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"Marrying the Ice Queen CEO" Chapter 3

James looked at her. “Why are you telling me this?”

“Because I think we both made the same mistake,” Catherine said, pulling her legs up onto the couch—a gesture so casual it seemed out of place coming from her. “We thought asking for help meant admitting defeat, so we stopped asking. And we’ve been drowning alone ever since.”

“Is that what we’re doing now? Asking for help?”

“I think so. In the most complicated way possible.”

James almost smiled. “That sounds about right.”

The first month was awkward in ways neither of them had anticipated.

Catherine worked sixteen-hour days, came home after Sophie was asleep, and left before she woke up. James maintained his routine—breakfast, school drop-off, work, pickup, dinner, homework, bedtime—but now in a space that felt too large, too empty, too borrowed.

They communicated through notes left on the kitchen counter and texts about groceries and whose turn it was to refill Sophie’s medication.

Then Catherine’s assistant quit on a Friday with no notice, leaving Catherine with a presentation for the board on Monday and a schedule that had just exploded into chaos.

James found her at 2:00 in the morning, sitting at the dining table with her laptop, surrounded by papers and empty coffee cups, her hair escaping its pins and her eyes red-rimmed with exhaustion.

“You’re still awake,” he said.

“I have to finish this.” Her voice was thin, stretched too tight.

James looked at the papers, at the spreadsheets glowing on her screen, at the numbers that marched in columns like soldiers going to war. He recognized the format. Financial projections. Five-year growth models. Investor deck.

“Let me see.”

Catherine looked up. “James, you don’t have to.”

“Let me see,” he repeated, gentler this time.

She turned the laptop toward him. He scanned the data, his mind clicking into gear for the first time in three years. That old instinct waking up like muscle memory.

He saw it immediately—the discrepancy in the Q3 projections, the inconsistency between the revenue forecast and the actual cost structure, the optimistic assumptions that didn’t match the market data.

“This is wrong,” he said.

Catherine stiffened. “Excuse me?”

“The growth model—it’s overinflated by at least fifteen percent. If you present this to the board, they’ll tear it apart.”

He pulled the laptop closer, fingers already moving across the keys. “Your assumptions here—they’re based on last year’s market conditions, but the sector shifted in March. You need to recalibrate the baseline.”

He worked for twenty minutes. Catherine watched in silence. When he turned the screen back to her, the numbers had transformed—leaner, harder, more honest.

“This is what it actually looks like,” James said. “It’s not as pretty, but it’s real. And if you present this, you’ll have credibility. They’ll trust you’re not blowing smoke.”

Catherine stared at the screen, then at him. “How did you—”

“This is what I used to do. Before.”

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Her voice caught. “This is partner-level work.”

“I know.”

She closed her laptop carefully, like it might shatter. “Why are you working in accounting reconciliation?”

“Because that’s what was available when I needed to feed my daughter.”

Catherine was quiet for a long time. Then she said, “I want to offer you a position. Chief Financial Analyst. Directly under me. Full salary, benefits, equity options.”

“You don’t have to do that.”

“I’m not doing it because we’re married. I’m doing it because you just saved me from humiliating myself in front of the board. And because I’m realizing I’ve had someone brilliant sitting on the fourth floor for two years and I was too blind to notice.”

James felt something crack open in his chest—something he’d kept sealed tight since Sarah’s funeral.

“I don’t know if I can do that job anymore.”

“Why not?”

“Because what if I fail? What if I’m not as good as I used to be? What if I take your offer and prove that everyone was right to pass on me?”

Catherine reached across the table and took his hand. Her fingers were cold. “Then you fail, and we figure out what comes next.”

“But James—you’re already failing by not trying.”

He looked at their hands. The wedding band on his finger—the one they’d bought at a department store for forty dollars. The stranger who’d become his wife through a legal loophole, and who was now offering him back a piece of himself he’d thought was dead.

“Okay,” he said. “Okay.”

