BUT ON THE NIGHT OF THEIR ANNIVERSARY, SHE SCREAMED WHEN HE REMOVED HIS “SKIN,” REVEALING THE MAN EVERYONE HAD DREAMED OF

Clara was a young woman full of dreams, yet imprisoned behind the bars of poverty.
Her father had fallen into a gambling addiction and sunk into debt amounting to 50 million pesos.
And the man he owed?
None other than Don Sebastian “Baste” Montemayor.
Don Baste was known across the country not only for his wealth, but for his appearance.
He weighed nearly 300 pounds (around 140 kilograms).
Morbidly obese, constantly sweating, scarred across the face, and always seated in a motorized wheelchair because, according to rumors, his weight made it impossible for him to walk.
Behind his back, people cruelly called him “The Billionaire Pig.”
THE DEAL
One night, Don Baste’s men arrived at Clara’s home.
“Pay the debt—or go to prison,” they threatened her father.
“We don’t have the money!” her father cried.
“Then I’ll give you my daughter! Clara! She’s young, beautiful, and hardworking! Marry her, Don Baste—take her in exchange for my debt!”
Clara’s eyes widened in terror.
“Dad?! Are you selling me?!”
But Clara had no choice.
To save her father’s life, she agreed to marry the man feared by everyone.
THE WEDDING
On the wedding day, the guests couldn’t stop whispering.
Clara stood glowing in her wedding gown—radiant and composed—beside Don Baste, who was drenched in sweat, gasping for air, with a spaghetti stain on his tuxedo.
“Poor girl,” someone whispered.
“She’s only in it for the money.”
“She must be disgusted at the thought of sharing a bed with him.”
Clara heard everything.
But she lifted her chin with pride.
She took out a handkerchief and gently wiped the sweat from Don Baste’s forehead.
“Are you alright, Don Baste?” she asked softly.
“Would you like some water?”
Don Baste froze.
He had expected disgust — but instead, he saw compassion.
Care.
“Water,” he whispered.
Throughout the ceremony, Clara stayed by his side.
When it was time for photos, she didn’t step away.
She held his hand—large, rough, and trembling.
THE TEST
After the wedding, they were taken to Don Baste’s mansion.
“You’ll sleep on the sofa,” Baste ordered inside the bedroom.
“I’m too big—you won’t be comfortable in the bed. And one more thing…
Clean my feet before I sleep. And feed me.”
Don Baste was testing her.
He pretended to be lazy.
Messy.
Rude.
Cruel.
“This food is awful!” he shouted, throwing his plate.
“You’re too slow! Wipe my back!”
For three months, Clara became his caretaker.
And yet, she never complained.
“I’m sorry, Don Baste. I’ll try harder tomorrow,” was always her gentle reply.
Every night, while Baste slept—or pretended to—Clara softly spoke as she massaged his swollen feet.
“I know you’re kind,” she whispered.
“Maybe you’re hurt because people wounded you with their words. Don’t worry. I’m here. I’m your wife. I won’t leave you.”
Baste heard every word.
And beneath his thick “skin,” his heart slowly softened.
THE GRAND CHARITY BALL
The night of the Grand Charity Ball arrived—the first time Baste would introduce Clara to high society.
He dressed her in a stunning red gown and expensive jewelry.
He himself wore a tuxedo, still tight around his massive body.
All eyes turned toward them as they entered the ballroom.
A woman approached—Vanessa, Baste’s former girlfriend from before he became “fat,” according to rumors. In truth, Vanessa was the one who shattered Baste’s trust in women.
“Oh my God, Sebastian,” Vanessa laughed.
“You’ve gotten even bigger! Is this the woman you bought? How much did she cost? She looks like a gold digger.”
Vanessa’s friends laughed.
“The perfect match—the beast and the paid woman.”
Baste lowered his head.
He waited for Clara to cry.
To step away.
To feel ashamed.
But he was wrong.
Clara released the wheelchair and stepped forward.
“Excuse me,” she said firmly.
“Do not call my husband a monster.”
Vanessa froze.
“Excuse me?”
“Yes, he’s big. Yes, he’s not as polished as your husbands,” Clara said loudly enough for everyone to hear.
“But this man has a heart bigger than all of yours combined. I married him because of debt—I admit that.
But I stayed because for three months, I saw the kindness you’re blind to because you only see appearances.”
Clara placed her hand on Baste’s shoulder.
“I am proud to be Mrs. Montemayor. And I would rather spend my life with this ‘pig’ than with plastic people like you.”
