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Two days later, Valerie Mendes walked into the Salazar mansion in Miami wearing a simple cream dress, her hair loose over her shoulders, and the expression of a woman who had already survived worse rooms than this one.
The mansion stood behind iron gates in Coral Gables, surrounded by palm trees, marble fountains, imported roses, and security cameras hidden so tastefully they looked like decoration. Valerie had grown up above a seafood stall near the docks in Key Biscayne, where the smell of salt, ice, and fish clung to her clothes no matter how hard she scrubbed. She knew how to bargain with suppliers, carry heavy crates, and smile at customers even when her stomach was empty.
But she had never stepped into a house where the front door alone looked more expensive than her entire neighborhood.
Alejandro Salazar stood beside her in a navy suit, calm on the outside, but his fingers tightened slightly around hers. That surprised her. Two days ago, he had been a desperate rich man hiding behind her seafood counter after running from his own engagement party. Now he looked like the kind of man who owned the room before entering it.
Valerie leaned closer and whispered, “If your mother throws wine at me, I’m charging extra.”
Alejandro almost smiled. “She would never waste imported wine.”
“Good. I wore cheap shoes.”
Before he could answer, the grand staircase filled with silence.
Victoria Salazar descended slowly, dressed in white silk, her silver hair pinned perfectly, diamonds at her ears, and disappointment sharpened into an art form. Behind her stood Isabella Arden, the woman Alejandro was supposed to marry, stunning in a pale blue designer dress, her smile polished but her eyes cold.
Victoria looked Valerie up and down as if examining a stain on the carpet.
“So this is the woman,” she said.
Valerie smiled sweetly. “Depends. Which woman?”
Alejandro coughed into his fist.
Victoria’s gaze snapped to him. “You humiliate this family, run through a public market like a criminal, ignore a signed engagement agreement, and return with a fishmonger?”
“Seafood vendor,” Valerie corrected. “If you’re going to insult me, at least use the right industry.”
Isabella’s smile thinned.
Alejandro stepped forward. “Her name is Valerie Mendes. She is my wife.”
The room froze.
Victoria blinked once. “Excuse me?”
Alejandro removed a folded paper from inside his jacket and handed it to his mother. “Marriage certificate. Filed in Miami-Dade County yesterday morning.”
Valerie kept her face steady, though inside she was still recovering from the courthouse wedding, the prenuptial contract, and the absurd amount of money now sitting in an escrow account under her name. Fifty thousand dollars a month for twelve months. Medical bills for her adoptive mother covered. Her younger brother’s debt paid directly to the lender, not to him. Housing support after the contract ended.
It had sounded outrageous.
It had also sounded like survival.
Victoria read the certificate, then looked at Valerie with quiet hatred. “How much?”
Valerie tilted her head. “For what?”
“For your performance.”
Alejandro’s voice hardened. “Mother.”
“No woman like her marries a man like you for love.”
Valerie felt the insult land, but she did not flinch. She had heard worse from men who thought a woman behind a counter belonged beneath them. She folded her hands in front of her and smiled.
“You’re right,” she said. “I didn’t marry him for love.”
May you like
Alejandro turned toward her sharply.
Valerie continued, “I married him because he asked, because he looked trapped, and because unlike some people in this house, I don’t enjoy watching someone be sold like property.”
The silence that followed was delicious.
Isabella gave a soft laugh. “How noble. Did you rehearse that?”
“No,” Valerie said. “I usually don’t need practice telling the truth.”
Victoria stepped closer. “You will not last one week here.”
Valerie looked around the marble foyer, the crystal chandelier, the oil portraits, and the staff pretending not to listen. Then she looked back at Victoria.
“Lady, I’ve survived spoiled fish in July, eviction notices, and my brother’s loan sharks showing up during dinner. Your chandelier doesn’t scare me.”
For the first time, Alejandro stared at her like he had not merely hired her.
He stared as if he recognized her.
That night, Valerie moved into the east wing of the mansion, a suite larger than the apartment where she had lived with her adoptive mother and brother. The bed looked too perfect to sleep in. The closet was filled with clothes Alejandro’s assistant had ordered in her size. There were shoes, handbags, skincare, silk robes, even a jewelry box with simple gold pieces she refused to touch.
She stood in the middle of the room and whispered, “What did you get yourself into?”
A knock sounded at the door.
Alejandro entered holding a folder and two cups of coffee from a Cuban bakery.
Valerie stared at the cups. “You went out for coffee?”
“I sent someone.”
“Of course you did.”
He handed her one. “Cortadito. I asked your friend at the market what you drink.”
Valerie paused. “You asked Marisol?”
“She threatened to gut me if I hurt you.”
“That sounds like her.”
They stood awkwardly in the middle of the expensive bedroom, both aware that they were legally married and emotionally strangers.
Alejandro cleared his throat. “We need rules.”
Valerie took a sip of coffee. “Good. Rule one: I sleep alone.”
“Agreed.”
“Rule two: no touching unless we’re in public and I say it’s okay.”
“Rule three: your mother doesn’t get to speak to my family.”
His expression darkened. “Agreed.”
“Rule four: don’t lie to me unless the lie is part of the contract.”
Alejandro hesitated.
Valerie noticed immediately. “That was not supposed to be a hard one.”
He looked away. “There are things about my life you don’t know.”
“I figured. Men running from engagements usually come with baggage.”
“It’s more complicated.”
“It always is.”
He placed the folder on the desk. “The contract protects you. My lawyers can explain anything you want. You can leave at any time, and you keep the first three months of payment no matter what.”
Valerie studied him. “You really think money solves fear.”
“No,” he said quietly. “I think poverty makes fear harder to survive.”
That answer stopped her.
For a second, she saw something behind his rich-man calm. Exhaustion. Loneliness. Maybe grief.
Then he turned to leave.
“Alejandro,” she said.
He paused.
“Why did you really ask me?”
He looked at her for too long.
“Because you refused my card,” he said. “And because for three years I’ve been looking for a woman who saved my life and disappeared. When I saw you, I thought maybe fate had a cruel sense of humor.”
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