
Contract Wife Discovered Husband's True Past
Chapter 1
The moment Alex confirmed she'd answered the phone, I felt something shift in my chest—a tightness I hadn't experienced in years. Five years of meticulous planning had led to this single call, this one opportunity to bring her back into my orbit.
I stood at the floor-to-ceiling windows of my corner office, watching the city sprawl beneath me like a conquered kingdom. Every building, every street corner reminded me of those nights I'd wandered them broken and starving. But today, none of that mattered. Today, Seraphina Vance would walk through my doors.
"Sir?" Alex's voice cut through my thoughts. "She's confirmed for three o'clock. Should I brief her on—"
"No." The word came out sharper than intended. "She comes in blind. I want to see her reaction when she understands what I'm offering."
Alex nodded, though I caught the slight furrow in his brow. He'd been with me for three years, long enough to recognize when I was operating on something deeper than business logic. But he was smart enough not to question it.
The hours crawled by with excruciating slowness. I reviewed the contract for the hundredth time, each clause crafted with surgical precision. Twelve months. Public appearances as required. Separate living quarters. Complete discretion. And in exchange, every penny of her father's medical debt erased, plus a substantial monthly allowance.
It was perfect. Clinical. Exactly the kind of arrangement that made sense in my world.
So why did my hands shake slightly as I set the papers down?
At 2:58, Alex knocked. "She's here, sir."
I straightened my tie, smoothed my jacket, and assumed the mask I'd perfected over five years of ruthless business dealings. Cold. Controlled. Untouchable.
"Send her in."
The door opened, and time seemed to fracture.
Seraphina Vance stepped into my office, and I forgot how to breathe.
She was exactly as I remembered, yet completely transformed. The girl who'd handed me that warm container of food with gentle eyes now carried herself with a weariness that made my chest constrict. Her dark hair was pulled back in a practical ponytail, and she wore a simple black dress that had seen better days. But her eyes—those same warm brown eyes that had looked at me with compassion instead of disgust—those were unchanged.
She stood in the doorway for a moment, clearly overwhelmed by the opulence of my office. I watched her take in the marble floors, the leather furniture, the panoramic view of the city. Her fingers clutched a small purse, and I noticed the slight tremor in her hands.
"Ms. Vance." I kept my voice level, professional. "Please, have a seat."
She approached the chair across from my desk with careful steps, as if afraid the floor might give way beneath her. When she sat, she perched on the edge of the seat, back straight, hands folded in her lap. Every line of her body screamed discomfort.
"Thank you for coming," I said, settling into my own chair. "I trust the law firm explained this was regarding a business opportunity?"
"They were... vague." Her voice was softer than I remembered, but there was steel underneath. "Mr. Voss, I'm not sure why you'd want to meet with me. I don't have any business experience, and frankly, I can't imagine what someone like you would want with someone like me."
Someone like you. Someone like me.
If only she knew.
I opened the leather portfolio on my desk and withdrew the contract, sliding it across the polished surface toward her. "I have a proposition that I believe will be mutually beneficial."
She leaned forward to read the header, and I watched her face change as the words registered. Her eyes widened, then narrowed, then widened again.
"A marriage contract?" The words came out as barely a whisper.
I nodded, keeping my expression neutral despite the way my heart hammered against my ribs. "I need a wife for business purposes. Social expectations, board requirements, that sort of thing. You need financial assistance. This arrangement solves both our problems."
She stared at the document as if it might burst into flames. "You want to... marry me? For business?"
"Twelve months. Separate bedrooms, minimal personal interaction required. You'll attend certain social functions as my wife, maintain the appearance of a committed relationship in public. In exchange, all of your father's medical expenses will be covered immediately, plus a monthly allowance of fifty thousand dollars."
The number hit her like a physical blow. She actually swayed in her chair.
"Fifty... thousand... a month?" She looked up at me, and for a moment, I saw the scared young woman beneath the composed facade. "Mr. Voss, I don't understand. Why me? You could have anyone. Models, socialites, women who actually belong in your world."
Because you saved me. Because you looked at a broken, desperate stranger and saw someone worth feeding. Because for five years, you've been the only thing that made sense in a world gone mad.
"You meet my requirements," I said instead. "You're not connected to my business circles, which eliminates potential conflicts of interest. You're not seeking fame or social advancement. And you have strong motivation to honor the terms of our agreement."
Each word felt like ash in my mouth, but I forced them out anyway. This was the only way I knew how to do this—through contracts and negotiations, through the language of business that had become my native tongue.
She was quiet for a long moment, her eyes scanning the contract. I watched her read each clause, saw her shoulders tense at certain provisions, saw her hands tremble as she turned the pages.
"The medical bills alone are over two hundred thousand dollars," she said finally. "And you're offering to pay them all? Just like that?"
"Just like that."
"And I would live... where?"
"My residence. You'll have your own wing, complete privacy. I travel frequently for business, so we likely won't cross paths often."
She was quiet again, and I could practically hear the wheels turning in her mind. Calculating. Weighing options. Probably wondering if this was some elaborate joke or if I was completely insane.
Both possibilities had merit.
"Mr. Voss," she said slowly, "this is... this is not normal. People don't just offer to marry strangers and pay their debts. What aren't you telling me?"
I leaned back in my chair, studying her face. She was sharper than I'd given her credit for, more suspicious. Good. She'd need that instinct in my world.
"Ms. Vance, I'm a very wealthy man with very specific needs. I don't have time for traditional courtship or the complications that come with emotional entanglements. This is a business arrangement, nothing more. You provide a service, I provide compensation. It's as simple as that."
The lie came easily, but something flickered across her face—hurt, maybe, or disappointment. It was gone so quickly I might have imagined it.
She looked down at the contract again, and I saw her hands shake as she reached for the pen I'd placed beside it.
"My father," she whispered. "He needs surgery next week. The doctors say if we wait much longer..."
She didn't finish the sentence. She didn't need to.
I watched her sign her name with trembling fingers, each letter sealing our fate together. When she set the pen down, she looked up at me with eyes that held a mixture of resignation and something that might have been grief.
"There," she said, her voice barely audible. "I hope you got what you wanted, Mr. Voss."
As she signed, I realized I had everything I'd dreamed of for five years.
So why did it feel like I'd just lost something irreplaceable?
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