The entire ballroom fell silent.
Vanessa stood humiliated.
Baste looked at Clara—and saw courage, loyalty, and love.
She was the woman he had been waiting for.
“Clara,” Baste whispered.
“Let’s go home.”
THE TRUTH
Back at the mansion, Clara guided Baste into the bedroom.
“Shall I prepare your tea, Don Baste?” she asked gently.
“No,” Baste replied.
His voice changed.
It was no longer hoarse or raspy — it was deep, smooth, and undeniably captivating.
“Clara… look at me.”
Slowly, Baste stood up from the wheelchair.
Clara gasped.
“Y-you can stand?”
“There’s a lot I can do, Clara,” he said with a smile.
He turned to the mirror, reached behind his neck, and peeled away a thin strip of silicone.
Clara’s eyes widened.
Slowly, Baste began removing his disguise.
He took off the prosthetic mask that made his face look scarred and swollen.
He removed the 50-kilogram fat suit wrapped around his body.
He pulled off the bald wig.
Within minutes, the “Billionaire Pig” was gone.
Standing before Clara was a man in his early thirties — tall, muscular, sharp-featured, and breathtakingly handsome.
Sebastian Montemayor.
His true self.
Clara collapsed onto the bed in shock.
“W-who are you?”
Sebastian knelt before her and held her hands.
“It’s still me, Clara. Baste,” he said gently.
“B-but why? Why pretend?”
“I was exhausted,” Sebastian confessed.
“Every woman I met loved me for my looks and my money. When Vanessa betrayed me, I swore I would never marry again until I found someone who loved my soul—not my skin.”
Tears filled his eyes.
“So I wore a mask. I became a monster. I searched for a woman who could endure my smell, my weight, my anger.
And that woman was you. Tonight, you defended me. You loved me even when you thought I had nothing to give.”
“Sebastian…” Clara cried.
“You won the game, Clara. And as your reward, I give you all my wealth, my heart, and my true face.”
Clara embraced her husband.
Not because he was handsome.
But because their love had proven itself real.
The next morning, news exploded about Don Baste’s “miraculous transformation.”
The world was stunned to see the impossibly handsome billionaire standing beside his simple wife.
Vanessa—and even Clara’s own family—tried to approach them for money, but security stopped them.
“The doors of this mansion are open only to those with genuine hearts,” Sebastian said in an interview.
Clara and Sebastian lived happily ever after—
A living proof that true beauty is not seen by the eyes, but felt by the heart.

Part 2: The Price of the Mask
The morning after the revelation, the sunlight filtering through the sheer curtains of the Montemayor mansion felt different—sharper, more honest. Clara woke up not to the sound of a heavy man struggling to breathe, but to the sight of Sebastian sitting by the window, a Greek god in a silk robe, scrolling through a tablet with a focused, piercing gaze.
The “Pig Billionaire” was dead. In his place was a man so strikingly handsome it felt like a new kind of cruelty.
“You’re staring,” Sebastian said, his voice smooth as velvet, without turning around.
“I don’t know who you are,” Clara whispered, sitting up and pulling the sheets to her chest. “The man I cared for was grumpy and smelled of medicinal ointment. You… you look like a stranger.”
Sebastian stood and walked toward the bed. Every movement was athletic, graceful, and deliberate. He knelt by her side, the same way he had the night before. “The soul hasn’t changed, Clara. Only the shell. I am still the man who threw his plate to see if you’d yell. I am still the man who listened to you whisper to my feet while I pretended to sleep.”
But for Clara, the adjustment wasn’t so simple. She had fallen in love with a man she thought was broken, only to find out he was the one holding all the pieces.
The Vultures Descend
The “miraculous transformation” wasn’t just a shock to Clara; it was a siren call to every vulture in the country. Within forty-eight hours, the mansion gates were besieged.
First came Clara’s father, Ricardo. He didn’t come with an apology for selling her; he came with a grin and an open palm.
“My son-in-law!” Ricardo shouted through the intercom. “I knew there was greatness in you! Now that the debt is settled and you’re… well, looking like a movie star, surely you can spare a few million for your father’s new business venture?”
Sebastian stood in the monitoring room, his jaw tight. He looked at Clara. “Do you want me to let him in?”
Clara looked at the screen—at the man who had traded her like a commodity. “No,” she said, her voice trembling but certain. “He didn’t sell me to a billionaire. He sold me to a ‘monster.’ He doesn’t deserve the man behind the mask.”
