
Fake Marriage To The Undercover Boss
Emaline Finley was drowning in massive debt to keep her dying father alive, even enduring a humiliating blind date with an arrogant man just to find a financial lifeline.
But the fatal blow came from her former best friend, Kitty. Kitty, who was already engaged to Emaline's ex-boyfriend, deliberately told Emaline's father that his expensive treatments were bleeding his daughter dry.
Out of extreme guilt, her father threw away his life-saving medication and checked himself out of the hospital to die at home. When Emaline found him, he was coughing up pools of bright red blood, his lungs rapidly collapsing. As the paramedics rushed him away, Kitty called to gloat, mocking Emaline's poverty and telling her to go watch her father die.
Emaline was completely shattered, suffocating under the sheer injustice of it all. She had been betrayed, stripped of her dignity, and was now forced to watch her only parent slip away because of a cruel, spiteful lie.
Just as her world went dark, a wildly wealthy stranger stepped in. Cullen Preston, the mysterious man who had witnessed her humiliating date, paid the astronomical medical bills and brought in the city's top surgeon to pull her father back from death. But his salvation wasn't charity.
"Consider it a dowry."
He bought her father's life, and in exchange, he demanded Emaline as his wife.
Chapters
Share
Chapter 1
"Your profile picture was better."
Chadwick Boggs did not even look up from his phone when he said it.
Emaline Finley stood by the heavy oak table of Bellezza, the chill of the Manhattan autumn wind still clinging to her cheap blazer. She swallowed the immediate lump of humiliation in her throat.
She pulled out her own chair. The wood scraped loudly against the tile floor.
Chadwick finally glanced up, his eyes scanning her unbranded clothing with obvious distaste. He tapped the screen of his phone one last time before setting it face down.
A waiter appeared instantly, handing them leather-bound menus.
Before Emaline could even open hers, Chadwick snatched it from her hands.
"She will have the house salad," Chadwick told the waiter. "And I will take the Wagyu ribeye, medium rare. Bring a bottle of your most expensive Cabernet."
The waiter nodded and vanished.
Emaline stared at the empty space where her menu had been. Her fingers curled into fists under the table. Her nails dug into her palms.
"So," Chadwick leaned back, crossing his arms. "Let us get this over with. What is your annual salary? Do you have any savings? Any outstanding debt?"
The words hit her like physical blows. Her stomach twisted.
"I make enough to support myself," Emaline said, keeping her voice level. "I thought we might talk about our interests first. Books, maybe? Movies?"
Chadwick let out a short, harsh laugh. "Interests do not pay the mortgage on a Manhattan penthouse. I drive a Porsche. I need to know if you are a liability. You are already punching above your weight class just sitting here."
Emaline felt the blood rush to her face. The heat burned her cheeks.
"My mother is getting older," Chadwick continued, oblivious to her reaction. "If we get married, you will need to quit your job. You will manage the house and take care of her full time."
Emaline pressed her lips together. The inside of her cheek caught between her teeth. She bit down hard enough to taste copper.
"This is our first date," Emaline said. Her voice trembled, just a fraction.
"A date is an interview for a merger," Chadwick sneered. "With your age and your background, you are not exactly a prime asset. But if you are willing to move in for a trial period before the wedding, I might consider it."
The air in Emaline's lungs turned to ice.
She grabbed the linen napkin from her lap and threw it onto the center of the table.
"You are the most arrogant, repulsive man I have ever met," Emaline said. The words tore out of her throat.
Chadwick's face darkened. The smugness vanished, replaced by a nasty scowl.
"Walk away now, and you will die alone," he threatened, his voice dropping to a vicious hiss. "You will never find anyone better than me."
Emaline stood up. She grabbed her faux-leather purse.
"I would rather die alone than spend another second breathing the same air as you."
She turned on her heel and marched toward the exit.
As she passed the adjacent booth, a low, rumbling chuckle stopped her in her tracks.
Emaline snapped her head to the side.
A man sat there alone. He was swirling a glass of amber whiskey. His dark, piercing eyes were locked on her. The corners of his mouth twitched upward in pure amusement.
He raised his glass to her in a silent toast.
A sudden jolt of heat shot down Emaline's spine. The intensity in his gaze made her skin prickle. She broke eye contact, her heart hammering against her ribs, and practically ran for the door.
"Hey! You need to pay for your salad!" Chadwick bellowed from across the restaurant.
Emaline froze with her hand on the brass door handle.
She unzipped her purse, pulled out a crumpled twenty-dollar bill, and slammed it onto a passing waiter's tray. She pushed through the heavy doors and stepped out into the freezing night.
The cold air hit her face like a slap.
She leaned against the rough brick wall of the restaurant. Her chest heaved. The adrenaline crashed, leaving her legs shaking and her eyes burning with unshed tears.
She dug her phone out of her pocket, needing to hear her father's voice.
The screen lit up with a new text message.
It was from the hospital billing department. Her father's next treatment installment was overdue.
The phone slipped from her numb fingers, dangling by her grip.
Her shoulders collapsed. A sob tore through her throat, raw and ugly. She covered her mouth with her hand, trying to choke back the sound.
The restaurant door clicked open.
A man stepped out onto the sidewalk. The crisp autumn wind ruffled his dark hair, but he did not seem to notice the freezing temperature. He stood alone, his posture perfectly straight, blending into the shadows of the awning. There was no grand entourage, no luxury vehicle waiting for him, just the quiet hum of the Manhattan street.
Cullen Preston raised a hand, rubbing the back of his neck as he let out a slow, measured breath. His dark eyes scanned the street and immediately fixed on the corner of the brick wall.
Emaline was hunched over, wiping her wet cheeks with the back of her sleeve, completely unaware of the man watching her with such intense focus.
Cullen adjusted the collar of his coat, his jaw tightening slightly as he observed her shaking shoulders. He shoved his hands into the pockets of his dark wool coat and walked toward the brick wall.
He stopped two feet away from her.
"That performance in there was significantly better than my date," his deep voice cut through the sound of the city traffic.
Emaline gasped and spun around. Her eyes were wide, red-rimmed, and defensive.
Cullen offered a faint smile. He pulled a pristine white handkerchief from his pocket and held it out to her.
"Do you need this?" Cullen asked. "Or do you plan to keep crying over that idiot's salad money?"
You may also like

