethan's POVThe atmosphere inside the boardroom shifted the moment Penelope stood.She didn't ask for permission. She never did.With effortless confidence, she buttoned her navy blazer and smiled at everyone seated around the long mahogany table. The morning sunlight streaming through the floor-to-ceiling windows cast sharp shadows across the room, highlighting the tension that had been building for months."Ladies and gentlemen," she began smoothly, "Blackwell Corporation is entering a new era."Silence answered her.Every director watched carefully. Some supported her. Some supported me. The rest were simply waiting to see who would win. The air felt thick with anticipation, the kind that preceded major corporate battles.Penelope gestured toward the man seated three chairs away from her. "I would like to nominate Richard Hayes for the position of Executive Chairman."Richard rose immediately, offering the room a practiced smile. He looked respectable. Experienced. Safe. Exactly th
Ethan's POVThe boardroom had always been my battlefield. Some people fought wars with bullets and bloodshed. I fought mine with signatures, calculated votes, and billion-dollar decisions that could reshape industries overnight. And this morning was no different.Sunlight poured through the floor-to-ceiling windows of Blackwell Corporation’s executive floor, reflecting off the long, polished mahogany table where fifteen board members sat in tense silence. Leather folders rested before each of them, untouched. The air hummed with unspoken anxiety. No one spoke above a whisper. They were waiting.Not for the meeting to begin.For me.Unfortunately for them, I was nowhere near the office.My phone vibrated for the third time in less than five minutes. Dante. I didn’t need to answer to know what he wanted. I declined the call with a sharp tap, eyes fixed on the sea of red brake lights stretching ahead.A second later, another message appeared on the dashboard display.**Where the hell are
Sophia's POVFor one blissful second, I forgot where I was. I reached toward the other side of the bed, expecting to feel the familiar wall beside my tiny, lumpy mattress in the old apartment. Instead, my hand sank into soft, luxurious Egyptian cotton sheets that seemed to stretch on forever, cool and smooth beneath my fingers. My eyes flew open.The ceiling wasn’t mine. The room wasn’t mine. Nothing about this elegant, expansive space belonged to me.A wave of panic hit me square in the chest before the memories came rushing back in a disorienting flood. The penthouse. The contract. Ethan Blackwell. The life I had signed away for the next two years.I sat upright so quickly that the duvet slipped down to my waist. “Oh…”I whispered the word to myself, barely audible in the hushed stillness of the room. This wasn’t a dream. This was my new reality — one I had chosen, but one that still felt impossibly foreign.I rubbed my face with both hands, trying to shake off the lingering fog of
Sophia's POVI barely slept that night. Every time I closed my eyes, Ethan’s face appeared—sharp jawline, intense gaze, the way his voice dropped when he said my name like it carried weight. Then the contract slid into view behind my eyelids, crisp pages filled with legal language that bound me to him for the next year. And finally, the number printed across the bottom in cold black ink. Three million dollars. The figure pulsed in my mind like a heartbeat.Enough to save my mother. Enough to change Leo’s future. Enough to silence the constant worry that had lived in my chest for years. But not enough to make me forget that none of this was real.The alarm rang at six. I turned it off before it could ring a second time and sat quietly on the edge of my bed, feet brushing the worn carpet. For a long moment, I simply looked around my apartment, letting the familiar details settle over me like a well-worn blanket.It wasn’t much. The paint on the walls was beginning to peel near the ceili







