Being a single mom, my mind never stopped racing. There was always something to worry about—whether it was the never-ending cycle of grocery shopping, doctor visits, or making sure that the bills got paid. And when your job is on the line too, it feels like there’s no end to the pressure. I was always running on empty, caught in an endless loop of to-do lists and sleepless nights.
That was the reality the day my phone rang while I was juggling my son Nathan’s schedule. My mind was already overloaded with a calendar full of meetings and the struggle of finding time to take Lily to her dentist appointment. So, when the phone buzzed, I almost ignored it. But something told me to pick up.
“Hello, this is the admissions office at St. Helena Academy. I’m calling about your daughter, Lily.”
The voice on the other end was calm, almost too calm. My stomach churned, and I gripped the phone, already bracing for bad news.
“Is she okay?” I asked, hoping for reassurance.
“She’s fine,” the woman replied. “This is about the tuition grant.”
I straightened up, the knot in my chest tightening. “What about it?”
“We regret to inform you that the scholarship has been reassigned. There was a reassessment of eligibility, and your daughter no longer qualifies.”
My heart stopped. “She’s already enrolled! She’s been going there for a month. You can’t just take it back.”
“I understand your frustration,” she said, her voice still annoyingly neutral, “but if you wish to keep her enrolled, the tuition is—”
I hung up before she could finish. I felt like the walls were closing in. How was I going to tell Lily? This school was everything to her—the small classes, the safe environment, the chance to thrive. I’d promised her we’d made it, that we’d found a place where she belonged.
I tried to focus on work, but by noon, I couldn’t keep pretending that I wasn’t falling apart. Emails felt like they were written in a foreign language. I couldn’t concentrate, and I hated that. I hated feeling desperate. But there was only one person I could turn to—Nathan.
I took a deep breath, walked down the hallway, and knocked on his door. He looked up from his laptop and gave me a curious glance. “What’s up?”
“Can I talk to you for a minute?” My voice barely sounded like mine, small and cracked.
“Sure.” He closed his laptop and gestured for me to come in.
I sat down, my hands trembling. “It’s about Lily. She lost her scholarship. We have until the end of the week to pay the tuition, or they’ll give her spot to someone else.”
Nathan didn’t flinch. He just leaned back in his chair. “How much are we talking?”
I told him. It felt stupid even saying the amount out loud. “I know it’s a lot. I’m not asking for a gift. Just a loan. I’ll pay you back monthly.”
Nathan didn’t seem phased. Instead, he stood up, walked to the window, and looked outside, lost in thought. After a few quiet moments, he turned back to me. “There might be another option.”
I frowned. “What kind of option?”
He looked at me and said something that knocked the wind out of me. “I need to get married.”
I stared at him. “What?”
He sighed. “My grandmother is old-fashioned. Very. And in her will, she made it clear that I won’t get control of the family estate unless I’m married. She’s demanding a wedding before her birthday, which is in a week.”
I blinked, struggling to process what he was saying. “And you want me to be your…?”
“Yeah.” He nodded, like it was the most natural thing in the world. “You. We go to her estate, pretend to be a couple. We get married on Sunday, and after that, we go our separate ways. In return, I’ll cover Lily’s tuition. For as long as she’s in school.”
My mouth went dry. “You want me to fake-marry you?”
He nodded again. “I know it sounds crazy. But I trust you, and you need help. It’s a temporary thing.”
I stared at him, too stunned to respond. Then, my phone buzzed again. It was the school, reminding me that if I didn’t pay, Lily would lose her place. I looked at Nathan, my head spinning. “Are you sure she can stay if I do this?”
“She will never have to worry about tuition again,” he said, his voice steady.
I took a deep breath, my hands shaking. I had no choice. I couldn’t let Lily lose everything because of some paperwork. “Okay. I’ll do it.”
Nathan gave me a small smile. “Good. We leave tomorrow. Pack up. And everything has to look real.”
The next day, we arrived at his grandmother’s estate, a place straight out of a fairytale. The fountain in front was the first thing that caught Lily’s attention, and she ran toward it, laughing. Nathan followed her, chasing her around, and I stood there, watching them both. In that moment, something shifted inside me. Nathan was no longer the serious boss I knew at work. Here, he was just a man—someone who could laugh, someone who enjoyed being around kids.
I wasn’t prepared for how that made me feel.
Later, his grandmother, a sharp-eyed woman with silver hair, greeted us. Nathan introduced me as Grace and Lily as his daughter. His grandmother smiled, then turned to Nathan. “It’s about time you brought someone home.”
That night, we sat down for a quiet dinner. The massive dining room felt empty with just the four of us at the table. Nathan’s grandmother was fascinated by our “love story” and was already planning the wedding for Sunday.
I had no idea what I was walking into, but suddenly, everything seemed to be moving so fast, like I had been swept into someone else’s life. I was out of place, surrounded by grand plans and delicate details. But slowly, it started to feel less like a fake marriage and more like something real.
We spent our days running errands for the wedding, and I found myself laughing more. I watched Nathan interact with Lily, kneeling down to help her color in a butterfly one afternoon, or eating ice cream with her late at night, and it became clear that this wasn’t just a “transaction” for him. There was something genuine about his care for her.
One night, I found a note Lily had written on the fridge: “I like Nathan. He’s funny.” My heart squeezed, and I tucked the note in my pocket, a small memento of a relationship I never expected.
The night before the wedding, I went outside to clear my head. Nathan was sitting on the porch swing, looking up at the stars. We talked quietly about our pasts—his relationship with his father, his grandmother’s control over him—and how, in a strange way, this wedding was freeing for both of us.
He leaned over and told me that everything had changed. “I’ve got everything I’ve ever wanted. You. And Lily.”
The next morning, everything collapsed in a whirlwind. I overheard his grandmother speaking harshly to him, calling me a burden and threatening him with disinheritance if he went through with the wedding. My heart shattered. I grabbed Lily, packed our things, and left before sunrise.
When Nathan came looking for me the next day, he told me that he’d stood up to his grandmother for the first time in his life. He admitted he loved me and Lily and that he would rather lose everything than lose us.
With that, I realized that what had started as a fake marriage had turned into something real. And as we stood there, everything that had been fake before felt true. For the first time, I wasn’t just surviving—I was living. And Lily? She was home.