8.3
I was the long-lost Donovan heiress, finally brought home after a childhood in foster care. My parents adored me, my husband cherished me, and the woman who tried to ruin my life, Kiera Reese, was locked away in a mental facility. I was safe. I was loved.
On my birthday, I decided to surprise my husband, Ivan, at his office. But he wasn't there.
I found him at a private art gallery across town. He was with Kiera.
She wasn't in a facility. She was radiant, laughing as she stood beside my husband and their five-year-old son. I watched through the glass as Ivan kissed her, a familiar, loving gesture he’d used with me just that morning.
I crept closer and overheard them. My birthday wish to go to the amusement park had been denied because he’d already promised the entire park to their son—whose birthday was the same day as mine.
"She’s so grateful to have a family, she’d believe anything we tell her," Ivan said, his voice laced with a cruelty that stole my breath. "It's almost sad."
My entire reality—my loving parents who funded this secret life, my devoted husband—was a five-year lie. I was just the fool they kept on stage.
My phone buzzed. It was a text from Ivan, sent while he stood with his real family.
"Just got out of the meeting. So exhausting. I miss you."
The casual lie was the final blow. They thought I was a pathetic, grateful orphan they could control.
They were about to find out just how wrong they were.

9.3
Jessie's biological parents brought her back from a Rust Belt wasteland just to force her into marrying a paralyzed heir to save their bankrupt empire.
Three years later, when the global doomsday apocalypse hit, her own family shoved her into a swarm of infected corpses.
As she was being torn apart by mutated hounds, she was stunned by what she saw.
Her fake sister, Harley, was clutching the antique silver necklace she had stolen from Jessie—an heirloom that secretly contained a magical spatial dimension.
When the infected swarmed them, her biological mother didn't even look back.
"Jessie is just white trash, she is perfectly suited to buy us time to run!"
Harley used Jessie's stolen necklace to live in absolute safety and luxury, while Jessie's windpipe was ripped out in the rotting wasteland.
Until she died, Jessie didn't understand. She was their true flesh and blood.
Why did her parents hate her so much? Why was she sacrificed so easily while the fake daughter got everything?
Opening her eyes again, the blinding glare of a crystal chandelier stabbed into her retinas.
She was back in the Manhattan penthouse on the exact day they sold her off.
This time, Jessie calmly signed the marriage contract, demanded a one hundred million dollar buyout, and walked out to prepare for the apocalypse.

