Flash Marriage To The Secret Chairman

The document felt heavy in Evangelina's hand as she followed Barrett back through the revolving door. He moved with the ease of someone who had memorized this building's floor plan, bypassing the main queue with a nod toward a side corridor marked Express Services.

"How do you know this route?" she asked.

"I've had occasion to study municipal efficiency." Barrett glanced back, a half-smile that didn't reach his eyes. "My work involves considerable regulatory navigation."

The silver-haired clerk at the express window looked up as they approached. Her eyes, magnified behind thick lenses, moved between them with the practiced skepticism of someone who had witnessed every possible permutation of human commitment.

"Identification," she said. "And your license application, if you have it."

Barrett produced two driver's licenses and the freshly couriered prenuptial agreement, which they had both signed after a tense, silent review on a marble bench. The clerk's eyebrows rose at the latter document, but she said nothing, merely entering data with mechanical precision.

"New York State requires me to ask," she said, looking directly at Evangelina. "Are you entering this marriage of your own free will?"

Evangelina's throat constricted. The fluorescent lights hummed overhead. Somewhere behind her, a couple was laughing, the sound bright and alien.

Barrett's hand covered hers on the counter.

His palm was warm. Callused in unexpected places, the ridge of his thumb pressing against her knuckles. She turned her head and found his eyes waiting-steady, certain, offering something she couldn't name but suddenly needed.

"We've been waiting for this," Barrett said to the clerk. His voice carried a tenderness that sounded almost real. "Both of us."

Evangelina forced her lips into shape. "Yes. I'm certain."

The clerk's expression softened. She stamped the approval with a satisfying thud. "Through the door, please. Judge Morrison will administer the oath."

The ceremony room was smaller than she'd expected. Plastic roses in foam containers. A faint chemical scent from the air freshener plugged into the wall outlet. The judge stood behind a lectern that looked like it had been borrowed from a high school debate tournament.

"Face each other, please. Hold hands."

Evangelina turned. Barrett was close now, close enough that she could smell his cologne-something with cedar, something that reminded her of winter forests and old libraries. He took her hands without hesitation, his fingers interlacing with hers, his grip firm enough to ground her.

The judge began the familiar words. Sickness and health. Richer and poorer. The phrases floated past Evangelina's ears, abstract and enormous, completely disconnected from the reality of this stranger's pulse against her palms.

"Do you have rings?"

Silence.

Evangelina felt heat rise to her cheeks. Of course they didn't have rings. This wasn't-

Barrett released one of her hands. He reached into his jacket pocket and withdrew a small velvet box.

The hinge creaked as he opened it. The diamond caught the overhead light, throwing prisms against the judge's robes. It was an elegant, vintage-inspired piece with a flawless, but not ostentatious, diamond. The setting was what made it remarkable-intricate, bespoke, a work of art that spoke of taste more than sheer wealth.

Evangelina's professional assessment happened automatically. The value was significant, but it was the craftsmanship that was staggering. This was not a ring purchased on impulse at a Midtown jeweler.

"It was a family piece," Barrett murmured, so quietly she almost missed it. "Intended for... a different circumstance. The sentiment is gone, but the object remains. Please consider it a tool for this arrangement, nothing more."

The explanation was thin. The timing was impossible. But the judge was waiting, and Barrett was sliding the ring onto her finger, and somehow-impossibly-it fit.

The metal cooled her skin. Barrett's thumb brushed her knuckle as he adjusted the setting, and Evangelina felt her heart accelerate, a trapped bird against her ribs.

"I'll forgo the exchange," Barrett said to the judge, his tone easy, conversational. "We'll handle the reciprocal symbolism privately."

The judge smiled. "By the power vested in me by the State of New York, I now pronounce you husband and wife. You may kiss your bride."

Evangelina's body went rigid. She hadn't considered this. Hadn't prepared for the physical reality of-

Barrett's hand settled at her waist. His head bent. His nose grazed her cheekbone, a whisper of contact, and then his lips pressed against her forehead.

Chaste. Brief. The pressure of a seal rather than a claim.

He stepped back. Evangelina's lungs remembered how to function.

The judge handed them each a certificate. Cream paper, embossed seal, their names printed side by side in formal script. Evangelina stared at the document, at the impossible permanence of Barrett Watson and Evangelina Vazquez joined by law.

"Cooperation established, Mrs. Watson." Barrett folded his certificate into his breast pocket. "Shall we discuss operational parameters?"

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