Then came Vanessa. She didn’t come for money; she came for the prize she thought she had lost. She appeared at a high-society gala a week later, wearing a dress that left nothing to the imagination, sliding toward Sebastian like a serpent.
“Sebastian, darling,” she purred, ignoring Clara entirely. “What a delicious trick. We all knew you were eccentric, but this? It’s genius. Now that the joke is over, we can stop pretending with this… little servant girl, can’t we? You need a woman who matches your new face.”
The room went silent. Sebastian didn’t pull away. He looked at Vanessa with a cold, terrifying smile.
“You’re right, Vanessa,” he said. “The joke is over. But you’ve misunderstood the punchline. I didn’t wear that suit to find a woman who matched my face. I wore it to find a woman who didn’t.”
He turned to Clara and kissed her hand in front of everyone. “My wife is the only person in this room who is beautiful on the inside. Most of you… you’re just wearing a different kind of silicone.”
The Cracks in the Mirror
But drama isn’t always found in enemies; sometimes, it’s found in the mirror.
As the weeks passed, Clara began to withdraw. She felt like an ornament. When Sebastian was “Baste,” she was his strength, his hands, his caretaker. Now that he was Sebastian, he was the sun, and she was just a moon reflecting his light.
One night, she found him in his private gym, lifting weights with a ferocity that bordered on pain.
“Why do you still work so hard at it?” she asked. “The suit is gone. You’ve already won.”
Sebastian dropped the weights with a thunderous clang. He turned to her, sweat slicking his chest, his eyes dark. “Because I can still feel it, Clara. I can still feel the weight. I can still hear the laughter of people like Vanessa. I spent three years being a ‘pig’ to see who would stay, but the truth is, I became that person. I’m afraid that if I stop, the mask will become my reality again.”
Clara realized then that Sebastian’s disguise hadn’t just been a test for others—it was a prison for him. He was obsessed with perfection because he was terrified of being rejected again.
“You’re still wearing a suit, Sebastian,” she said softly, walking to him and placing her hand over his pounding heart. “This muscle, this face… it’s just another disguise to keep people from hurting you. You don’t have to be a billionaire or a monster or a god for me. I liked the man who needed me.”
The Final Test
The climax of their drama came when Sebastian’s company faced a hostile takeover orchestrated by Vanessa’s family and a group of disgruntled investors who felt “deceived” by his charade. They sued him, claiming his psychological state made him unfit to lead.
The court case was a circus. They brought in psychiatrists to argue that his “fat suit” was a sign of a fractured mind.
Clara took the stand.
“They call it a delusion,” the opposing lawyer sneered at her. “Tell us, Mrs. Montemayor, isn’t it true your husband forced you into a marriage under false pretenses? Isn’t it true he is a manipulator who enjoys wearing masks?”
Clara looked at Sebastian. He looked vulnerable, his hands gripping the mahogany table.
“He didn’t force me to love him,” Clara said, her voice echoing in the courtroom. “The world is full of people who pretend to be kind while being monsters. Sebastian is the only man I know who pretended to be a monster just to see if kindness still existed. If that’s a sickness, then I hope it’s contagious.”
The lawsuit was dismissed. But the victory felt hollow until they returned home.
Epilogue: The Soul’s Reflection
A year after their anniversary, there was no grand party.
Clara and Sebastian sat in a small garden they had planted themselves. There were no servants, no masks, and no debts. Sebastian had stepped down as CEO, handing the reins to a trusted board, choosing instead to run a foundation that provided reconstructive surgery for burn victims and those with physical scars—people who, like his “Baste” persona, were ignored by the world.
Clara was no longer the “servant girl.” She was a partner.
“Do you ever miss him?” Sebastian asked, leaning his head against her shoulder as the sun set. “The big guy? The one you had to feed?”
Clara laughed, a sound of pure gold. “Sometimes. He was very good at cuddling.”
Sebastian smiled, and for the first time, it wasn’t a “handsome” smile or a “monstrous” smile. It was just a man’s smile.
“I realized something, Clara,” he whispered. “The world dreams of the man I am now. But I only ever dreamed of the woman who would love the man I was then.”
In the end, the “Pig Billionaire” didn’t just find a wife; he found a mirror that showed him he was enough, with or without the skin. And Clara? She learned that the greatest wealth wasn’t the 50 million pesos that paid her father’s debt—it was the heart she had found hidden beneath a mountain of lies.