7.6
To pay for her father's life support, Haleigh sold herself into a marriage with Fabian Blackburn, a ruthless billionaire in a deep coma.
But on her wedding day, she caught her boyfriend cheating with her stepsister, laughing about how they would steal the inheritance the second Fabian stopped breathing. Cornered and desperate, Haleigh secretly underwent IVF using her comatose husband's frozen sperm to secure the family trust.
Weeks later, a miracle happened. Fabian woke up.
But instead of gratitude, he treated her like trash. He threw annulment papers at her face, completely disgusted by the arranged marriage.
"If you try any dirty tricks to get pregnant, I will personally drag you to a clinic and have that bastard scraped out of you."
Terrified, Haleigh hid her positive pregnancy test and desperately tried to hack her way to enough cash to escape. But while using his computer, she accidentally opened a highly classified folder.
Inside was a medical file and a photo of a severely disabled girl who looked exactly like Fabian.
Before she could process it, Fabian walked in. Seeing the screen, his cold mask shattered into pure, unhinged madness. He lunged across the room, lifting her off the floor by her throat, completely ignoring her desperate gasps for air.
"Lock her in the basement," he roared to his guards. "No food. No water."
Curled on the freezing concrete, clutching her newly pregnant belly, Haleigh didn't understand what she had just seen that turned him into a murderous monster.
But she knew one thing: if she didn't escape this terrifying estate, both she and his unborn heir would die in the dark.

8.8
My fiancé, Knox, was the man I’d spent ten years building a life with, the one I’d poured my family’s fortune into. But then I found the lockbox. Inside, a photo of him smiling, his arm around a heavily pregnant woman, marked: *To my only wife Deana.*
I’d been looking for a charger in our Boston penthouse closet when I stumbled upon it. The faded Polaroid showed Knox, younger, beaming, with a heavily pregnant stranger. Its timestamp: "Ten years ago"—the exact year I funded his Ivy League PhD.
Flipping the photo, I saw Knox’s familiar handwriting: *To my only wife Deana and our upcoming miracle.* My world crumbled. The man I’d loved had a wife, making me the unwitting mistress. My opulent life was built on his lies.
His text, "Baby, I'm coming home to *our house*," twisted into a cruel joke. My tears froze. A decade of sacrifices, of family alienation—all for a man who used my money and trust—shredded in my mind. The fragile woman in me vanished; my eyes turned cold and clear. I relocked the box, smoothed the rug, and applied crimson lipstick. Practicing a flawless smile, I whispered, "Welcome home, my sweet liar."

9.5
Jennifer, a fiercely independent entrepreneur, never imagined that running her company would put her in the orbit of Joseph, a reclusive billionaire with a dangerous agenda. Their professional clashes ignite a forbidden attraction, drawing them into a passionate affair that threatens to unravel everything Jennifer has built. As corporate sabotage, hidden heirs, and dark secrets from Joseph's past begin to surface, Jennifer's world spirals into a web of betrayal, desire, and moral peril. In a story where power and love collide, nothing is as it seems and every choice could be lethal.

9.5
Eda Roman clutched her father's diagnostic report, its sharp edge cutting her finger. His cancer had mutated, standard treatment failed, and a fifty thousand dollar deposit for experimental therapy was due by midnight. Fail to pay, and his hospital bed would be cleared.
Wife to Axel Foley, a multi-billion dollar CEO, Eda faced an impossible chasm. Her family trust, controlled by Keri Lane, offered a meager three hundred dollars.
An emergency fund request met a forty-eight-hour review—a death sentence. Keri's assistant denied expedite and blocked calls. Desperate, Eda called Axel, but his assistant dismissed her with lies, Axel's laughter echoing.
Humiliation and betrayal ignited cold fury. Wife to Seattle's wealthiest, yet begging on a hospital floor? Axel's indifference and Keri's games showed her: her father's life couldn't be left in their hands.
Wiping tears, the pleading girl vanished; her survival instinct roared. Red lipstick her war paint, Eda Roman marched to Foley Group Headquarters, ready to reclaim what was hers.