LOGINHelena's POV
What could she be referring to? I wasn't in the mood for more stress.
I frowned. “A solution?” I finally asked.
She nodded. “Yes, if you’re willing to listen,” she replied.
My heart skipped a beat. A part of me jumped with hope, while another part was more skeptical than anything else.
My thoughts dangled between both sides. “What kind of solution?” I asked carefully.
That only made her smile wider. “One that might give you exactly what you’re looking for,” she replied.
And for the first time since I’d walked out of that house, I didn’t feel quite so alone.
But I knew I should have walked away.
I knew that was the sensible thing to do, just thank the strange woman for listening, laugh politely at whatever ridiculous advice she was about to offer, and leave.
People didn’t just hand out solutions to problems like mine.
I mean, it's not everyday people go about telling their problems to strangers, especially ones that involve arranged marriages and controlling grandfathers.
And yet, I stayed.
“Okay,” I said cautiously, shifting my weight on the bench. “I’m listening,” I added.
The woman’s smile softened, as if she’d expected my answer. “First,” she started, “let me introduce myself. You can call me Helen.”
“Helen,” I repeated after her slowly. “Funny. Similar names,” I remarked.
“Really?” She asked.
“Yeah, I'm Helena,” I stated.
She chuckled. “Perhaps fate has a sense of humor afterall,” she teased.
I wasn’t sure I believed in fate, but something about the way she said it kept me quiet.
“You want to escape a marriage that’s already been arranged,” Helen continued calmly. “And your grandfather isn’t looking like the kind that takes no for an answer,” she repeated.
“Yeah, if you are putting it mildly,” I muttered.
“Then the only way to nullify his arrangement,” she said, “is to already be married,” she announced.
I stared at her blankly, awaiting the punchline that never came.
“I’m sorry,” I said slowly. “What?”
“Get married to someone else,” she added, as if that made it any better.
A sharp laugh burst out of me. “That’s not a solution. That’s insanity.”
“Is it?” Helen asked gently. “Legally speaking, once you’re married, any prior arrangement becomes irrelevant,” she clarified.
My heart began to pound. “You’re telling me to run off and marry some random man?”
“No, my dear. I’m telling you,” she paused, giving me a full minute wait before continuing. “To marry my grandson.”
The world tilted, then I stood up abruptly. “No. No, absolutely not. I don’t even know you,” I exclaimed honestly.
“That’s true,” she said calmly. “But you don’t know the man your grandfather chose either,” she shot back.
“That’s different,” I replied.
“Is it?” She asked again, unbothered by my reaction. “At least this way, you’d be choosing,” she said calmly.
I shook my head, backing away. “This is crazy. You’re crazy,” I retorted.
Helen laughed, the sound still warm and light in my ears. “Perhaps, but desperate times do call for desperate actions,” she replied gently.
I ran a hand through my hair, my thoughts had already begun racing. “Why would your grandson agree to something like this?”
“Because he trusts me,” she replied simply.
“And what’s in it for him?” I demanded.
“A wife, on paper,” she replied again. “Nothing more.”
That phrase stuck with me. On paper.
“There would be rules,” Helen continued. “Clear boundaries, no expectations beyond the contract. And when the time comes, the marriage can be dissolved quietly, with no fuss,” she explained.
A part of me wasn't pleased with that. “I wouldn’t even have to meet him?” I asked , against my better judgement.
She smiled. “Not unless you both choose to,” she replied.
My chest tightened. “This sounds like something out of a Tom Cruise movie,” I cracked.
She laughed softly. “I guess those stories exist because they work,” she added softly.
I looked away, staring at the empty path ahead of us.
I thought of my grandfather’s cold expression. I thought of the way he’d looked at me like I was only there to do his bidding.
Like I was something he had purchased.
“I don’t even know his name,” I said quietly.
“You don’t need to,” Helen replied. “In fact, it’s better if you don’t,” she added softly.
I turned to her sharply. “Why?” I asked.
“Because anonymity keeps things clean,” she said. “No attachments. No complications.”
My stomach twisted. “You’re serious.”
“I wouldn’t suggest it otherwise,” she replied.
