Morning light filtered through unfamiliar curtains, rousing me from a dreamless sleep. My head throbbed, punishment for last night's whiskey and poor decisions. Fragments of memory drifted back—the hotel bar, those intense dark eyes, strong hands, and a suite with a view of the Seattle skyline. Finn. That was his name.
I groaned, burying my face in the pillow. What had I done? One minute I was drowning in the humiliation of Jason's betrayal, the next I was falling into bed with a stranger whose last name I couldn't even remember.
My phone buzzed incessantly on the nightstand. I reached for it, squinting at the screen. Twenty-seven notifications? At 7 AM?
The first message was from Quinn: *CALL ME RIGHT NOW. ARE YOU SEEING THIS?*
Attached was a link to a tabloid website. My stomach dropped as I clicked it open.
*BILLIONAIRE BACHELOR FINN SHEPARD'S MYSTERY REDHEAD: WHO IS SHE?*
Beneath the headline was a grainy photo that made my blood run cold. Me, wrapped in nothing but a sheet, curled against Finn's bare chest as he slept. The photo was taken through a window—some paparazzo with a telephoto lens had caught us.
My phone continued buzzing. More messages, more links. The story was everywhere.
*Billionaire CEO Finn Shepard launches #FindHer campaign after one-night stand*
*Shepard Industries stock jumps as CEO's love life goes viral*
*WHO IS SHE? Finn Shepard offers reward for identity of mystery woman*
I scrolled through Twitter in horror. #FindHer was trending nationwide. Finn's PR team had turned our one-night stand into a viral sensation—a modern-day Cinderella story, complete with the prince searching for his mystery woman.
Except I hadn't left a glass slipper. According to one article, I'd left a broken watch, an old friendship bracelet, and $100 cash. I vaguely remembered placing the money on the dresser before slipping out at dawn, thinking it would somehow make me feel less... used. Now it made me look like either a thief or an escort.
My phone rang. Quinn. I couldn't talk now—couldn't form words through the panic closing my throat. I silenced it and stumbled to the shower, as if hot water could wash away this nightmare.
---
The office was buzzing when I arrived. I'd considered calling in sick, but hiding would only make things worse. I needed normalcy, needed to pretend my life wasn't imploding in real-time on social media.
"Did you see that #FindHer thing?" someone whispered as I passed the break room.
"I heard he's offering fifty thousand dollars to anyone who can identify her."
I ducked my head, clutching my coffee like a shield. No one knew it was me in those photos—the images were grainy, my face mostly hidden against Finn's chest. But how long before someone recognized me?
"Look at this!" Melissa from accounting exclaimed, holding up her phone to show a small crowd gathered around her desk. "They're saying she's either a high-end escort or a corporate spy trying to get inside information on Shepard Industries."
I froze behind a nearby cubicle, my heart hammering so loudly I was certain everyone could hear it.
"Personally," Melissa continued, "I think she's just some gold-digger who thought she hit the jackpot. I mean, look at this tabloid cover—'WHO WILL CLAIM THE BILLIONAIRE?'—like he's some prize to be won."
The office swam before my eyes. I was the gold-digger. I was the spy, the escort, the opportunist. Every cruel theory was about me—the woman who'd just had her heart shattered and made one impulsive decision.
I retreated to my desk, hands shaking as I pretended to work. How had this happened? One moment of weakness, and now I was the subject of a nationwide manhunt.
---
"Open up! I've got reinforcements!"
Quinn's voice echoed through my apartment door that evening. When I opened it, she stood there with two bags of takeout, a bottle of prosecco, and fierce determination in her eyes.
"You look like hell," she announced, pushing past me into the kitchen. "But we're going to fix this."
"There's no fixing this," I mumbled, collapsing onto a barstool. "Have you seen what they're saying about me? About the 'mystery woman'?"
Quinn uncorked the prosecco with a decisive pop. "Yes, and it's all garbage. But we need a plan. Your parents called me, by the way. They saw the news and want to know if you've 'heard about that poor girl.'"
Despite everything, I laughed—a strangled, desperate sound. "What did you tell them?"
"That I'm sure she's a perfectly nice woman who deserved privacy." Quinn handed me a glass of bubbling courage. "Now, we need to draft a statement for when they inevitably find out it's their daughter."
"They'll be so disappointed."
"Stop." Quinn gripped my shoulders. "You are not the villain here. Jason cheated on you publicly, humiliated you, and you had one night with an admittedly hot billionaire. You're allowed to be human, Ava."
Tears spilled down my cheeks. "What happens when Finn finds out who I am?"
Quinn's expression softened. "I don't know. But whatever happens, you'll face it with dignity—and with me beside you."
I nodded, clinging to her certainty when I had none of my own. But as we drafted careful explanations for my parents, I couldn't shake the dread building inside me. Sooner or later, Finn Shepard would discover my identity. And when he did, what would he want from the woman who'd fled his bed at dawn?