The board meeting was on Monday. Catherine presented the revised projections with James sitting in the back of the room, quiet and invisible.

The board members asked hard questions. Catherine answered every single one, her voice steady, her data airtight.

At the end, the chairman leaned back in his chair and said, “This is some of the most honest financial modeling I’ve seen from you, Catherine. Whatever you’re doing differently, keep doing it.”

After the meeting, in the elevator back to her office, Catherine turned to James. “Thank you.”

“You did all the talking. But you gave me the truth. That’s harder.”

The elevator doors opened. James followed her down the hall, and for the first time since he’d started working at this company, he felt like he belonged there.

That night, Sophie had a nightmare.

James woke to her crying, stumbled into her room to find her sitting up in bed, tears streaming down her face. “I dreamed Mommy was calling me and I couldn’t find her.”

He held her, rocked her, whispered the things you say when words don’t actually help.

Then he heard footsteps in the hall. Catherine appeared in the doorway, wearing a T-shirt and pajama pants, her hair loose around her shoulders. She looked different like this—younger, uncertain, human.

“Is everything okay?” she asked quietly.

Sophie lifted her head from James’s shoulder. “I miss my mommy.”

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Catherine came into the room and sat down on the edge of the bed. “Tell me about her.”

Sophie wiped her nose. “She was really pretty and she made the best pancakes. And she used to sing me songs at bedtime, but she made up the words because she didn’t know the real ones.”

“She sounds wonderful.”

“She was.” Sophie’s voice cracked. “Do you think she’s mad at Daddy for marrying you?”

James’s heart stopped.

Catherine didn’t flinch. She looked at Sophie with complete seriousness and said, “I think she loves your daddy very much. And I think she wants him to be happy, just like he wants you to be happy.”

“But what if Daddy forgets her?”

“He won’t,” Catherine said simply. “Love doesn’t work like that. You don’t run out of it. Your daddy loved your mommy. He still does. And that doesn’t mean he can’t build new love with other people. Love isn’t a pie where each slice makes the rest smaller. It’s more like a garden. The more you plant, the more you grow.”

Sophie thought about this. “That’s a good metaphor.”

Catherine blinked. “Thank you.”

“My teacher says metaphors are when you compare things to make them easier to understand. Yours was good.”

“Well, I’m glad.”

Catherine glanced at James, something soft in her expression. “Do you want me to stay until you fall back asleep?”

Sophie nodded.

Catherine settled in next to her, and Sophie curled up against her side, small and trusting. James sat on the other side of the bed, and the three of them stayed like that until Sophie’s breathing evened out into sleep.

In the hallway afterward, James said, “Thank you for that.”

“I meant it.”

“I know you did. That’s what makes it mean something.”

Catherine leaned against the wall, exhaustion pulling at her features. “My parents used to travel ten months out of the year. I saw them at Christmas and on my birthday. The rest of the time I had nannies. I swore if I ever had a family, I’d show up every day. Even when it was hard. Especially when it was hard.”

“You’re doing that now.”

“Am I?” She looked at him. “Or am I just fulfilling a contract?”

“Does it matter? You showed up.”

Something shifted in Catherine’s face. She pushed off the wall, started toward her room, then stopped.

“James… I don’t think this is just business anymore for me. I wanted you to know that.”

She disappeared into her room before he could respond.

James stood in the dark hallway, listening to the city’s distant hum, and felt the careful walls he’d built around his heart start to develop cracks.

The following weeks, things changed in ways both small and significant.

Catherine started coming home for dinner—not every night, but three or four times a week. She’d sit at the table with James and Sophie, asking about school, about homework, about the book Sophie was reading.

She was terrible at small talk—too direct, too earnest—but Sophie didn’t seem to mind. She’d chatter about her day, and Catherine would listen with the same intense focus she probably brought to board meetings.

James started his new position. The work was harder, more visible, more consequential. He had an office now with a door and a window that looked out at something other than a brick wall.

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