Heir to a fortune so vast it had its own Wikipedia page. Handsome in that effortless way wealthy men are, with tailored suits that fit like second skin and a smile that had launched a thousand magazine covers.

We met at a charity gala I was working as a coat check girl.

He asked me my name. I told him. He asked me to dinner. I laughed and said I could not afford the restaurants he probably went to.

He showed up at my apartment the next day with takeout Chinese food and a bottle of wine that probably cost more than my entire wardrobe.

We ate on my fire escape, legs dangling over the city, and he told me he was tired of people who only saw his last name.

I told him I did not care about his last name. I cared about whether he could solve a differential equation.

He could not.

I fell in love anyway.

For six months, we lived in a bubble. He took me to places I had only seen in movies. I showed him parts of the city tourists never found.

He said I made him feel real.

I said he made me feel seen.

When he proposed, it was not with a ring the size of a small country. It was with his grandmother’s simple gold band, sitting on a bench in Central Park at sunrise.

I said yes because I loved him.