I sank back onto the bench as my legs felt suddenly weak.
This was insane, reckless and pretty dangerous.
But it was also the only realistic way out of my papa's plans.
“What about my life?” I asked. “My job?” I added even if I knew I had none.
“You continue as you are,” Helen said. “This marriage isn't to cage you, my dear. It's to free you.”
The word echoed in my head. Freedom.
I closed my eyes, breathing out slowly. “If I say yes,” I said slowly, “I need conditions.”
“Of course,” Helen said approvingly.
“No contact beyond what’s necessary,” I said. “No showing up unannounced. No controlling behavior.”
“Agreed.”
“And if either of us wants out,” I added, “we walk away. No drama.”
She nodded. “Agreed, that's what it's all about,” she replied.
I hesitated. “And no real names if I can't know his,” I said.
Her smile widened. “Yeah, nicknames rather,” she said softly.
I swallowed. “Fine.”
The word felt heavy as it left my mouth.
Helen stood up abruptly. “Then we should proceed quickly. Before your grandfather makes his next move,” she said with a nod.
We took a cab to the nearest courthouse and Helen brought out a bundle of papers and handed them to the clerk like she came prepared.
The official arrangements were done and I signed the papers with a hand that trembled all the way.
This didn’t feel real. It felt like stepping into a story that wasn’t mine.
“What nickname would you like to use?” the clerk asked me as I concluded the signing process.
I hesitated, then said the first thing that came to my mind. “Lena.”
Helen gave me an approving nod from beside me.
When it was done, when the ink dried and the documents were filed, I stared at the marriage certificate in disbelief.
And just like that, I am married. And to a man I’d never met.
As I stepped outside, my phone buzzed.
Barron's POV
My phone buzzed on my thigh and I picked it up to find a message from my grandmother.
She's all I have left as I lost my father and mother a while back and she's been my support all through, at least emotionally.
I respected her and would do anything she wants as she's the only family I have left.
I opened her message and read it slowly.
“I've found you the perfect contract wife. She's signed all the necessary papers. Below is her number.”
And after that messaged followed a set of numbers.
I took a deep breath, she had brought this up a few times and I never thought she would pull it through.
But here it was. My ‘wife’s’ number.
And before I could overthink everything, I did the first thing that came to mind.
Helena's POV “Promise me you'll do it,” he whispered.I would have done anything he asked of me. That thought dripped hot through me before he even spoke.Sitting there beside his bed, watching the slow rise and fall of his chest, listening to the quiet rhythm of machines that had no business being louder than his voice. There was nothing he could ask that I wouldn’t give, certainly not now. Not after everything I had seen, everything I had allowed to slip through my fingers.“Just tell me what it is,” I said softly, leaning forward a little, my hands already reaching for his. “You can ask me anything.”He didn’t answer immediately.His gaze drifted away from me for a moment, like he was searching for something beyond the walls of the room, beyond the present.Reaching for somewhere buried in years I hadn’t paid enough attention to. And for a second, I thought maybe he’d changed his mind. Maybe he wouldn’t ask.Then—“It’s about the house,” he finally said and I blinked.“The house?
