Every holiday dinner was the same — my parents’ polite smiles masking the same relentless questions: When are you getting married? Have you met someone yet? This year, I couldn’t face it. Sitting in my car near the park, I spotted a man on a bench in a worn coat, his eyes tired but kind. On impulse, I approached him with an outrageous proposal: “Would you pretend to be my fiancé for one weekend? I’ll give you a warm place to stay, clothes, and meals.”
His name was Christopher. After a shower, a haircut, and some new clothes, he looked completely different confident, handsome, and surprisingly charming. By the time we sat down to dinner at my parents’ house, I thought my plan had worked perfectly. Then my mother asked where he was from, and Christopher mentioned a car accident five years ago that had changed his life. My mother’s face went pale. She confessed she’d been in that accident — and claimed Christopher had been under the influence that night.
When I confronted him, he told me his side: his wife had died shortly before, and he was on doctor-prescribed sedatives for anxiety. He’d been driving carefully, but my mother had been speeding. Later, she admitted her fault and that she had taken money from him out of fear and guilt. She wanted to make it right.
I placed an ad in the paper asking him to meet me again. When he showed up, we talked honestly for the first time. It wasn’t about pretending anymore. By the end of that night, I realized the man I had chosen on a whim to be my fake fiancé had somehow become the man I truly loved.