To Save My Father, I Pretended to Be a Stranger’s Fiancée, But I Never Expected to Fall for the Wrong Brother

I was drowning in hospital bills when a stranger in a suit offered me a deal: pretend to be his fiancée, and he’d save my father’s life. I had no choice but to say yes. Then I met his brother…

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The day started like any other, but by noon, my entire world had collapsed.

My phone buzzed just as I was locking my apartment door. I almost didn’t answer: spam calls had been relentless lately, but something made me pick up.

“Miss Carter?” The voice was calm and professional. “This is Dr. Reynolds. I’m calling about your father.”

“Is he okay?” My voice cracked on the last word.

There was a pause, a measured breath. “His condition has worsened. He needs surgery immediately. Without it… his chances are low.”

I pressed my back against the doorframe, gripping the phone so hard my fingers ached.

“How much?”

The number crashed over me like a tidal wave. Too high. Impossible. I barely heard anything after that.

I just murmured a weak “I’ll figure it out” before ending the call.

But I had nothing. No savings. No family to ask for help. Just a café job that barely covered rent.

By the time I arrived at work, my chest felt hollow. I barely noticed the smell of coffee beans or the familiar chime of the bell as I pushed through the door. I made a beeline for my manager.

“Lisa, I… I need an advance. Please. Anything you can spare.”

Lisa’s face softened, but her hands twisted nervously.

“Sophie, I wish I could do more. Two months’ salary is the best I can offer.”

It wasn’t enough. But I forced a nod, blinking hard.

“Thank you. I… I appreciate it.”

The weight in my chest only grew heavier. Two months’ salary wasn’t nearly enough. It wouldn’t even cover half of what I needed.

I blinked hard, willing the sting behind my eyes to disappear. Crying wouldn’t fix anything. Exhaling shakily, I turned back toward the café floor. And that’s when I felt it.

Someone was watching me.

The sensation crawled up my spine, a quiet, lingering gaze that felt too deliberate to ignore. I glanced up. A man sat near the window, his eyes locked onto me.

He wasn’t pretending to skim a menu or glance around absentmindedly. He was watching. Listening.

The café wasn’t loud. My conversation with Lisa hadn’t been a whisper. He must have caught every desperate word. Heat rushed to my cheeks.

Who is he?

For months, another man always sat in that spot. We had never spoken beyond polite exchanges, but I noticed him. He never rushed, never buried himself in his phone, never seemed in a hurry to leave.

He always ordered the same thing. Black coffee. No sugar. No cream.

I even started adding an extra cookie to his plate. He never said anything, never questioned it, but he always smiled before leaving.

And I had foolishly imagined, just once, that maybe one day he’d do more than smile.

But that day, he wasn’t there. Instead, a different man sat in his place.

Older. Sharper. Dressed in a suit that radiated quiet authority. He stirred his coffee with slow, deliberate movements, his gaze flicking toward me before shifting away.

I forced myself to move, to pretend I hadn’t noticed. But my stomach twisted.

I didn’t know who he was. I didn’t know what he wanted.

And I had no idea that by the end of the night, he would change everything.

***

Later that evening, I walked home, my body aching from the long shift, my mind tangled in numbers, hospital bills, and the crushing weight of impossibility. I barely noticed the cold creeping through my thin jacket or the flickering streetlights overhead.

I just kept walking. The streets were quiet, the usual city hum softened by the late hour.

Then, a car slowed beside me.

I stiffened, gripping my bag a little tighter. The tinted window rolled down, and a deep, controlled voice called my name.

“Sophie.”

I froze mid-step.

It was him. The man from the café. The one who had taken the seat of my regular customer that day—the one I always brought an extra cookie to.

Every instinct screamed at me, “Keep walking! Ignore him. This is how true crime documentaries start.”

But something about his tone made me pause. It wasn’t commanding. It wasn’t threatening. It was… certain.

“You don’t need to be afraid,” he said, as if reading my thoughts. “I just want to talk.”

