“I was a Parsons-trained designer, but with my family drowning in over half a million dollars of debt, I delivered coffee just to survive. One clumsy mistake-spilling a latte in a corporate lobby-put me on the radar of the city's most ruthless billionaire, Christian Mercer. A week later, I wasn't fired. I was summoned to his office on the 85th floor, where he laid out a contract. He knew everything: my student loans, my mother's crippling medical bills, the foreclosure notices piling up on our kitchen table. He offered to wipe it all away, plus pay me five million dollars. The price was one year of my life as his wife. He called it a "mutually beneficial transaction," coldly stating my desperate circumstances made me the perfect, compliant candidate. I wasn't a person to him, just an asset to be acquired to solve a problem he refused to explain. But when I found the eviction notice taped to our apartment door, my pride was a luxury I could no longer afford. I signed his contract. After a sterile City Hall ceremony, he left me alone in his cold, empty penthouse with a final, chilling instruction. "The public part of our agreement begins now, Mrs. Mercer," he said, his voice void of any emotion. "Act accordingly."”