pressio
Feb 01, 2026

She Hired Him to Be Her Fake Husband for One Year—But Neither of Them Expected the Secrets, Betrayal, and Dangerous Feelings That Would Follow

Ethan Carter had grown used to the feeling of life pressing him into a corner. It was always there—that tight weight in his chest from raising his six-year-old daughter alone, drowning in endless medical bills, and clinging to a job that barely kept them afloat. But that morning, when he was summoned to the 36th floor to meet the most powerful woman in the company, his fear of being fired turned into something far more surreal.

Victoria Hayes, the Vice President—known throughout the company as the “Ice Queen”—didn’t fire him. She looked him straight in the eyes with her signature cold precision and said:

“I need you to pretend to be my husband for one year.”

Ethan froze.

The silence in the glass-and-steel office felt deafening. His exhausted mind, worn down by sleepless nights caring for his daughter and calculating impossible expenses, took a moment to process what he had just heard. Then, with disbelief mixed with desperate humor, he asked the only question that came to mind:

“So… are we sharing a bed?”

And in that exact moment—raw, absurd, and vulnerable—everything began to unravel.

It had all started a week earlier.

It was 8:45 on a Monday night. Ethan was hunched over his desk, writing forgettable slogans for products no one cared about when he got a call from his daughter’s daycare. She had a fever. Again.

Panic tightened in his throat. He hung up, rubbing his eyes with the kind of exhaustion that seeps into your bones—the kind only single parents understand, when life feels like it’s barely held together by tape and hope.

As he rushed toward the elevator, he collided with someone.

A leather briefcase fell, scattering documents across the polished marble floor. Instinctively, Ethan dropped to his knees to help.

“I’m so sorry,” he muttered, gathering the papers.

When he looked up, he met Victoria Hayes’s eyes.

She was twenty-nine, with a reputation that made senior managers tremble. She said nothing, simply taking the documents back with precise movements. But Ethan noticed something else—a cream-colored envelope partially hidden beneath a nearby table.

He picked it up and ran after her.

“Miss Hayes, you dropped this.”

Victoria opened the envelope, glanced inside, and immediately pulled out five hundred dollars—offering it to him out of habit.

Ethan looked at the cash, then back at her, and shook his head.

“I was just returning what’s yours. I don’t need to be paid to be decent.”

He turned and walked away, leaving her standing there, hand extended, confusion flickering across her flawless face.

What Ethan didn’t know was that Victoria Hayes never forgot details like that.

She needed a husband—fast.

Her father’s will had a cruel clause: to inherit full control of the company and prevent it from falling into the hands of her manipulative brother, Nathan Hayes, she had to be married before turning thirty.

She had eleven months left.

She needed someone controllable. Someone desperate. But also someone with integrity.

Ethan Carter—the debt-ridden copywriter with an unbreakable moral code—was perfect.

Days later, when she presented the contract, the offer was overwhelming.

She would erase his $120,000 medical debt, double his salary, provide premium healthcare, and secure his daughter’s future.

Other posts