From a young age, Emily had learned one truth: beauty was currency, and marriage was the most lucrative contract. While her mother tried to drill recipes for pickled vegetables into her, Emily watched with pity. Her parents lives, consumed by penny-pinching worries, served as her prime example of what to avoid.
Listening to her mothers late-night tears, the girl made a vow: *My home will smell of expensive perfume, not vinegar. Ill have a grand flat and a housekeeper.*
Emily knew her family couldnt afford private education, so she studied relentlessly, choosing university with foresightlaw. It was a field of professionals who earned well and, crucially, wealthy clients. She never hid her views on love, declaring even in her first year, *I want a rich husband. Love isnt romanceits a smart investment.*
Her friends teased her:
Emily, millionaires dont grow on trees!
No, she countered, but theyre always suing over money. Until then, there are art galleries, business seminars, and fine restaurants. Why waste my life in a kitchen when nature gave me everything to win the jackpot?
She admired her reflectiontall, poised, with long chestnut hair and striking eyes. Undoubtedly beautiful, she intended to make the most of it. Men around her fell into two types: those who stammered nervously and those who saw her as a trophy. Naturally, she chose the latter. She wasnt looking for lovejust a profitable venture.
By her third year, Emily switched to part-time study and took a secretarial job at a courthouse. *I need experience and access to the right circles,* she told her mother, who had tried to dissuade her.
Her chance came swiftly.
A defendant in one casea distinguished man in his fiftiesnoticed not just her looks but her sharp mind. After the trial, he offered her a job as his advisor.
Her life became a whirlwind of negotiations, cocktail parties, and society events. She was his secret weaponcharming partners, easing tensions, remembering every detail. For a while, she hoped hed leave his wife for her, but he was unmovable.
Family is the foundation, Emily, hed say, adjusting his cufflinks. Youre my penthouse suite.
So she changed tactics, eyeing his circle instead. Then she found her new targethis business partner, Richard Whitmore. A chain of luxury car dealerships, unattractive, balding, with tired eyes. Perfect prey.
She engineered their meeting*accidentally* bumping into him, *forgetting* a scarf, asking clever questions during his speech. He took the bait instantly.
Their first date lasted five hours. Richard spoke of business, loneliness, and craving sincerity. Emily listened, nodding adoringly, while thinking, *How dull. But how useful. Ill endure it.*
Within a year, she had a car. Within two, a lavish central-London flat. She wasnt a caged birdshe was a skilled lawyer, often proving indispensable. After every successful deal, she splurged on clothes, cosmetics, treatments. She relished being his most expensive accessory.
When her mother lamented her wasted youth on empty affection, Emily smirked.
Relax. Hes mine. Hes just stalling.
She was certainuntil five years passed, her thirtieth birthday loomed, and still no ring. When she hinted at marriage, Richard chuckled. Why bother with paperwork, darling? Were happy as we are.
Then came the thunderclap.
He took her to *their* restaurantthe site of their first date. She wore a new dress, anticipating a proposal.
Emily, Ive married, he said, sipping wine.
What? Who?
Louise. From accounting. You wouldnt know her. Shes different. Bakes incredible pies. Pickles cucumbers like my mothers. With her, its peaceful.
Her world shattered.
Youre joking, she hissed. Some plain, pickling mouse stole my future?
No one *stole* your place, he said, absurdly earnest. Youre the most beautiful woman Ive ever known. But a wife she must be kind, nurturing. Thats not you, my rose. Agreed?
It wasnt a slapit was annihilation. Somehow, she kept composure, exiting with icy dignity. *Hell regret this.*
Desperate, she stopped taking precautions. Two months later, a test showed two lines. Weeks after, she marched into his office, radiant.
Richard, were having a baby. *Your* heir. She handed him the ultrasound.
She expected tears. Instead, he paled.
What have you done? he whispered. Blackmail?
Hes *yours*!
I thought you were smarter than gold-diggers. Did you really think Id let you leech off me forever?
I *love* you, she lied.
I wont raise a bastard with a mistress, he snapped. Two choices: end it, or
Too late. Ive planned everything.
He glared, then hissed, Fine. Have it. Disappear. Youll get a lump sumenough to live comfortably. But if anyone learns who fathered it, you get *nothing*.
The amount was staggeringenough for a lifetime. He wasnt just buying silence; he was buying his childs future. Her stomach dropped. He was colder, shrewder than shed imagined.
Yet even defeated, she bargained.
Increase it by twenty percent. And draft it as a *gift*legally airtight. So your *cozy* wife cant contest it later.
A flicker of respect crossed his face. Deal.
Two weeks later, the money arrived. Payment for silence and exile. Not the fairy tale shed dreamed of, but shed sold her youth dearly.
Before birth, she moved townsbought a modest flat. The money spared her panic, let her think. When her son turned six months, she hired a nanny. Instead of an office grind, she freelancedonline consultations, legal documents. She invested frugally, mostly in education: international law courses, English tutors. Suddenly, she *needed* to prove she was more than a pretty face.
It was a slow climbsleepless nights, exhaustion, guilt whenever her son, William, smiled with his fathers eyes. *But we have a head start,* shed think. *This money is ours.*
Years passed.
Emily built a small law firm specializing in remote business services. She had a name, a reputation, security. She no longer sought a millionaire husbandshed *become* what she once chased: strong, independent, self-made. The path just hadnt been through a bedroombut through cold strategy, relentless work, and lifes brutal lesson.
**Sometimes, the price of ambition isnt paid in goldbut in the dreams you outgrow.**





