The Man I Married as a Favor Walked Free Three Years Later – Then He Showed up With a Black Box and a Truth I Never Saw Coming P4

Celeste's office smelled like lemon polish and money.

"I have a shift in an hour," I said.

"I'll be brief, Sadie." She folded her hands. "I'm offering you $2,000 a month."

"For what?"

"Your name."

I stared at her.

"I'll be brief, Sadie."

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"My son, Jonah, is serving twelve years," she said. "He needs a wife on paper. Visit twice a month, write letters, and show the court he still has family. Courts like roots. A wife gives him roots."

"You want me to marry a prisoner?"

"I want you to make a practical decision."

"Is he dangerous?"

"No. Entitled, careless, and foolish, yes. Dangerous, no."

"Why me?"

Her smile was soft enough to cut with. "Because you understand responsibility."

"You want me to marry a prisoner?"

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I should have walked out.

Instead, I thought of Owen pretending he wasn't hungry after school.

"I want the first payment before the wedding," I said.

Celeste smiled. "Of course."

***

When I told Owen, he stared at me like I'd become someone else.

"You're getting married?"

"On paper, that's all."

"To a man in prison?"

"Of course."

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"Yes."

"You sold yourself to keep me in school?"

"I did it to keep a roof over our heads."

"That's not an answer."

"It's the only one I have."

His anger softened into something worse.

"I can get a job."

"You sold yourself to keep me in school?"

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"You are finishing school, Owen. That's what matters."

"Sadie, please."

"No. You graduate. You get out. And you become someone no rich woman can price."

He looked away first.

That's how I knew he understood.

***

The wedding happened behind scratched glass.

Jonah sat across from me in a beige prison uniform, thin and tired-eyed.

He looked away first.

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"You don't have to pretend I'm a good man," he said.

"Good, because I'm not that generous."

I expected anger, coldness, or arrogance.

Instead, he looked ashamed.

"I did take money," he said. "$18,000 from a restricted foundation account. My trust was frozen after my father fell ill, and I called it borrowing from my future."

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