I turned, keeping a cautious distance. “Who are you?”

“Steven.”

He leaned slightly toward the open window, his dark eyes sharp, assessing.

“Get in. I’ll explain everything.”

I huffed out a laugh. “Yeah, that’s not happening.”

His lips twitched.

“Fair enough.”

He exhaled, tapping his fingers against the steering wheel. “Then I’ll talk here.”

“I’m listening.”

His gaze met mine.

“My father is handing over control of our family business soon. But there’s a condition—he wants to see me as a settled man. Stable. Engaged.”

“And that affects me how?”

Steven studied me for a moment. Then, with a quiet certainty, he said, “Because I need a fiancée.”

I let out a sharp, incredulous laugh. “You’re joking.”

“I’m not.”

He let the silence stretch just long enough before adding, “And you need money. I heard you talking to your manager.”

My fingers curled into fists. “You were listening?”

“I see an opportunity, I take it. You need money. I need a fiancée. It’s simple.”

Simple. Right. Except nothing about this feels simple at all.

“You… want me to pretend to be your fiancée?”

“A few weeks. Public appearances. My father believes I’ve finally settled down, and in return… I’ll pay for your father’s surgery.”

I could refuse. Walk away. Pretend this conversation never happened. But then what? My father would suffer. His condition would worsen.

I didn’t remember saying yes. But an hour later, I was in a dressing room, surrounded by silk dresses and designer heels, staring at a reflection I didn’t recognize.

The girl in the mirror looked polished. Elegant. Someone who belonged in Steven’s world.

I wasn’t that girl. But for the following few weeks… I would have to be.

***

Steven’s father’s birthday came. It was our grand debut as a couple.

The mansion was breathtaking. It wasn’t just big, the kind of place you saw in magazines, the kind of house that didn’t feel real.

A live band played soft jazz in the background, and waiters in crisp black uniforms weaved through the crowd with trays of champagne.

I kept my shoulders back, my posture perfect, just as Steven had instructed. Every movement mattered. Every glance, every smile. We were on display.

Steven played his part flawlessly. He smiled at all the right moments and whispered small reassurances whenever I hesitated.

“Relax,” he murmured in my ear as we walked further into the room. “You look perfect.”

His father, a tall, commanding man approached us. His sharp eyes scanned me from head to toe.

“Father,” Steven said smoothly. “This is Sophie.”

“Ah, so this is the young woman you’ve been hiding from us,” his father said, his voice rich with skepticism. “Lovely.”

And then I saw him. My regular. The man whose absence I had felt that very morning. The one I had secretly admired for months without knowing his name.

But finally, I did. Steven’s father introduced him with a proud smile.

Oliver. Steven’s brother.

His gaze locked onto mine, and I knew instantly—he recognized me too. He didn’t approach right away. He waited. He watched. And then, when the moment was just right, he made his move.

“Fancy seeing you here,” he said casually, stepping closer.

“Oliver…”

“You know, I’ve spent months trying to work up the nerve to ask you out. But it turns out I didn’t need to. My brother beat me to it.”

“I…”

“I came to that café every morning just to see you,” he continued, ignoring my attempt to speak. “I thought maybe one day, I’d stop being a coward and say something. But I never did.”

He let out a quiet laugh. “Instead, I followed you home a few times. Not in a creepy way…”

“Oliver.”

“…just because I couldn’t find the right words.”

I could tell him the truth. I could explain everything and end the lie before it spiraled any further.

But then my father’s face flashed in my mind. The hospital. The money.

I turned away, slipped my hand into Steven’s, and leaned up to kiss him.

The first time a lie had ever tasted so bitter.

***

The next morning, Steven placed a check in front of me.

“Here.”

I stared at the paper. The amount was more than enough to cover my father’s surgery and keep him comfortable for months. My hands trembled as I picked it up. But instead of relief, all I felt was emptiness.

“You are playing your part well. Maybe we should continue

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