"I have my job, Grandma. I'm stable." The words felt hollow even as she said them.
A wracking cough shook Evelyn's small frame. Her gaze drifted towards the window, her hope dimming like the late afternoon sun. A sharp, cold fist clenched around Clarice's heart. She couldn't bear to see that light go out completely.
Stepping out of the room, Clarice leaned her forehead against the cool, sterile wall of the hospital corridor, the antiseptic smell filling her lungs. Her phone buzzed, an unknown number flashing on the screen. She almost ignored it.
"Miss Reynolds?" a crisp, formal voice said when she answered. It was a man she didn't know, a butler for a woman she'd never met. "Mrs. Sinclair asked me to remind you. The arrangement is for today. He will be waiting at City Hall."
Clarice closed her eyes. The beeping from the room seemed to grow louder in her head. This was insane. A desperate, last-ditch solution to a problem that had no rational answer.
She took a breath that felt like swallowing glass.
"I'll be there," she said, her own voice sounding distant.
The taxi ride to the New York City Hall was a blur of traffic and noise. Her mind was a blank slate, she was about to marry a man whose name she barely knew, whose face was a complete mystery. All for a single, precious smile.
She saw him standing on the steps, a tall figure in a simple but impeccably tailored casual jacket and dark jeans. He was turned away from her, looking out at the street. When he turned, her breath caught. He was handsome, with sharp, defined features and dark hair, but his eyes were cold, distant. They held no warmth, only a kind of weary impatience.
"Clarice Reynolds?" he asked. His voice was deep, devoid of any emotion.
"Yes."
"I'm Hank Miller."
She just nodded, a knot forming in her stomach. The silence between them was heavy, awkward. There was nothing to say. They were two strangers about to sign a contract.
Inside, the process was as impersonal as a transaction at the DMV. They submitted their documents, took a number, and sat on a hard wooden bench to wait. He handled everything with a detached efficiency, pointing to the lines where she needed to sign. He moved with a purpose that felt out of place in the drab, bureaucratic hall.
While they waited, her eyes fell on the watch on his wrist. It was understated, a simple leather band and a dark face, but she recognized the brand. It was worth more than her car. More than she made in six months.
A flicker of doubt crossed her mind. But the thought was quickly extinguished by the image of her grandmother's fading smile. It didn't matter.
When their number was called, they stood before a clerk who looked as bored as they felt. They recited the vows without looking at each other, their voices flat. The stroke of the pen on the certificate was the final, anticlimactic act.
She held the document, the paper feeling flimsy and absurd in her hand. It was a marriage certificate. Her marriage certificate. It felt like a prop from a play.
Outside, the city air hit her. Hank Miller-her husband-turned to her. He held out a sleek black credit card and a single key.
"This is part of the agreement," he said, his tone all business. "The apartment and living expenses. I have a job overseas. I'm leaving immediately."
Clarice looked from the card to his impassive face. She pushed the card back toward him. "I can support myself."
She took only the key.
For the first time, a flicker of something-surprise, maybe-crossed his features. It was gone as quickly as it appeared. He didn't insist.
"Contact the lawyer if you need anything," he said. That was it. No goodbye, no handshake. He slid into the back of a black sedan that had pulled up to the curb and was gone, disappearing into the stream of New York traffic.
Clarice stood alone on the sidewalk, clutching a key to an apartment she'd never seen and a piece of paper that said she was married.
She went back to the hospital. She took a picture of the certificate and showed it to Evelyn. A genuine, peaceful smile spread across her grandmother's face, a sight more precious than any diamond.
Seeing it, Clarice knew. It was worth it.
*****
A year flew by. Evelyn's condition stabilized, a small miracle. Clarice settled into a routine, living the life of a single woman. Her "husband" never called, never wrote. He was a ghost, a name on a legal document. She poured all her energy into her work at a subsidiary of the Sinclair Group, quickly earning a reputation for being sharp, efficient, and reliable.
Then, one Tuesday afternoon, an email from Human Resources landed in her inbox. The subject line made her heart skip a beat: Promotion and Transfer to Corporate Headquarters.
The email was concise. Due to her "outstanding performance," she was being transferred to the Sinclair Group's global headquarters in Manhattan. Her new role: an administrative position in the CEO's office.
Her colleagues crowded around her desk, a mix of congratulations and thinly veiled envy.
From her window, she could just make out the distant, glittering skyline of Manhattan. A new challenge. A new start. She felt a surge of excitement, completely unaware that her carefully constructed life was about to be torn apart.
The last line of the email mentioned that the mysterious new CEO, Nolan Sinclair IV, would also be starting his tenure next Monday.