"Marrying the Ice Queen CEO" Chapter 1
James held a glass of water at the edge of the conference room. Punch was too expensive to waste on nervous hands.
The office was singing
Happy Birthday
to their CEO, Katherine Morrison. Someone joked about who would be brave enough to propose to the most eligible boss in the building.
James muttered under his breath, not meaning for anyone to hear, “Maybe I should just say, ‘Marry me,’ and solve all my problems.”
The room kept laughing. Catherine turned around. She’d been standing right behind him.
“What if I say yes, James?”
Her voice was quiet. Her smile wasn’t.
Everyone thought it was part of the joke, but James saw her hands still waiting. He didn’t know why his mouth had gone dry.
The conference room erupted in laughter. Someone clapped Catherine on the back like she’d delivered the punchline of the century.
James managed something between a smile and a grimace—the kind of expression that passes for humor when your stomach has just dropped six floors. He set the glass down on the nearest table before his hand could betray him with a tremor.
Catherine held his gaze for another second, maybe two, then turned back to the cake someone had wheeled in on a cart that probably cost more than his monthly rent.
He slipped out while they were cutting slices, taking the stairs instead of the elevator because he needed the extra minute to remember how to breathe.
The stairwell smelled like concrete and the faint chemical tang of cleaning products. His phone buzzed in his pocket.
Sophie:
Daddy, can I get pizza Friday, please? Please, please.
He looked at the message for longer than necessary, thumb hovering over the keyboard. Twenty dollars. The field trip permission slip had been eighty, due next week. The car registration was two hundred twelve, overdue by three days.
He typed back, “We’ll see, sweetheart. How was school?”
Then he pocketed the phone and pushed through the door back into the hallway where the fluorescent lights hummed their endless monotone song.
His desk sat in the corner of the fourth floor, tucked between a filing cabinet and a window that looked out onto another building’s brick wall.
James had worked here for two years—ever since he’d left the bigger firm downtown, the one with the corner offices and the espresso machine that could make six different types of foam.
That was before Sarah got sick, before the hospital bills started arriving in envelopes thick enough to contain bad news, which they always did.
He opened his laptop and stared at the spreadsheet he’d been working on since nine that morning. Numbers in neat columns, formulas humming along beneath the surface like the building’s HVAC system—invisible but essential.
This was what he did now: reconciled accounts, tracked expenses, made sure the decimals lined up. Quiet work. Invisible work. The kind that nobody noticed until something went wrong.
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His phone buzzed again. Not Sophie this time.
Unknown number:
Can we talk? —K.
James closed his eyes, then opened them. The text was still there. He should have deleted it. Should have pretended his phone had died, or that he’d changed numbers, or moved to Alaska where cell service was a myth.
Instead, he typed, “I’m sorry. It was a stupid joke.”
I didn’t mean—
Three dots appeared, disappeared, appeared again.
I know. But I wasn’t joking. Tomorrow, 10:00 a.m. My office.
James looked at the message until the screen went dark. Then he looked at the brick wall outside his window where someone had spray-painted half a word before apparently giving up. The letters said
four
and nothing else, like the beginning of a sentence nobody wanted to finish.
He went home at 5:30, picked up Sophie from the community center, and made spaghetti with the jar of sauce that had been in the back of the cupboard since July.
Sophie ate three bites, pushed the rest around her plate, then asked if he was sad.
“No, sweetheart. Just tired.”
“You look sad.”
“I’m not sad.”
Sophie regarded him with the kind of skepticism only seven-year-olds can muster—the look that suggested she knew he was lying, but loved him enough not to push.
She went back to her spaghetti, twirling a single noodle around her fork with the concentration of a surgeon.
After dinner, after homework, after the bedtime story about the mouse who wanted to be an astronaut, James sat in the kitchen with the lights off and the laptop open. The blue glow painted shadows across the countertops, across the stack of unopened mail he’d been avoiding for a week.
The electric bill. The water bill. Something from the hospital that he didn’t want to open because he already knew what it said.
In the drawer next to the sink, beneath the tangle of rubber bands and expired coupons, was a small wooden box. James pulled it out, set it on the counter, and opened the lid.
Inside was Sarah’s wedding ring, small and silver. Beneath that, a letter folded into thirds and softened at the creases from being handled too many times.
He didn’t need to open it to know what it said.
Please don’t stop living. Sophie needs a mom. You deserve to be happy.
She’d written it three days before she died, when her handwriting had already started to shake, when every word had cost her something she didn’t have to spare.
James closed the box, put it back in the drawer, and shut the laptop without saving anything.
At 9:55 the next morning, James stood outside Catherine Morrison’s office, holding a coffee he’d bought from the lobby cart because showing up empty-handed felt wrong—even though he had no idea what he was doing there in the first place.
The door was closed. Through the frosted glass, he could see Catherine’s silhouette seated at her desk, head bent over paperwork.
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He knocked.
“Come in.”
Catherine’s office was smaller than he’d expected, but everything in it was deliberate. The desk was clean, except for a laptop, a phone, and a single framed photo he couldn’t see from the doorway.
The walls were white, hung with three pieces of abstract art that probably meant something to someone. There were no plants, no personal items scattered around—nothing to suggest that anyone actually spent time here beyond the bare minimum required to run a company.
She gestured to the chair across from her desk. “Please sit.”
James sat, set the coffee down on the edge of the desk, then realized he’d forgotten to ask if she wanted any.
“Thank you.”
Catherine picked up the cup, took a sip without checking what it was first, and set it back down.
“James, I’m going to be direct with you because I don’t see the point in wasting either of our time. Yesterday at the party, you made a joke. I responded in a way that probably seemed bizarre. It’s fine. Really—you don’t have to.”
She said it like she was reading from a list, something factual and unchangeable.
“I’m thirty-eight years old. I’ve built this company from the ground up. I’ve been married to the work for the last fifteen years, which is about fourteen years longer than any actual relationship I’ve ever maintained. Two months ago, my father called to inform me that if I don’t produce a suitable husband by the end of the year, he’s handing my inheritance to my younger brother—who has spent the last decade gambling it away in Monaco.”
James opened his mouth, closed it, tried again. “I don’t—”
“I’m not asking you to marry me for real,” Catherine said, leaning back in her chair, fingers laced together on the desk. “I’m asking if you’d consider a legal arrangement. One year, on paper only. I’ll ensure your financial stability. You’ll ensure I keep my family’s company shares. After twelve months, we dissolve it cleanly. You walk away with enough to secure Sophie’s future.”
The office was very quiet. Somewhere down the hall, a phone rang three times and stopped. James could hear his own pulse in his ears—that hollow thud that sounded like someone knocking on a door that wouldn’t open.
“You’ve been watching me.”
“I’ve been paying attention.”
Catherine picked up the coffee again, held it without drinking. “You’re one of the best analysts we have. You’re here at seven most mornings. You leave at 5:30 to pick up your daughter, and you’re back online by 9:00 p.m. working on freelance contracts. You’ve never missed a deadline. You’ve never asked for an advance. You’ve never complained.”
“So you want to marry me because I’m reliable.”
Something flickered across Catherine’s face, too quick to name. “I want to offer you an arrangement because I think we might be able to help each other. You’re drowning, James. I can see it. And I’m about to lose the only thing I’ve ever built that matters.”
James set his hands flat on his thighs, felt the fabric of his work pants under his palms—the same pants he’d been wearing in rotation for the last year because buying new ones hadn’t made the priority list.
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