The ballroom of a five-star hotel in Zurich looked like it belonged in a magazine—crystal chandeliers overhead, white roses on every table, flawless linens, servers moving like dancers. Everyone was laughing, hugging, clinking glasses.
Everyone… except her.
Lucia Fernandez sat alone at a small table near the wall, tracing the rim of her wineglass as if the motion might steady her nerves. Her navy dress fit perfectly, but in a room filled with designer gowns and quiet wealth, she felt like she’d wandered onto the wrong set.
Every time she looked up, she caught sight of her best friend—Mariana, the bride—radiant beside her new husband.
Every time she looked down, she heard the same murmurs.
“Did she come alone?”
“I heard she works too much. That’s why she’s single.”
“She looks… out of place.”
Lucia forced a smile and took a long sip.
She was a financial journalist. She interrogated powerful men for a living. She’d walked into boardrooms packed with billionaires and made them sweat with a single, well-placed question.
But here—surrounded by perfect couples and polished laughter—her loneliness weighed heavier than any headline she’d ever written.
She checked the time.
8:00 p.m.
Too early to leave without seeming rude… too late to pretend it didn’t hurt.
She was just about to stand and escape to the restroom when the air changed.
A man approached her table—confident, precise—and sat beside her as if the seat had always been his.
Tall. Impeccably tailored suit. Sharp features. Steel-gray eyes that looked like they could strip truth straight off your face.
Heads turned. Whispers spread.
He didn’t look at anyone.
He leaned closer to Lucia and whispered, no warning, no introduction:
“Pretend you’re with me.”
Lucia’s heart slammed hard in her chest.
“Excuse me?” she managed, pulling back slightly.
His gaze stayed fixed on a nearby table, where a group of guests were openly watching them.
“They’re talking about you… and they’re talking about me,” he murmured. “If you don’t mind, let’s act like we arrived together. You stop being ‘the girl alone at the wedding’… and I avoid a setup date I don’t want.”
Lucia let out a soft, disbelieving laugh.
“So I’m supposed to play girlfriend to a complete stranger?”
That’s when he finally turned toward her.
Those gray eyes locked onto hers—cool on the surface, but with something underneath she couldn’t quite name.
“Just pretend,” he said again. “Trust me. We both win.”
She could say no.
She should say no.
But the looks from the other tables—sharp, smug, hungry—pushed her into a decision she didn’t fully understand yet.
Lucia lifted her chin.
“Fine,” she said. “But how far are you planning to take this little performance?”
His mouth curved—just barely.
“Leave that to me.”
He rested his arm along the back of her chair with effortless intimacy, and the reaction across the room was instant. A few guests leaned closer, suddenly fascinated.
Lucia felt a flicker of unease.
This man didn’t just know what he was doing.
He was dangerously good at it.
“What’s your name?” she asked quietly.
He answered without pause.
“Alejandro Morel.”
The name hit Lucia like a splash of ice water.
She knew it.
Everyone did.
Alejandro Morel—Switzerland’s most feared CEO in the financial world. The ruthless executive they called “The Wolf of Zurich.” The man who never smiled for photos. The man whose decisions made markets tremble.
Lucia swallowed.
Perfect, she thought. I’m fake-dating the most untouchable man in the country.
And somehow… the night began to shift.
Alejandro introduced her as “someone very special.” He poured her wine like it was second nature. He leaned in with quiet, dry remarks whenever someone asked something intrusive, shielding her without ever drawing attention to it.
Lucia played along—startled by how natural it felt beside him.
“You’re a good actor,” she whispered at one point, halfway through dessert.
Alejandro’s eyes flicked to hers.
“And who said I’m acting?” he murmured.
Lucia forgot how to breathe for a moment.
By midnight, the lights softened and the couple began saying their goodbyes. Lucia realized she’d started looking at Alejandro like she’d known him forever…
and at the same time, like she knew absolutely nothing about him.
When she finally got home to her small apartment and slipped off her heels, she told herself it was just a strange story to tell Mariana.
A one-night performance.
Nothing more.
She didn’t know that the whisper—“Pretend you’re with me”—had just opened the door to the most dangerous chapter of her life.
Because three days later…
As Lucia left the newsroom, exhausted, a black car rolled smoothly to the curb.
The window lowered slowly.
The same face.
The same gray eyes.
And then Alejandro said something that made her blood run cold.
The ballroom of the five-star hotel in Zurich looked like it had been torn straight from a glossy magazine and pinned to the fantasies of people who never glanced at price tags.
Crystal chandeliers poured soft light over tables draped in white linen so crisp it looked as if it had been ironed by angels. White roses sat in flawless arrangements, each bloom identical, every stem trimmed to the exact same height. Waiters moved across the floor with the quiet confidence of dancers who knew the choreography by heart.
Everything was polished. Curated. Intentional.
And yet, in the center of all that shine, Lucía Fernández felt like a smear on pristine glass.
She sat alone at a small table tucked against the wall—close enough to count as “included,” distant enough to be overlooked. Her navy dress was elegant, the kind you buy for one important night and promise yourself you’ll wear again. Her hair was pinned neatly at the nape of her neck, her lipstick the shade she reserved for occasions that mattered.
Still, she felt misplaced. Like she’d stepped into someone else’s life by mistake.
Every time she raised her eyes, she saw Mariana—her best friend since college—radiant at the head table in a dress that made her look impossibly happy. Mariana had always dreamed of this: the fairy-tale venue, the perfect flowers, the crowd of people with expensive watches and carefully practiced smiles.
And every time Lucía lowered her gaze, she heard what people thought when they assumed she couldn’t hear them.
