At 34, I was exhausted by my parents constantly reminding me that I was still unmarried. Every family dinner turned into another lecture about settling down and giving them grandchildren. Then they crossed a line I never expected — they told me I wouldn’t receive a single cent of their inheritance unless I got married before turning 35.
With only a few months left, I felt trapped. One afternoon, while walking home frustrated and angry, I noticed a homeless man sitting near a café asking people for spare change. His clothes were worn, but there was something calm and kind in his eyes that made me stop.
On impulse, I offered him a deal. “Marry me,” I said. “It’ll only be for appearances.” I explained everything — the inheritance, my parents, and the fake marriage. In return, I promised him a warm home, clean clothes, and financial help. His name was Stan, and after a long silence, he agreed.
I bought him new clothes, got him cleaned up, and three days later introduced him to my parents as my fiancé. To my surprise, they absolutely adored him. A week later, we had a small wedding ceremony, and just like that, my problem seemed solved.
At first, living together was awkward. Stan was quiet and polite, always careful not to take up too much space. But over time, I noticed little things about him. He cooked dinner before I got home from work, fixed things around the house without being asked, and somehow made the place feel warmer than it ever had before.
Then one evening, exactly a month after our wedding, I came home expecting another ordinary night. But the second I opened the front door, I froze. My messy living room had been completely transformed. The lights glowed softly, the table was covered with flowers and candles, and soft music played in the background.
Before I could even ask what was happening, Stan walked out wearing an expensive black suit I had never seen before. Gone was the shy homeless man I married. He looked confident… elegant. Then he smiled nervously and said, “I think it’s time I told you the truth.”
My heart pounded as he explained everything. Stan had once been a successful businessman who lost everything after being betrayed by his own family and business partners. After years of depression and living on the streets, he had stopped caring about life — until I spoke to him that day outside the café. The apartment transformation wasn’t random either. Using hidden savings and old contacts, he had secretly rebuilt part of his life over the past month.
Then he looked at me with tears in his eyes and said something I never expected: “You may have married me to annoy your parents… but somewhere along the way, I truly fell in love with you.” And standing there in that candlelit room, I realized I had fallen for him too.