My name is Marina, I’m 26 years old, and I come from a struggling family in the hot, sunbaked province of Cebu. My father passed away when I was young, and my mother has been sick for most of my life. I had to leave school in the 10th grade to start working—whatever jobs I could find—to help support us.
After years of hardship, I eventually found work as a live-in maid for one of the wealthiest families in Makati, Manila—the Del Rosarios, who lived in a sprawling estate in Forbes Park.
Adrian Del Rosario, my husband, is their only son. He’s handsome, highly educated, and always composed—but there was always a quiet wall around him, something distant. I spent nearly three years working in their home, learning to keep my head down and stay invisible. I never imagined I could belong in their world.
But then, one day, Clarissa Del Rosario—Adrian’s mother—called me into the formal living room, placed a marriage certificate in front of me, and made a surprising promise:
“Marina, if you agree to marry Adrian, the villa by Taal Lake will be in your name. It’s a wedding gift from our family.”
I was in shock. How could someone like me—a maid—be considered a match for their cherished son? At first, I thought it was a cruel joke, but the seriousness in Clarissa’s eyes told me otherwise. I couldn’t understand why they had chosen me. All I knew was that my mother was gravely ill, and her medical bills were more than I could ever afford. My mind urged me to decline, but my love for my mother—and the desperation I felt—pushed me to say yes.
The wedding was extravagant, held at Sofitel Philippine Plaza, Manila. I sat beside Adrian in a flowing white gown, still unable to believe it was real. But his expression remained cold, distant, as though he were guarding a truth I hadn’t yet uncovered.
That night, the suite was filled with the scent of fresh sampaguita and roses. Adrian stood across from me, dressed in a crisp white shirt, his face perfectly handsome yet shadowed by sadness. As he drew near, I trembled—then, the truth struck like a thunderclap.
Adrian wasn’t like other men. He had been born with a condition that prevented him from being a husband in the traditional sense. Suddenly, everything made sense—the luxury villa, the unexpected proposal, the rushed wedding. I wasn’t chosen because I was remarkable. I was chosen because they needed someone to appear as Adrian’s wife, someone who wouldn’t question the arrangement. I had been brought into the family for appearances.
Tears welled up in my eyes—I didn’t know if it was because of self-pity or pity. Adrian quietly sat down and said:
“I’m sorry, Marina. You don’t deserve this. I know you’ve sacrificed a lot, but my mother… she needs me to have a family to feel secure. I can’t go against her will.”
In the warm yellow glow of the room, I noticed Adrian’s eyes glistening with tears. In that moment, I realized—beneath his cold exterior was a man carrying silent pain. He and I were not so different after all—both shaped by circumstances beyond our control.
In the days that followed, our life together took on an unusual rhythm. There was no romantic affection like in typical marriages, but there was kindness, respect, and quiet companionship. Adrian treated me with genuine care—he greeted me warmly each morning, took me for walks along the shores of Taal Lake in the afternoons, and we shared peaceful dinners in the evenings. He no longer saw me as the maid I once was, but as someone by his side. That gentle respect touched me deeply, and although my heart began to stir, my mind reminded me: this marriage was never meant to be conventional.
Then one day, I overheard a private conversation between Clarissa and the family doctor. She was gravely ill with a heart condition and didn’t have much time left. Her greatest fear was leaving Adrian behind—alone and misunderstood. She had chosen me not as a transaction, but because she saw something in me: someone quiet, loyal, and unpretentious. Someone who wouldn’t walk away from Adrian because of his condition.
That truth shook me. I had believed I was just a stand-in—someone they could buy with a house. But I had been chosen because she trusted me. Because she hoped I would give Adrian the care and love she feared he’d never find.
That day, I made a silent vow: whatever this marriage turned out to be, I would never leave him.
One stormy night in Manila, Adrian suddenly collapsed. Panic overtook me as I rushed him to St. Luke’s Medical Center. Even while unconscious, he clutched my hand and murmured:
“If one day you get tired, leave. The villa is compensation. I don’t want you to suffer because of me…”
Tears flooded my eyes. Somewhere along the way, he had taken hold of my heart. I squeezed his hand and whispered back:
“No matter what, I will not leave. You are my husband—my family.”
When he regained consciousness and saw I was still there, his eyes filled with tears—this time, not of sadness, but of warmth. We both knew then: we didn’t need a traditional marriage, just a real one. Built not on perfection, but on quiet loyalty and mutual care.
The villa by Taal Lake stopped feeling like a gift. It became our home. I planted flowers outside, and Adrian set up a painting corner in the living room. At night, we’d sit together, listening to the rain tapping against the nipa huts and palm trees, sharing simple dreams and quiet joys.
Maybe true happiness isn’t about flawless love or a perfect life. Maybe it’s about finding someone who stays—even when things aren’t easy.
And I realized… I found that happiness. It began the night I trembled in uncertainty—and chose to stay.