Regina Albright slid the contract across her desk like she was offering me a job instead of a life.
The room was cold enough to raise goose bumps under my shirt, and the leather chair made a soft sticking sound every time I moved.
Outside the glass wall, her employees crossed the hallway without turning their heads.

That was how people moved around Regina.
Carefully.
Quietly.
Like one wrong look might cost them their rent.
Her attorney sat beside her with a pen ready, watching me with the tired impatience of a man who had already decided I was going to sign.
On the first page, the number stared back at me.
One hundred thousand dollars.
Under it, the term.
Twelve months.
Under that, the line that should have made me laugh.
No romantic attachment.
Regina folded her hands on the table.
Her nails were pale, her suit was black, and her face had the polished stillness of a woman who never let anybody see the bill come due.
“I need a husband,” she said, “not a man in love.”
My name was Matthew Hernandez, and technically, I worked as her executive assistant.
That was the title HR used so nobody had to say driver.
I opened her car door, picked up her dry cleaning, carried her files, brought black coffee to meetings, and stood behind her at elevators while people with six-figure salaries became suddenly polite.
I knew what everyone at Albright Holdings thought of her.
Cold.
Brilliant.
Impossible.
Untouchable.
But that afternoon, when she reached for the folder, her fingers trembled.
Not much.
Not enough for her lawyer to notice.
Just enough for me.
“Why me?” I asked.
She looked at the contract instead of my face.
“Because you’re discreet.”
“And poor?”
The attorney coughed into his fist.
Regina’s eyes lifted then, sharp and dark.
“Because you need money,” she said, “and I need time.”
That was the first honest thing she told me.
My mother was waiting for heart surgery in a public hospital in East LA.
Every visit smelled like disinfectant, burnt coffee, and fear.
I had already sold my motorcycle, most of my tools, and the gold chain my father left me before he died.
I had borrowed from cousins who could barely afford to answer the phone.
I had taken every extra shift Regina offered and still watched the number climb beyond anything I could reach.
So I read the contract with a dry mouth.
We would live in the same house but use separate bedrooms.
We would appear together at family and business events.
We would not disclose the arrangement to anyone.
Any kiss or physical affection would be limited to public necessity.
I would not ask about her personal history.
I would not fall in love.
The last rule sat there like a warning written by someone who had already seen the damage.
“What happens if someone finds out?” I asked.
Regina closed the folder with one clean motion.
“Then we both lose everything.”
At the time, I thought she meant money.
A week later, I learned she meant blood.
The first family dinner was held at the Albright mansion in Beverly Hills, a house so wide and white that my whole apartment building could have fit inside its garden.
A valet took the car keys.
A server took my coat.
Nobody took the time to hide what they thought of me.
The dining room glowed under a chandelier, all crystal and polished wood and plates nobody seemed hungry enough to touch.
Regina sat beside me with perfect posture.
Across the table, her father, Arthur, watched from his wheelchair with the kind of authority that did not need a raised voice.
Her mother looked at my suit, then my hands.
Her brother Patrick looked at my face and smiled.
“This is the husband?” he asked.
The word husband sounded dirty in his mouth.
Regina’s hand slid under the table and found mine.
Her palm was cold.
It was the first time she had touched me when no photographer was nearby.
“Yes,” she said. “Matthew is my husband.”
Her mother gave a small laugh.
“How interesting,” she said. “I thought you were finished with charity projects.”
A few people smiled.
One cousin coughed into a napkin to hide a laugh.
The server pouring water went still.
I should have stayed quiet.
That was what the contract paid me to do.
My mother’s surgery had a date now because Regina had already transferred the first installment.
Every bill, every hospital intake form, every phone call from the billing office should have told me to swallow my pride.
Then I looked at Regina.
She was not embarrassed by me.
That almost would have been easier.
She looked exhausted.
Like she had heard some version of that sentence her entire life and had run out of places to put it.
So I set down my fork.
“If marrying me is charity,” I said, “then at least somebody at this table finally did something useful.”
The room froze.
No fork moved.
No glass touched a lip.
Regina turned toward me, furious at first.
Then something shifted behind her eyes.
Not softness.
Not yet.
Recognition.
On the ride home, she said nothing.
At her house, she walked into the living room, kicked off her black heels, poured tequila into a short glass, and stared through the window at the dark backyard.
I waited by the doorway, ready for the firing.
