The penthouse on the 51st floor of the Meridian Tower had always felt like a stage to Damien Cross. At thirty-nine, he had built a fortune in luxury real estate and private aviation, turning empty land into gleaming skyscrapers and broken dreams into private jets. Women came and went, drawn to the money, the power, the lifestyle. Damien had learned the hard way that love was often just another transaction.

So when he met Sophia Laurent โ a gentle, soft-spoken elementary school teacher who volunteered at animal shelters on weekends โ he decided to run the ultimate test. For three weeks, he pretended to have been in a serious car accident that left him paralyzed from the waist down. He hired a private medical team to maintain the illusion, used a wheelchair, and moved into a specially adapted ground-floor apartment in one of his buildings. Only his closest assistant knew the truth.
Sophia visited every single day.
She brought homemade soup, read to him from her favorite books, helped him with the exercises the โdoctorsโ prescribed, and never once complained about the sudden change in their relationship. When Damien deliberately made things difficult โ snapping at her, testing her patience, pretending to be depressed and hopeless โ she responded with quiet kindness. She never asked for money. She never pulled away. She simply showed up, again and again, with the same gentle smile and steady hands.
Damien watched her carefully, waiting for the mask to slip. He was certain that once the novelty wore off and the reality of caring for a โparalyzedโ man set in, she would reveal her true colors โ the gold-digger he believed every woman eventually became.
On the twenty-second day, he decided to end the test.
He was sitting in the wheelchair in the living room when Sophia arrived with a small bouquet of wildflowers she had picked herself. She arranged them in a vase, then knelt beside him and took his hands.
โI know this has been incredibly hard,โ she said softly. โBut I want you to know Iโm not going anywhere. Weโll figure this out together. I love you, Damien. Not your money, not your success. Just you.โ
Damien felt something crack inside his chest. He had expected relief, maybe even triumph. Instead, he felt shame.
He was about to confess everything when the doorbell rang.
A delivery driver stood outside with a large envelope. Damien signed for it, opened the envelope, and froze.
Inside were photographs โ clear, high-resolution images of Sophia in the arms of another man. The timestamps were from the previous week. The man was tall, handsome, and very much able-bodied. In one photo, they were kissing. In another, they were laughing together outside a small cafรฉ.
Damienโs world tilted.
He looked up at Sophia, his voice ice-cold. โWho is he?โ
Sophiaโs face went pale. She stared at the photos, then back at Damien, confusion turning to horror.
โThatโs my brother,โ she whispered. โHeโs visiting from out of state. I wanted to introduce you, but with everything that happenedโฆ I didnโt want to burden you.โ
Damien laughed bitterly. โYour brother? Do you think Iโm stupid? Iโve seen the way you look at him.โ
Tears filled Sophiaโs eyes. โDamien, I swear to you โโ
โGet out,โ he said, his voice shaking with rage and betrayal. โGet out of my life. The test is over. I was never paralyzed. It was all a game to see if youโd stay. And you failed. You failed spectacularly.โ
Sophia stood there for a long moment, tears streaming down her face. Then she did the one thing Damien never expected.
She knelt down again, took his hands โ even though he tried to pull away โ and looked him straight in the eyes.
โI stayed because I love you,โ she said, her voice trembling but steady. โNot because I thought you were broken. I stayed because when youโre kind, when you let the walls down, youโre the man I fell in love with. I donโt care if you can walk or not. I care that you feel safe enough to be real with me. But if you can lie about something this big just to test meโฆ then maybe you never trusted me at all.โ
She stood up, wiped her tears, and walked to the door.
โI hope you find what youโre really looking for, Damien. I really do.โ
The door closed softly behind her.
Damien sat in the wheelchair โ the one he no longer needed โ feeling the weight of his own cruelty crash down on him. He had destroyed the only genuine relationship he had ever had, all because he couldnโt believe someone could love him without an agenda.