
The CEO Who Pretended to Be Poor
Chapter 2
"Prove you wrong?" The bartender's voice carried a hint of amusement that cut through my alcohol-induced haze. "That's quite a challenge."
I laughed bitterly, the sound echoing off the polished mahogany bar. "Trust me, it's impossible. I've got three years of evidence to back up my theory."
He leaned against the bar, his dark eyes studying me with an intensity that made my skin prickle. "What if I told you that some chances are worth taking, even when you're convinced they'll end badly?"
"I'd say you're either naive or lying." I drained my glass, the whiskey burning away what remained of my rational thought. "Life isn't about taking chances. It's about protecting yourself from people who'll use those chances to destroy you."
"Maybe." He moved closer, his voice dropping to a whisper that somehow carried over the jazz music. "Or maybe life is about finding someone brave enough to take the biggest chance of all."
The room spun slightly as I turned to face him fully. "And what would that be?"
"Marriage."
The word hung between us like a challenge. I stared at him, this stranger with his perfect jawline and eyes that seemed to see straight through my defenses. The alcohol had loosened something inside me, something reckless and desperate.
"Marriage?" I repeated, my voice rising. "You think marriage is a chance worth taking? That's rich, coming from someone who probably has women throwing themselves at him every night."
"I'm serious." His expression didn't waver. "What if two people could promise to be honest with each other, no matter what? What if they could build something real, something that couldn't be bought or sold or traded up for a better model?"
The pain in my chest flared fresh and raw. "That's a fairy tale. People don't work that way. When something better comes along, they take it. Every time."
"Not everyone." He reached across the bar, his fingers brushing mine as he pushed another drink toward me. "Some people understand that the best things in life aren't about upgrading. They're about finding something worth keeping."
I stared at his hand covering mine, the warmth of his skin sending an unexpected jolt through my system. "You're drunk too," I accused, though my voice lacked conviction.
"Probably." He smiled, and the expression transformed his entire face. "But drunk people sometimes tell the truth more than sober ones."
The bar around us had grown quieter, the other patrons lost in their own conversations and secrets. I felt suspended in this moment, caught between the wreckage of my old life and something I couldn't quite name.
"So what are you suggesting?" I asked, my heart hammering against my ribs. "That we prove each other wrong?"
"I'm suggesting we prove that real commitment still exists." His thumb traced across my knuckles, sending shivers up my arm. "That there are still people willing to take a leap of faith."
The whiskey had made everything feel surreal, like I was watching someone else's life unfold. "You're insane."
"Maybe." He stood up, extending his hand toward me. "But there's a chapel about six blocks from here. Twenty-four hours, no questions asked. If you really believe all men are the same, if you really think commitment is meaningless, then prove it."
I stared at his outstretched hand, my mind reeling. "You're suggesting we get married? Tonight? To prove a point?"
"I'm suggesting we find out what we're both really made of." His voice was steady, but I could see something vulnerable flickering in his eyes. "Unless you're too scared to back up all that cynicism with action."
The challenge hit me like a physical blow. Derek's words echoed in my head—*someone in your league*—and suddenly I wanted nothing more than to prove him wrong, to prove everyone wrong.
"Fine." I slid off the barstool, my legs unsteady but my resolve crystallizing. "Let's do it. Let's get married and see how long it takes for you to realize you made a mistake."
He smiled, and for a moment, something that looked almost like relief crossed his features. "Deal."
The October air sobered me slightly as we walked through the empty streets, but not enough to stop the momentum building between us. The chapel appeared like a mirage, its neon sign casting pink and blue shadows across the sidewalk.
"Last chance to back out," he said as we stood before the entrance.
I thought about Derek, about Tiffany's smug smile, about the apartment that no longer felt like home. "I'm not backing out. Are you?"
"Not a chance."
The chapel interior was exactly what I'd expected—cheap decorations, artificial flowers, and an officiant who looked like he'd performed a thousand similar ceremonies for drunk couples who'd regret it in the morning.
"Do you have rings?" the officiant asked in a bored tone.
My companion—I realized with a start that I didn't even know his name—pulled two simple gold bands from his pocket. "Alexander Knight," he said, as if reading my thoughts. "And you are?"
"Isabella Chen." The name felt foreign on my tongue, like I was introducing a stranger.
The ceremony passed in a blur of standard vows and legal formalities. Alexander's voice was steady as he promised to love and honor me, his eyes never leaving mine. When it was my turn, the words felt both meaningless and profound, spoken to a man I'd known for less than four hours.
"Sign here," the officiant said, sliding a stack of papers across the small podium.
I scrawled my signature across multiple documents, my vision blurry from alcohol and adrenaline. Alexander guided my hand to each signature line, his touch gentle but insistent.
"Standard marriage paperwork," he explained when I hesitated over one particularly dense document. "Legal requirements, you know."
I signed without reading, too drunk and too angry at the world to care about the details. What did it matter? This was all just a elaborate way to prove that love was a lie and commitment was meaningless.
"Congratulations," the officiant said with practiced enthusiasm. "You may kiss the bride."
Alexander's lips were warm against mine, tasting of whiskey and something indefinable that made my head spin. For a moment, the kiss felt real, like maybe this stranger understood something about pain and hope that I'd never expected.
When we broke apart, he was smiling. "Hello, Mrs. Knight."
The name hit me like a bucket of ice water, but before I could process what had just happened, exhaustion crashed over me. The alcohol, the emotional devastation, the surreal nature of the evening—it all combined to leave me swaying on my feet.
"Come on," Alexander said, his arm sliding around my waist. "Let's get you home."
I don't remember the ride to his apartment or how I ended up in his bed, still wearing my work clothes from what felt like a lifetime ago. Sleep claimed me completely, pulling me under into blessed unconsciousness where Derek's betrayal and my impulsive marriage couldn't follow.
When I woke up, sunlight was streaming through unfamiliar windows, and my head felt like it was being split open with an axe. I groaned and rolled over, immediately regretting the movement as nausea rolled through me.
This had to be a dream. A bizarre, alcohol-fueled nightmare brought on by stress and heartbreak. I'd wake up in my own bed, and last night would fade away like the remnants of a fever dream.
But as my vision cleared, I saw it—a crisp white document on the nightstand beside me, official seals and signatures clearly visible even through my hangover haze.
Marriage Certificate.
State of Nevada.
Isabella Chen and Alexander Knight.
My signature, unmistakably my own handwriting, stared back at me from the bottom of the page.
"No," I whispered, sitting up so fast that the room spun. "No, no, no, this isn't real."
But the certificate was real. The unfamiliar bedroom was real. And somewhere in the apartment, I could hear the sound of someone moving around, the clink of dishes and the smell of coffee drifting through the air.
I was married.
To a complete stranger.
I opened my mouth and screamed.
You may also like