“Don’t ever defend me again,” she said.
“Then stop letting them destroy you for free.”
Her shoulders tightened.
“You don’t know anything about me.”
“I know your hand shook when Patrick spoke.”
For once, Regina Albright had no answer ready.
She stood there with the glass in her hand, the ice melting against the sides, and then she walked down the hall and closed her bedroom door.
That was how the marriage started.
With doors closing.
With mornings where she drank coffee standing up and I ate toast at the kitchen island while both of us pretended not to hear each other breathing.
With magazine captions calling us a surprise love story.
With society pages wondering how the queen of Albright Holdings had married her executive assistant.
With her mother texting, That man is not our class.
With Patrick showing up at events just to ask questions designed to make me sound stupid.
At first, I counted the months.
Then I counted the ways Regina contradicted herself.
She never apologized, but she left cash envelopes on my nightstand after hospital calls.
She never asked for gratitude, but she knew the day of my mother’s pre-op appointment.
She never said she was worried, but one morning I found a travel mug waiting for me by the door with a sticky note that read, Don’t skip breakfast again.
Care is not always soft.
Sometimes it looks like money left where pride does not have to answer.
Sometimes it looks like a woman who says nothing but remembers every detail you tried to hide.
The first time I saw her break, it was not at a gala or a board meeting.
It was on the kitchen floor at five in the morning.
The house was gray with early light.
The refrigerator hummed.
Regina sat barefoot on the tile, clutching a medication box against her chest like somebody might steal it.
“Are you sick?” I asked.
Her head snapped up.
She shoved the box partly behind her knee.
“It’s not your problem.”
I crouched in front of her.
“I’m your husband, aren’t I?”
She laughed once, but it cracked halfway through.
“On paper.”
“Sometimes paper cuts too.”
She stared at me as if I had said something unforgivable.
Then her face changed.
The hard line of her mouth loosened, and for the first time since I had known her, she looked younger than her money.
She lowered her forehead to my shoulder.
I knew the contract.
I knew the rules.
I knew the line I was about to cross.
I hugged her anyway.
Not for cameras.
Not because anybody was watching.
Not because I was lonely, though I was.
I held her because she was shaking, and I understood what it meant to be one unpaid bill, one phone call, one bad morning away from collapse.
After that, the house changed.
Not all at once.
Regina was still Regina.
She still corrected my tie before events without asking permission.
She still answered emails at midnight.
She still used silence like a locked gate.
But she started leaving coffee for me before leaving for the office.
She asked whether my mother liked the new cardiologist.
She came home one night with a bag from a bakery near the hospital because she had overheard me say my mom missed pan dulce.
At dinner parties, she touched my arm like she had forgotten it was supposed to be fake.
At home, she laughed when I mispronounced expensive wine names.
I did not fall in love in one big, stupid moment.
I fell in love in receipts.
Coffee cups.
Hospital parking validations.
A woman who did not know how to say she cared, so she kept proving it in ways nobody could quote.
The gala downtown should have been another performance.
There were cameras at the entrance, donors under warm lights, and men in tuxedos who looked through me until they needed something carried.
Regina wore a dark green dress, simple and sharp, and she stood beside me with her hand tucked into my elbow.
A businessman with silver hair looked at us and smiled too wide.
“Regina,” he said, “your husband looks more like your bodyguard.”
People nearby chuckled.
I felt Regina’s fingers tighten.
I was ready to make a joke and move on.
Instead, she turned toward me, took my face in both hands, and kissed me.
Not a polite kiss.
Not a press of lips for a camera.
A real kiss.
The room clapped because rich people love a performance.
I heard none of it.
All I felt was the way she closed her eyes before I did.
All I saw was the fear on her face when she pulled away and realized she had revealed something she could not manage.
In the car, the city lights slid over the windshield.
Neither of us spoke until the freeway noise filled the silence.
“That shouldn’t have happened,” she whispered.
“But it did.”
“Matthew.”
“Tell me it was for the contract,” I said, “and I’ll shut up.”
She looked out the window.
She did not lie.
That was the night the second bedroom became a prop.
It should have made things simpler.
Instead, it made every hidden thing feel dangerous.
When a lie stays fake, it can be managed.
When a lie starts breathing, every locked door becomes a threat.
I noticed the photo first.
A man tucked behind old papers in the bottom drawer of her nightstand.
Not a family picture.
