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His Substitute Bride Became His Obsession
His Substitute Bride Became His Obsession
Author: Sir Josh

Chapter 1: The Stolen Signature

Author: Sir Josh
last update publish date: 2026-07-11 00:24:48

My name was on the fabric tag. It just wasn’t on the contract.

I stood in the doorway of Adrian’s office with a folder shaking in my hand, and the first thing I thought, the stupid, useless first thing, was that I recognized the stitching on page twelve. My stitching. My Phoenix collection, laid out in glossy renders under a manufacturing agreement that had already been signed. Not by me.

By him.

“Adrian.” My voice came out smaller than I wanted. “What is this.”

He didn’t even look up from his phone right away. That was the thing about my husband, he had a way of making you wait, like whatever was on that screen mattered more than whatever was standing in his doorway. When he finally lifted his eyes to me, there was nothing there. No guilt. No flinch. Just a kind of tired patience, like I was a meeting that had run long.

“You weren’t supposed to see that yet.”

Not *I’m sorry*. Not *let me explain*. Just an admission dressed up as an inconvenience, like I’d walked in on him mid-sentence instead of mid-theft.

My hands went cold first. Then my chest. I’d designed the Phoenix line at two in the morning for eight straight months, hunched over my drafting table with coffee gone bitter beside me, ripping out seams until my fingers bled at the cuticles. I remembered the exact night I sketched the signature wing sleeve, how I’d shown it to Adrian first because he was my husband and I trusted him with the only thing that was fully, completely mine.

“You filed my collection under your name.” I made myself say it out loud because some sick part of me needed to hear how insane it sounded. “You signed a manufacturing deal. Using my designs. Under *your* name.”

“Our name, Evelyn.” He set the phone down finally. Stood. Buttoned his jacket like he was preparing for a very reasonable conversation. “We’re married. What’s mine is yours.”

“Then why isn’t my name on the contract?”

He didn’t answer that. He walked to his desk instead, opened the drawer, and pulled out a manila envelope that had clearly been sitting there, waiting. Waiting for this exact moment, I realized, the way you wait to lance a wound once it’s good and ready to burst.

He held it out to me.

I didn’t take it. My arms wouldn’t move. There’s a particular kind of cold that isn’t about temperature, it starts somewhere behind your sternum and spreads out through your ribs until your fingers go numb from the inside, and that’s what I felt looking at that envelope, like my body already knew what was in it before my mind caught up.

“What is that.”

“Divorce papers.” He said it the way another man might say *I picked up milk*. “I had Oliver draw them up last week.”

The floor didn’t move. I want to be honest about that, because in the books I used to read as a girl the floor always moved, the room always tilted, but mine didn’t. Mine stayed exactly where it was, cold marble under cold feet, and I stood very still in the middle of it while my entire life quietly ended.

“Last week.” My voice cracked on the second word. “You’ve had these for a week.”

“I was waiting for the right time.”

“And stealing my designs first was part of the right time?”

Something flickered across his face then, the closest thing to shame I’d get from him, gone before I could hold onto it. “The Voss deal needed a name attached that carried weight in the industry. Yours doesn’t. Not yet.”

I laughed. It surprised both of us, that laugh, sharp and wrong in the quiet office. “So you decided to just take it.”

“I built the partnership, Evelyn. You made some sketches.”

*Some sketches.* Eight months of my life, folded down into two dismissive words, and he said it so easily, like he’d practiced saying it easily, like he’d rehearsed this exact conversation in a mirror somewhere and decided *some sketches* was the line that would end it fastest.

I finally looked past him, out through the glass wall of his office toward the empty hallway, because I couldn’t look at him anymore without wanting to be sick. And that’s when I saw her.

Vanessa Sterling. Standing by the elevator bank in a red coat too warm for the season, watching us through the glass like she was watching a show she already knew the ending to. She didn’t look away when I caught her eye. She just tilted her head, the smallest motion, almost sympathetic, if sympathy could look that much like satisfaction.

“Is that why.” The words came out of me before I’d fully formed the thought. “Is that what this is about?”

Adrian followed my gaze. I watched his jaw shift, watched something soften in his face that had never once softened for me in three years of marriage, and I understood everything in that one unguarded second.

“She’s back,” he said. Quiet. Almost reverent, the bastard. “Vanessa’s back.”

“You’re leaving me for a woman who left you first.”

“I never stopped—” He caught himself. Ran a hand through his hair. When he spoke again his voice had gone clinical, like he was closing out a business quarter instead of a marriage. “You reminded me of her, Evelyn. That’s, that’s why I married you, if I’m honest. You had this quiet fire she used to have. I thought maybe I could, I don’t know. Rebuild something. But you’re not her. You were never going to be her.”

I stood there and let that land, all of it, every syllable, because there wasn’t anywhere else for it to go. Three years. Three years of early mornings and late nights and defending him at family dinners when my mother called him beneath the Hart name, three years of believing the tired eyes and the long hours meant he was building something *with* me instead of building an exit around me.

“Get out of my office,” he said, gently, like he was doing me a kindness. “Take the rest of the day. Oliver’s assistant will call you about signing.”

My legs carried me out before my mind agreed to it. I don’t remember the elevator ride down. I remember the manila envelope in my hand, because at some point I must have taken it after all, my fingers closing around it on pure animal reflex, the way you catch something falling even when you know it’s already broken.

I remember Vanessa’s perfume in the lobby, expensive and cold, like frost on glass.

And I remember standing on the sidewalk outside the building I used to think of as half mine, watching my breath fog in the October air, realizing I had exactly three things left in the entire world.

A grandmother who loved me.

A sketchbook Adrian hadn’t found yet.

And a family who was about to make everything so, so much worse.

My phone buzzed in my coat pocket. My mother’s name lit up the screen, and something in my stomach dropped before I even answered, some old, tired instinct that had learned a long time ago that my mother never called with good news.

“Evelyn.” Her voice was clipped, already impatient, like I was interrupting something. “Where are you. Your father needs you home tonight. There’s something we need to discuss.”

I looked up at the glass tower behind me, at the floor where my husband, my *ex*-husband, was probably already calling Vanessa Sterling to tell her the deed was done.

“Mom,” I said, and my voice came out steadier than I felt, steadier than I had any right to feel. “I don’t think tonight is a good time.”

“It’s not a request.” A pause, and then, colder. “It’s about your future. Be home by seven.”

She hung up before I could answer. I stood there with the phone against my ear, listening to a dial tone that felt like the last sound of the life I used to know, and somewhere behind my ribs a small, exhausted voice whispered that whatever was waiting for me at seven o’clock, it was going to cost me something I hadn’t lost yet.

I just didn’t know yet how right I was.

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