Contract Marriage: The CEO's Silent Shield

The morning sun was cruel. It exposed everything-the dark circles under her eyes, the fraying hem of her coat.

She stood at the bottom of the City Hall steps, clutching her birth certificate like a shield.

Campbell was already there. He held two paper cups of coffee. He looked fresh, energized, like he ran on a different battery than the rest of humanity.

They sat on a concrete bench.

"Before we go in," she said. She had rehearsed this speech. "You need to know. Lydia wants fifty thousand dollars. As a 'dowry'. Or she won't release my trust documents."

She watched his face, waiting for the flinch. Fifty thousand was a fortune. It was a life sentence.

He took a sip of coffee. "Cashier's check is fine?"

She blinked. "You... you have fifty thousand dollars? Liquid?"

He paused. A flicker of calculation crossed his face.

"It's from a discretionary fund," he said smoothly. "For unforeseen business expenses. Solving your problem is a strategic investment. You are the key asset now."

Guilt washed over her. Hot and heavy.

"I can't let you use your business fund," she said. "I'll write you an IOU. I'll pay you back. Monthly installments."

He looked at her. His lips twitched. "On your salary? You'll be paying me until the next century. Let's just sign a post-nup. If you run away, you owe me double."

"Deal," she said. It was fair. He was a businessman.

His phone rang. He glanced at the screen. Preston.

"Boss, the custom Bugatti is ready for delivery..."

Campbell hung up instantly.

"Telemarketers," he said. "Scams are getting sophisticated."

"I know," she said. "I get them too. We need to be careful with money."

She pulled out her ledger. "I have a scholarship. I can do translation work. I don't speak much, but I can write."

He looked at the battered notebook. His jaw tightened. He looked like he wanted to say something, but he swallowed it.

"Good," he said. "Fifty-fifty."

They walked up the steps. The line for the clerk was long. Mostly young couples in jeans. Campbell stood out. His suit was too sharp, his posture too commanding.

A man in a trench coat passed them. He stopped. He looked at Campbell.

"Excuse me," the man said. "Are you Mr. Dunlap? From the cover of-"

Campbell turned. He didn't speak. He just looked at the man. It was a look of absolute, freezing indifference. A warning.

The man faltered. "Sorry. Mistake. You look like... someone else."

He hurried away.

She was tying her shoe. She missed the look.

"Name?" the clerk asked. She sounded bored.

"Campbell Dunlap."

"Amelie Blankenship."

The clerk typed. She paused at 'Dunlap', glancing up at his suit. Then she shrugged. New York was full of Dunlaps.

The ceremony took three minutes. No rings. No flowers. Just a stamp and a signature.

"I pronounce you united in civil matrimony."

She let out a breath she felt like she'd been holding for ten years.

Campbell looked at her. He leaned in, his voice a low rumble near her ear.

"Done. You are safe now."

They walked out into the blinding daylight. She looked at the paper in her hand.

"Should we... celebrate?" she asked. "There's a hot dog cart."

Campbell Dunlap, the man who had just spent a small fortune on her, looked at the cart.

"Lead the way," he said.

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