Not a business event.
A candid shot of a man in a suit that did not fit quite right, smiling at the camera like he had been asked to pretend everything was fine.
Regina walked in before I could look longer.
She took the photo from my hand and placed it back in the drawer.
“Who is he?” I asked.
“No one you need to know.”
Then came the phone calls.
She would answer in another room, voice low.
If I stepped into the hallway, the call ended.
Then there was the locked room at the end of the hall.
Every big house has places people do not use.
This one felt different.
No dust gathered by the door.
Regina had the key on her chain, and once, after a nightmare, I woke to find her standing outside that room in the dark.
But the worst thing was the contract.
I read it again because love makes a person suspicious in ways pride never does.
Buried under clauses about confidentiality and appearance obligations, I found a sentence I had skimmed the first time.
If Matthew Hernandez dies before completion of the twelve-month term, Regina Albright is released from all obligations under this agreement.
Dies.
Not resigns.
Not breaches.
Not disappears.
Dies.
I stared at that word until the letters stopped looking like letters.
The next afternoon, Patrick found me in the company parking garage.
The place smelled like oil and sun-heated concrete.
A fluorescent light flickered above us, making his smile look worse every few seconds.
He leaned against a black car and looked me over.
“Nice suit,” he said. “Borrowed?”
I kept walking.
He stepped in front of me.
“Enjoy it while you can, driver. Regina always breaks what she uses.”
“What do you want, Patrick?”
His smile widened.
“I just thought you should know you’re not the first.”
“The first what?”
“Husband she bought.”
The garage seemed to tilt.
He leaned close enough that I could smell mint on his breath.
“Ask her about Julian,” he said. “Ask her about the man who signed a contract before you and ended up buried before his twelve months were done.”
I wanted to hit him.
I imagined it for one hot second, my fist meeting that polished grin.
Then I thought of my mother, Regina’s cameras, and the way men like Patrick always knew how to make a trap look like self-defense.
So I stepped around him.
He laughed behind me.
“Ask her about the mark.”
I drove home with both hands locked on the wheel.
By the time I reached Regina’s house, my anger had gone quiet.
That was worse.
Quiet anger listens.
Quiet anger remembers every clause.
She was in the dining room when I walked in.
Two plates waited on the table.
Meatloaf, mashed potatoes, green beans.
An ordinary meal in a room that cost more than my mother’s apartment building.
Regina looked almost nervous.
“I called your mom,” she said. “She told me this was your favorite.”
That hurt me.
It hurt because she had tried.
It hurt because I loved her.
It hurt because Patrick’s words had not erased the way she remembered my life.
I took off my jacket and laid it over the chair.
“Who was Julian?”
Regina’s face drained so quickly I knew Patrick had not made him up.
“Who told you that name?”
“Your brother.”
Her eyes closed.
“Matthew, please.”
“Was I his replacement?”
“No.”
“Then tell me the truth.”
She stood, but her knees did not look steady.
“I can’t.”
“Why not?”
Her hands trembled.
There it was again.
The same tremor from the day the contract crossed the table.
The same small crack in the woman who made everyone else afraid.
“Regina,” I said, softer than I meant to, “did that man die because of you?”
Before she could answer, the doorbell rang.
Then came three knocks.
Hard.
Sharp.
Too deliberate for a neighbor.
Regina turned toward the security screen mounted near the entry.
I watched the color leave her face.
Not confusion.
Not irritation.
Terror.
On the screen stood an older woman dressed all in black.
Her hair was pulled back tight, and her face had the stillness of someone who had not come to ask permission.
In one hand, she held a red envelope.
Regina took one step backward.
“Don’t open it,” she whispered.
The woman on the porch leaned toward the camera.
The porch light caught the envelope and made it look brighter than anything else on the screen.
I could hear my own heartbeat.
Regina grabbed my wrist before I reached the lock.
“Matthew,” she said, and this time my name sounded like a warning.
The older woman looked straight into the lens.
“Matthew Hernandez,” she said, clear enough for the speaker to crackle. “I know why she chose you.”
Regina’s grip tightened until it hurt.
The dinner behind us sat untouched.
The meatloaf cooled on the plates.
The house that had been a stage, a prison, and almost a home seemed to hold its breath.
The woman lifted the red envelope higher.
“And if you don’t come out now,” she said, “tomorrow you’re going to wake up with the same mark Julian had before he died.”