That night we talked until dawn. About my childhood in Riverside. About his lonely upbringing surrounded by tutors and security guards. About my mother’s cooking and the small dreams I once had before life interrupted them.

Something began to change between us.

Not love.

Understanding.

In the months that followed, we moved into the house by the lake. To the outside world, we looked like the perfect couple—the young heir and his mysterious wife.

But behind the photographs, life was simple.

Ethan began joining me in the kitchen when I tried to recreate my mother’s recipes. He laughed awkwardly when I burned the biscuits or messed up the rice. And I discovered that beneath his polished manners was a man who had never truly experienced ordinary life.

One afternoon, as we walked along the water, he shared something else.

“There’s a new treatment,” he said quietly. “In Germany. It’s experimental… but it could help.”

“Then why haven’t you tried it?” I asked.

He looked toward the lake.

“Because I’m tired of feeling like my worth depends on fixing myself.”

I stopped walking.

“Your worth doesn’t depend on that,” I told him firmly.

For the first time, hope appeared in his eyes.

We decided to try the treatment.

Not because his family demanded it.

But because he wanted to try—for himself.

In Munich, inside quiet white hospital corridors, I held his hand before every procedure. He looked at me not with shame, but with trust.

And I gave him the strength he needed.

Months passed.

The treatment didn’t change everything overnight.

But there was progress.

Enough for Ethan to finally feel… whole.

One quiet night back at our home in Lake Tahoe, he looked at me differently.

Not like a contract.

Not like an obligation.

But like a woman.

“Sofia,” he whispered gently, “if you want to stop at any moment, we stop.”

I smiled softly.

“This time I’m not staying because I have to.”

And I kissed him.

What followed wasn’t perfect or dramatic.

It was awkward.

Human.

Real.

And it belonged to us.

A year later, the Harrison family hosted a formal dinner. Everyone expected an announcement that our convenient marriage had come to an end.

Instead, Ethan held my hand.

“I want to thank my wife,” he said calmly. “What started as an arrangement became the best thing that ever happened to me.”

His mother looked at me carefully, searching for signs that it was all an act.

It wasn’t.

A few weeks later, I discovered I was pregnant.