“She came alone, didn’t she?”
“I heard she’s married to her job.”
“Honestly… she looks out of place.”
Lucía traced the rim of her wine glass, the way people touch a nervous habit without noticing they’re doing it. She pretended to listen to the music. Pretended she wasn’t paying attention. Pretended it didn’t bother her.
She was a financial journalist. She questioned billionaires for a living. She stared down CEOs who could move markets with a single sentence. She’d built her career on asking questions that made powerful people uncomfortable.
But at that table, surrounded by laughter and couples leaning toward one another, the weight of being alone pressed harder than any interview she’d ever faced.
She checked her watch.
Eight o’clock.
Too early to leave without appearing rude.
Too late to pretend it didn’t hurt.
Lucía took a measured sip of wine and told herself she’d stay another hour. She’d smile, hug Mariana when the moment came, then escape back to the quiet safety of her apartment—her coffee machine, her spreadsheets, her solitude.
She was just about to stand—something about the restroom, something polite—when the atmosphere around her shifted.
It wasn’t the music. It wasn’t the lighting.
It was the sudden, unmistakable awareness that someone important had entered her space.
A man approached her table with a kind of calm authority that didn’t ask permission. He didn’t hover or hesitate. He pulled out the chair beside her and sat down as if it had been reserved for him all evening.
Lucía froze. Her first instinct wasn’t fear—it was suspicion.
Who sits at a stranger’s table during a wedding?
He was tall, broad-shouldered, wearing a perfectly tailored charcoal suit that looked expensive without advertising itself. His dark hair was neatly styled, polished but not fussy. His face was all sharp lines—cheekbones, jaw, seriousness—like someone who didn’t waste time on things that didn’t matter.
But it was his eyes that held her.
Gray. Storm-cloud gray. A gaze that didn’t flicker or roam the room, didn’t perform or seek approval.
The room noticed him instantly. Lucía felt it—heads turning, whispers rising, a ripple moving across nearby tables.
He didn’t look at any of them.
He leaned toward Lucía as if they were old acquaintances and murmured, low and direct:
“Pretend you’re with me.”
Her heart jolted so hard it felt like it struck her ribs.
“Excuse me?” Lucía leaned back slightly, instinctively creating space.
His expression stayed calm. Focused.
He wasn’t watching her—he was watching a table across the room where several guests had openly turned to stare.
“They’re talking about you,” he said quietly. “And they’re talking about me.”
Lucía blinked, trying to understand what kind of situation she’d just been dropped into.
“If you don’t mind,” he continued, “let’s act like we arrived together. You stop being ‘the woman sitting alone,’ and I avoid a setup I have zero interest in.”
Lucía let out a short, incredulous laugh.
“So I’m supposed to play girlfriend for a complete stranger?”
For the first time, he turned fully toward her.
His gray eyes locked onto hers—cool on the surface, with something restless beneath, something she couldn’t quite identify.
“Just pretend,” he said. “Trust me. We both benefit.”
Lucía should have said no.
She should have stood up, walked away, and told Mariana later about the strange billionaire who treated weddings like networking events.
But then she felt the stares again—those small, cutting glances that carried judgment like perfume.
And something stubborn inside her refused to be anyone’s pity story tonight.
She lifted her chin.
“Fine,” she said. “But how far are you planning to take this performance?”
A faint curve touched the corner of his mouth—a smile that looked rarely used.
“Leave it to me.”
He draped his arm along the back of her chair with easy familiarity. Not possessive. Not forced. Just intimate enough that nearby guests leaned closer and whispered louder.
Lucía’s pulse didn’t slow.
“Who are you?” she asked quietly.
He answered without ceremony.
“Alejandro Morel.”
The name slid down her spine like ice water.
Lucía knew it. Everyone in her world did.
Alejandro Morel wasn’t just wealthy—he was the man in Swiss finance. The CEO whose decisions made headlines, whose silence created enemies. The press called him the Wolf of Zurich because he was ruthless, efficient, and famously untouchable.
He almost never smiled for cameras.
He almost never gave interviews.
And people said he didn’t bother with a personal life because he saw it as a distraction.
Lucía stared at him as if the chandeliers had suddenly tilted.
Perfect, she thought. I’m fake-dating the most inaccessible billionaire in the country.
Alejandro reached for the wine bottle with the ease of someone who never felt out of place and refilled her glass as though it were the most natural thing in the world.
Across the room, the staring shifted. Whispers quieted. Eyes flicked between Lucía and Alejandro, recalculating the story they’d been telling themselves.
Lucía felt something she hadn’t felt all night.
Control.
Alejandro introduced her to a passing guest as “someone very special.”
He said it so calmly that no one questioned it. They simply nodded, smiled too hard, and moved on.
When an older man made a thinly veiled comment about “career women” and “not settling down,” Alejandro responded with a dry remark that made the man laugh awkwardly and retreat.
Lucía should have been irritated that she needed a billionaire to shield her from strangers.
Instead, she was… entertained.
And more than a little intrigued.
“You’re a good actor,” she murmured later, as dessert arrived on plates that looked like artwork.
Alejandro glanced at her without turning his head.
“And who said I’m acting?”
Lucía nearly dropped her spoon.
She searched his face for the joke.
He didn’t give her one.
That was how the night changed—quietly, completely.
By midnight, as guests hugged and the newlyweds prepared to leave, Lucía realized she’d spent the last hour laughing more than she had in weeks.
She told herself it was the novelty.
The adrenaline.
The absurdity of it all.
Nothing else.
When she finally got home and kicked off her heels, she repeated the same sentence in her mind like a warning:
It was just a performance.