The walls of my fatherâs study used to be lined with framed awards and magazine covers.
Now, theyâre just dusty reminders of what used to be.
He sits across from us, behind the desk that once ruled a business empire. His fingers tap the surface, steady and slow. Every tap is a countdown. And when it stops, the silence becomes unbearable.
âIâve made the decision,â he says.
His voice is tired, but his tone is final.
He doesnât look at me.
He looks at my sister.
My twin.
Eliora.
âYouâll marry Adrian Donavan.â
Just like that.
Not a request. A command.
Eliora doesnât flinch. She crosses her legs, raises one brow, and says, âExcuse me?â
âYou heard me.â
âNo, I didnât. I thought I heard you say youâre marrying me off to a man I donât know, like itâs 1823.â
My father sighs and stands. His suit is rumpled. He hasnât shaved. This isnât the man who once dined with prime ministers.
âThis is the deal,â he says. âDonavan invests fifty million into Vaughn Corp. In return, we merge families. Marriage. Itâs clean. Simple.â
âItâs disgusting,â Eliora snaps. âYouâre selling your daughter.â
âIâm saving my company,â he fires back. âYou think I enjoy this? Weâre drowning, and I finally have a lifeline. Donavan doesnât want random shares. He wants blood connection.â
âAnd you offered mine?â
âYouâre not a child. You know how these things work.â
âDo I?â
He slams a folder onto the desk. The contract. Signed. Sealed.
âI already agreed,â he says. âYouâll do it. Or youâll pack your things and leave this house. I wonât support disloyalty.â
âDamn right you wonât,â she mutters.
I sit frozen. Watching. Breathing. Trying not to take sides even though everything in me wants to scream.
Eliora stands, fists clenched.
âSo thatâs it? My lifeâs just a transaction?â
My father doesnât answer.
Which is answer enough.
Later that night, in our room, she throws open every drawer she owns.
Clothes fly. Shoes hit walls. Zippers rip. Her frustration is loud.
âYouâre really going through with it?â I ask.
âI donât have a choice,â she says. âAnd neither do you. This affects all of us.â
âYou could say no.â
âAnd be disowned? No thanks. I like eating.â
I help her fold a blouse, but she snatches it back.
âIâm not marrying him because I want to. Iâm marrying him because Dad failed. Weâre paying for his mistakes.â
âYouâre doing it for the family,â I say, trying to comfort her.
âNo,â she whispers. âIâm doing it because he left me no other option.â
Vaughn Corp is crumbling. My father is desperate. Godwin Donavanâricher, colder, sharperâoffered a bailout disguised as an alliance. His son, Adrian, doesnât need a partner. He needs a wife to keep the Donavan legacy in the bloodline. Eliora became the price for survival. There was no courtship. No choice. No warmth. Just a dress, a venue, and a signature.
The wedding happens two weeks later
A rush of arrangements. A blur of silk and secrets.
They donât call it a wedding. They call it a merger.
I stand beside her in the mirror.
She wears white. The expensive kind. Lace sleeves. High neck. No smile.
âYou okay?â I ask.
âNo,â she says, and clips in her earrings. âBut I will be.â
Dad walks her down the aisle like a man handing over stock.
The guests are powerful. Important. Silent.
No one asks if sheâs happy.
No one cares.
Adrian Donavan is tall and clean-cut, with perfectly tailored cuffs and amber eyes that donât waver. His expression is unreadableâcontrolled, reserved, perhaps detached. He says his vows like he's reading terms and conditions. His hands are steady, his voice flat. No affection. No emotion.
When it ends, they donât kiss. They shake hands.
Literally.
Itâs not a love story.
Itâs a transaction.
The reception is worse. Stiff. Formal. Cold.
I watch them sit side by side, not touching. He speaks only when spoken to. She sips her champagne like itâs poison.
âAny sparks?â I ask when I sneak up beside her briefly.
âOnly the ones in my brain trying not to explode,â she says.
Adrian disappears halfway through. No one notices.
Or maybe no one dares ask.
Later, I peek into the suite theyâre to share.
The bedâs untouched. The champagne unopened, Two chairs sit by the window, each one empty.
This isnât a honeymoon.
It's an exile
The next morning, she comes down for breakfast in a sleek black robe, her hair already tied back.
âSleep well?â I ask.
She stares into her cup. âHe left after midnight. Didnât say a word. Didnât even look at me.â
âMaybe heâs nervous.â
âMaybe he doesnât care.â
She sips her coffee.
âHe said weâll âease into it.â Like weâre business partners instead of husband and wife.â
âMaybe thatâs all he wants,â I say gently.
âToo bad. Heâs stuck with me.â
I nod. But something about the way she says it makes my stomach turn.
The housekeeper calls her for a fitting at the Donavan estate. She leaves without a hug. Sheâs never been the hugging type.
I watch the car drive away.
Black windows. An empty seat beside her. A future thatâs already starting to feel like a cage.
She stares out the window like sheâs head
ing to her own execution.
Sheâs married now. To a stranger. For the sake of a father who sold her future to save his past. And none of us know what comes next.