I stared at the business card in my hand, the embossed silver lettering catching the fluorescent lights of my company's lobby. "Shepard Industries Private Security." My stomach twisted into knots as I looked up at the man who'd cornered me by the elevator—tall, broad-shouldered, with the expressionless face of someone who'd seen too much and cared too little.
"Mr. Shepard requests your presence immediately, Ms. Carter," he said, his voice low enough that my coworkers couldn't hear as they streamed past us, oblivious to my world collapsing for the third time in a week.
"How did you—" My voice cracked. "How did you find me?"
The security man's expression didn't change. "That's what we do, Ms. Carter. The car is waiting outside."
I glanced toward the glass doors, where a sleek black sedan idled at the curb. This was it. The moment I'd been dreading since I'd seen my blurry photo splashed across every social media platform in America. #FindHer had found me.
"I have meetings," I said weakly, knowing it didn't matter.
"They've been rescheduled." Of course they had. Billionaires didn't wait for middle managers with mortgages and student loans.
I clutched my purse tighter, wishing Quinn were here. She'd know what to say, how to handle this with dignity. But Quinn wasn't here, and I had to face the consequences of my actions alone.
"Fine," I said, lifting my chin. "Let's get this over with."
The car ride was silent, the privacy glass between us and the driver firmly in place. I stared out the window as Seattle blurred past, trying to calm my racing heart. What did Finn Shepard want? Money? An NDA? To humiliate me the way Jason had?
When we pulled up to a familiar building, my breath caught. Jason's company. The security man led me through the lobby to the executive elevator, up to the conference room where I'd attended countless holiday parties and corporate functions as Jason's plus-one.
The door opened, and there he was.
Finn Shepard looked even more imposing in daylight than he had in the dim lighting of the hotel bar. Tall, with shoulders that filled out his custom suit to perfection, he stood at the window overlooking the city. When he turned, those dark eyes locked onto mine with an intensity that made my knees weak.
"Ms. Carter," he said, his voice exactly as I remembered it—deep, commanding. "Thank you for coming."
As if I'd had a choice.
"What do you want?" I asked, proud that my voice didn't tremble.
He gestured to the chair across from him. "Please, sit."
I remained standing. "I'd rather know why your security team tracked me down like some criminal."
A flicker of something—amusement?—crossed his face. "You're not a criminal, Ms. Carter. You're a solution to a problem."
"I'm not a solution to anything," I said. "I'm a person who made a mistake and would like to move on with her life."
"A mistake." He tested the word, his expression hardening slightly. "Is that what you call it?"
Heat rushed to my face. "What would you call it?"
"An opportunity." He reached for a leather portfolio on the conference table and slid it toward me. "I have a proposal for you."
I eyed the portfolio warily. "What kind of proposal?"
"A marriage."
The word hung in the air between us, impossible and absurd.
"Excuse me?"
"I need a wife, Ms. Carter. For business purposes." He spoke as if discussing the weather, not a life-altering proposition. "The Nakamura merger is contingent on certain... traditional values being demonstrated. My board is concerned about my public image after some recent tabloid stories."
"So find someone else," I said, incredulous. "Someone who actually wants to marry you."
"The timing is critical. We don't have the luxury of a traditional courtship." His eyes narrowed slightly. "Besides, our connection has already been established in the public eye. It's the perfect narrative—the billionaire who launched a nationwide search to find the woman who captured his heart."
"That's not what happened," I protested.
"It's what people believe happened," he countered. "And perception is reality in business."
I shook my head, backing toward the door. "This is insane. I'm not marrying a stranger for a business deal."
"Two million dollars," he said calmly. "For one year of marriage. After which we'll divorce amicably, and you'll be free to live however you choose—with financial security few people ever achieve."
I froze, the number echoing in my head. Two million dollars. Enough to pay off my student loans, buy a home, start over somewhere new where no one knew me as the woman who'd been publicly humiliated twice in one week.
"Why me?" I asked, my voice barely above a whisper.
Something shifted in his expression—a softening around the eyes, a slight parting of his lips. For a moment, he looked almost human.
"Because you left," he said simply. "No one leaves me, Ms. Carter. It was... intriguing."
I should have walked out. Should have told him to find another pawn for his corporate chess game. But as I stood there, feeling the weight of my shattered life pressing down on me, I found myself reaching for the portfolio.
"I'll read it," I said. "But I'm not agreeing to anything."
His smile was slow, confident. The smile of a man who always got what he wanted.
"We'll discuss the details over breakfast tomorrow," he said. "8 AM at the Four Seasons café."
As I left the conference room, clutching the portfolio to my chest, I couldn't shake the feeling that I'd just made a deal with the devil—and he was already counting on my soul.