Helena's POV I let the door slide open slowly, almost carefully, like the room on the other side might shatter if it moved too fast.The smell hit me first, carried by the wind straight into my nose, sterile and pretty overwhelming. It smelled clean in a way that felt too good to hold a body, a kind of silence rested in the air, heavy and quiet, like the room had been emptied of everything color.And then, my eyes fell on him, and with it, my fingers tightened around the hem of my skirt without me meaning to, my breath blocking the air halfway into my chest and refusing to let it out again. For a second, I couldn’t move. Couldn’t blink. Couldn’t even think straight.Cause the man lying on that bed, the man laying with his eyes closed couldn’t be him. It couldn’t be my grandfather.My eyes moved over him slowly, like if I took it all in too fast, it would become real in a way I wouldn’t be able to take back. His face looked smaller, like something had ripped him out from the inside
Helena’s POVThe question didn’t just land, it cut through everything.My hand went still mid-motion, the spoon hovering just slightly above the plate as my mind… blanked for a second.“My grandfather?”The words came out slower than I expected, like I needed to hear them out loud to even begin processing them.When last did I check up on him?I blinked once, then twice, my brows pulling together as I tried to answer that in my head.Last week…?No. Wait. My fingers tightened slightly around the spoon as I tried again.Maybe two weeks? No… that doesn’t feel right either.My chest shifted uncomfortably as I searched harder, pushing back through the days, through everything that had been happening lately, trying to find the last clear moment I had called, or visited, or even just—Three weeks.The thought dawned on me all at once, crashing into me. Three weeks.My breath caught slightly as I stared down at my plate, my appetite melting away in the same second.Three weeks? No. No, that
Helena’s POVThe words didn’t settle right.They didn’t land the way everything else had just landed between us, not clear, just heavy and pressing in.They lingered over me, hovering somewhere in the space between what I already thought I knew and something I couldn’t quite name yet.An idea? Something that could help us?My fingers tightened slightly against the armrest as I watched him, my mind already moving ahead of me, trying to piece together what that could possibly be without letting it dive too far.There were only so many directions something like that could go. And none of them felt… safe.I exhaled slowly, my brows pulling together just a little when I asked, “What kind of idea?”He didn’t answer immediately. Just looked at me for a second, like he was measuring how to say it. Then—“A dinner night.”I blinked. “A Dinner night?”“With them,” he added calmly, like that did any good in making it sound better. “You and your fiancé. Me and Tessy. One night.”For a second, I j
Helena’s POVI felt it before I clearly understood it.That small shift somewhere inside me, like something I had been holding in place for too long had finally started to loosen, started cracking, started giving way.Started opening up just enough to move out of the way.My fingers tightened slightly against the edge of the chair as I kept my eyes on him, trying to hold onto something steady, something familiar, something that still made sense.But nothing did. Not in the way I wanted, not with the way he was looking at me. Not with how close he was at the moment.Then why are you still thinking about it?His question from earlier still played in my mind, questioning me on a repeat. I didn't have an answer then, don't still have one now, cause the truth is, I couldn't stop thinking of it.I was still yet to shake it off, still yet to free my mind from the spell his lips put on me.His eyes stayed on me, looking into me not in the way he would just to hear me answer, but like he alrea
Tessy’s POVI stared at the message longer than I should have.The number wasn’t saved. No name, no hint, nothing familiar. Just a string of digits sitting there like it expected me to understand it.My fingers hovered over the screen, not moving as my eyes went over the screen.Avoiding?My brows pulled together slightly as I leaned back in my chair, the office noise from others fading into something distant behind me.Avoiding who?I hadn’t avoided anyone, anyone except for him this morning. But why would he text me right after saying what he said last night?I'd just done what he asked for, kept to myself, focused on work, and stayed out of things that obviously don’t concern me.My throat tightened slightly.Or maybe that wasn’t true. Maybe I had been avoiding something, or someone.I swallowed, my gaze dropping back to the message as my mind started running through possibilities, none of them settling long enough to make sense.Barron wouldn’t text like this. He didn’t need to.L
Helena’s POVI woke up before my alarm.For a second, I didn’t move. I just lay there, staring at the ceiling, feeling that strange in-between state where everything was quiet but not peaceful. My body felt rested enough, but my mind… my mind had already started.It went straight to him.I let out
Helena's POV My mind played out the image long before the car even rolled to a stop.My chest tightened first. Then my eyes followed, locking onto the sleek black body as it rolled in like it owned the damn place.Of course it did. Of course he did.Who else but the boss himself, Barron.The name
Helena’s POVThe first thing I felt was the sickening weight.Not the kind that sat on the chest like fear. Not pressure. Just a pressing weight. Thick, dull, heavy, like my entire body had been dipped in something slow and sticky and left to harden overnight.My eyelids fluttered, but even that fe
Tessy’s POV“I am sorry.”The words just about left my lips, soft and fragile, like they didn’t deserve to exist in the same air as what I had just done.My eyes stayed on her. On Helena. She was laying flat on the floor now.For a second, my chest tightened in a way I didn’t expect. My fingers twi