The silence is louder than the truth.Adrian stands across from me, holding the DNA test results. His jaw is clenched. His eyes are unreadable. And I know, at this moment, nothing will ever be the same.âYouâre pregnant,â he says flatly.I nod.âWith my child.âAnother nod.âAnd youâre not my wife.âI couldn't even answer.He tosses the envelope onto the glass table. It flutters like a dying leaf.Eliora is behind him, arms crossed, face triumphant. Sheâs wearing her victory like perfume, strong enough to choke me.âYou lied to me,â Adrian says.âI didnât mean to..ââYou slept beside me. Ate with me. Kissed me. And all this time, you were her.âMy voice is barely a whisper. âI was just trying to protect everyone.âHe laughs once. Dry and bitter. âProtect? You pretended to be someone else and ended up carrying my child. Thatâs not protection. Thatâs manipulation.âEliora steps forward.âShe used me. Lied to you. Lied to me.ââStop,â I murmur.âShe stole my marriage.ââYou gave it away.
I canât breathe.The moment she said,âIâm pregnantâ,my world tilted.She was never supposed to be the one.I was the replacement, the backup plan, the shadow wearing her face. And yet here I am⌠living a life that doesnât belong to me, falling in love with a man who was never mine, only to lose everything again because of one test. One line.âYouâre sure?â I ask.Her voice is ice. âYes.âI stare at my reflection in the car window. Same hair. Same eyes. Same lips. But none of this belongs to me.She gives me a look like sheâs already won.âIâll return before the end of the week.ââNo.âHer brows shoot up. âExcuse me?âI turned to her. âYou said I had until there was an heir. Well, Iâm still carrying that part out.ââYou mean Iâm carrying that part out,â she snaps, placing a protective hand over her stomach.I sigh. âThen let me handle this for just a bit longer. Let me talk to Adrian. Ease it in.ââThereâs no easing in, Eliana. You had your time. Itâs my life. My husband. My child.ââA
Heâs different.Less guarded. More present.Heâs still Adrian,the man with a calendar tighter than a noose,but lately he lingers. At breakfast. On the balcony. In the hallway outside our bedroom, he wants to say something but doesnât know how.Itâs terrifying.And I hate that I love it.I should be thinking of my exit. The switch was never meant to last. But here I am, memorizing the way his eyes crease when he smiles, how his voice softens when he says my name.Except⌠itâs not my name.Every moment I spend with him is a lie wrapped in something dangerously close to real.We have dinner together again. No staff. No distractions.I make chicken in white wine sauce. He helps wash the dishes.Heâs relaxed. Curious. Watching me like Iâm someone new, and in his eyes, I am.âYouâve changed,â he says again.âI told you. Iâm adapting.ââFeels more like awakening.âI laugh, but itâs strained. âMaybe Iâm just finally⌠seeing you.âThat quiets him.Later, in the bedroom, he sits beside me on th
Chapter ThreeHe was gone by the time I woke up.No note. No text. No explanation.Just silence and spaceâhis usual.It was supposed to make it easier for me. Fewer questions, fewer chances to mess up. But it only reminded me how alien this life felt, even though I was now wearing it like my own skin.I spent most of the morning studying her things. Her perfumes. Her journals. Her playlists. The way she curled her ârâs in writing, how she signed her name with a little flick at the end. Every detail was important. I had to become her, not just look like her.The staff watched me like hawks. But I smiled, nodded, made polite small talk, and followed her routine to the letter.I couldnât afford mistakes. Not when the stakes were this high.Iâd already crossed the line.Now, I had to make sure no one noticed.At lunch, I ate in the sunroom.At 2:00 p.m., I called her best friend, Vanessa, like she used to do every Friday.At 4:00, I tried on dresses for the charity gala Adrian's mother wa
It started with three knocks on my door. Soft. Hesitant. But I knew it was her.I opened it without a word.Eliora stepped in like she hadnât just married into one of the richest families in the country. Like she wasnât supposed to be waking up beside her new husband in a mansion full of staff.She didnât sit. She didnât smile.âI need your help,â she said.I closed the door behind her. My fingers twitched.âHelp with what?âShe turned to face me, and I noticed the dark circles under her eyes, the chipped polish on her nails, the nervous way she twisted her wedding ring.âI canât have a child,â she whispered.The words sucked the air out of the room.âWhat do you mean?ââIâve tried,â she said. âWeâve been⌠doing it. Or pretending to. But it doesnât matter. It wonât work. My bodyâs broken.ââEliâŚ.!ââBecause of the abortions.âSilence.The room was still. My breath caught.She never talked about that. Not out loud. Not even to me.âI thought maybe it wouldnât matter,â she said, voice c
The walls of my fatherâs study used to be lined with framed awards and magazine covers.Now, theyâre just dusty reminders of what used to be.He sits across from us, behind the desk that once ruled a business empire. His fingers tap the surface, steady and slow. Every tap is a countdown. And when it stops, the silence becomes unbearable.âIâve made the decision,â he says.His voice is tired, but his tone is final.He doesnât look at me.He looks at my sister.My twin.Eliora.âYouâll marry Adrian Donavan.âJust like that.Not a request. A command.Eliora doesnât flinch. She crosses her legs, raises one brow, and says, âExcuse me?ââYou heard me.ââNo, I didnât. I thought I heard you say youâre marrying me off to a man I donât know, like itâs 1823.âMy father sighs and stands. His suit is rumpled. He hasnât shaved. This isnât the man who once dined with prime ministers.âThis is the deal,â he says. âDonavan invests fifty million into Vaughn Corp. In return, we merge families. Marriage.