A Billionaire Asked Her To Fake A Marriage. Then The Ballroom Froze-Quieen - Chainityai

A Billionaire Asked Her To Fake A Marriage. Then The Ballroom Froze-Quieen

Camila Reyes had not planned to become anyone’s wife that night, real or pretend. Her plan was smaller than that, and much sadder. She wanted to survive one charity gala without crying in a bathroom stall.

The Meridian Crown Ballroom did not make survival easy. Everything inside it gleamed. The floors were polished marble, the walls pale gold, and the chandeliers scattered light over people who looked born knowing how to stand beneath crystal.

Camila entered under the gold archway with her invitation in one hand and her borrowed clutch in the other. The navy dress belonged to her cousin. The lipstick belonged to Elena Park. The anxiety belonged entirely to Camila.

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At the door, a man in black checked her name twice. Then he asked for identification, though the donors ahead of her had been waved through with only nods and warm smiles.

Camila handed over her driver’s license and pretended not to notice the pause. She had become good at pretending. Six weeks of humiliation can teach a person to keep breathing while strangers decide where she belongs.

The first thing she smelled inside was lilies. Then perfume. Then cold seafood sitting on crushed ice beneath silver lights. The room hummed with violins, glassware, and laughter sharp enough to cut skin.

A blonde woman in pearls gave Camila’s dress one slow look. It started at her shoes, climbed to the waist seam, paused, and finished at her face. Then the woman smiled without warmth and turned away.

Camila almost left right then.

But Elena had put her name on that list. Elena Park, charity coordinator for the Meridian Children’s Health Foundation, had treated Camila’s sadness like an emergency that could be solved with eyeliner and a plated dinner.

Three nights earlier, at 9:17 p.m., Elena had sent a screenshot from the foundation office. GUEST PASS — REYES, CAMILA. Under it she wrote, You’re coming. Don’t argue.

Camila had argued anyway. She said she had nothing to wear. Elena found the navy dress. Camila said she had no appetite. Elena said grief did not get to cancel dinner.

“You’ve been living on coffee, cereal, and emotional damage,” Elena told her.

“I call that surviving,” Camila replied.

“I call that depressing. You are wearing lipstick. You are eating something that came on a silver tray. And you are remembering you still exist.”

Existence, lately, had felt like a job without pay. Six weeks earlier, Camila had worked at a marketing agency in Midtown. The salary was modest, but it paid rent. The apartment had sunlight in the kitchen.

She had also had Daniel, a boyfriend she believed was loyal because loyalty had never seemed like too much to ask. Then the agency sent a termination email before lunch on a Tuesday.

Two days later, Daniel said he needed “clarity.” Camila learned that clarity had a name, a perfume, and a drawer already cleared in his bedroom.

The apartment lease carried Daniel’s name. The bills carried both their histories. Even the place where Camila cried was not fully hers. Inside her purse, folded and unopened, was an eviction notice.

Not heartbreak. Not bad luck. Paperwork. A deadline. A life can collapse very politely when every signature belongs to someone else.

That was why she stayed in the ballroom. She found a place near the seafood table, took a lobster tart, and tried to look like someone who understood why the ice sculpture needed its own spotlight.

For twenty minutes, she almost succeeded. She smiled at strangers. She stepped aside when people walked through her as if she were furniture. She watched Elena hurry past twice with a folder clutched to her chest.

Across the room, Adrian Vale watched her.

He was not supposed to be watching anyone with real interest. Men like Adrian were expected to be watched instead. At thirty-six, he was already famous in private investment circles, though he avoided interviews when he could.

Financial magazines liked calling him ruthless, visionary, untouchable, impossible to predict. People repeated those words around him as if they were compliments. Adrian treated them like weather reports: not personal, only occasionally useful.

His family, however, treated his name like a door they should be able to unlock whenever they pleased. That night, his mother had arrived with donors. His cousin had arrived with investors. And Vivian Shaw had arrived in emerald silk.

Vivian had spent months implying to the right people that she and Adrian were practically engaged. She never said enough to be called a liar. She said just enough for society pages to speculate.

Adrian had ignored it until ignoring it became permission.

By the time the gala began, three guests had congratulated him on a wedding that did not exist. One board member had joked about merging families. His mother had smiled instead of correcting anyone.

That was the part Adrian did not forgive.

He could handle ambition. He had built his career around recognizing it. But he hated performance disguised as intimacy, and Vivian had turned a rumor into a leash.

Then he saw Camila near the seafood table.

She was pretending to admire the ice sculpture while clearly calculating whether another lobster tart would make people judge her. A man in a silver tie said something. Her smile tightened. Her eyes moved toward the exit.

Then she lifted her chin.

That small movement caught Adrian more than any gown in the room. It was not arrogance. It was preservation. She looked like someone whose pride had been bruised all week and still refused to lie down.

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