FAZER LOGINPanni never intended to steal her twin sister’s life. She only agreed to help with one simple favor—pretend to be Annie for a single meeting. But the moment she stepped into an elite private restaurant and faced Jinyan Lu, the cold, brilliant CEO of Lu Corporation, she realized nothing about this meeting was simple. Jinyan, still bound by his late grandmother’s dying wish to “find someone who will stay by your side,” had prepared a contract marriage proposal. He believed the woman sitting before him—Panni in disguise—was the one who had already agreed to the arrangement. Bound by fear, circumstance, and her sister’s disappearance, Panni reluctantly stepped into a life that wasn’t hers, signing a contract that would entangle her fate with a man who trusted no one. As she plays the role of the polished, confident twin, Panni struggles to hide her true identity while navigating the cold walls of the Lu family mansion, the scrutiny of the company board, and the unspoken expectations placed upon the future Mrs. Lu. But her biggest challenge is Jinyan Lu himself—distant yet unexpectedly protective, calculating yet quietly vulnerable. What begins as a practical arrangement slowly turns into a dangerous emotional territory neither can control. When Jinyan starts falling for the woman he believes is Annie, Panni is torn between duty and desire, truth and revival. Every moment she stays by his side deepens the lie… and the attachment. But secrets don’t stay buried forever. When the real twin retraces and hidden agendas threaten the fragile bond forming between them, Panni must decide whether to walk away—or fight for a love built on borrowed identity.
Ver maisRain hammered against the windows of the speeding taxi, blurring the city lights into streaks of gold and blue. Su Panni tightened her grip on her phone, her pulse racing as her sister’s last frantic words echoed in her ear.
“Just go to my place—please! I’ll explain later!”
Explain later.
That was always Su Annie’s line, a promise that never came with answers.The taxi swerved through traffic, cutting through a storm that seemed determined to rip the night apart. Panni’s reflection in the window looked like a stranger—perfect makeup, curled hair, the expensive cream blazer Annie shoved at her earlier. She looked nothing like the exhausted, practical woman she truly was.
She looked like her twin.
But no amount of makeup could hide the dread clawing at her stomach.
“This is the address, miss.” The driver stopped in front of an upscale private restaurant, the kind reserved for politicians, billionaires, and people who didn’t work three part-time jobs to survive.
Panni stepped out into the storm’s assault. A valet rushed forward, umbrella in hand, clearly expecting someone important. She walked beneath it, shoulders tight, heart thundering. Her heels clicked sharply against marble tiles as she entered the lobby.
Warm light. Soft violin music. A receptionist who greeted her with a perfectly practiced smile.
“Miss Su? You’re expected. This way.”
Expected.
Her sister had set this up.Panni’s steps felt heavier with every stride down the private corridor. Rainwater slid from her coat, each droplet cold against her skin. She reached the final door just as the receptionist bowed and disappeared.
Panni exhaled once—shaky, uncertain—then pushed the door open.
And froze.
A single man sat inside the private dining room, framed by the amber light of a chandelier. He didn’t look up immediately; he didn’t need to. His presence filled the space even in silence.
Jinyan Lu.
CEO of Lu Corporation.
Power wrapped in precision; elegance sharpened into steel.
Panni had seen him in magazines, on television, across news headlines—but seeing him in person was different. His expression was calm, but his posture radiated command. When he finally raised his gaze toward her, the impact was immediate.
Cold. Intelligent. Assessing.
“You’re late,” he said—no greeting, no warmth.
Panni swallowed. “I—I’m sorry. The storm—”
“Storms are predictable. Being unprepared is not.” He closed the file in front of him. “Sit.”
The word wasn’t a request. It was a decision already made.
Panni moved stiffly into the chair opposite him, her pulse ringing in her ears. She had walked into the wrong room, the wrong meeting, the wrong life.
He opened the file again. “We will begin with the terms.”
“The… terms?” Panni whispered.
“For the marriage.”
Her breath stopped.
Marriage.
Her heart slammed painfully against her ribs. This wasn’t a business meeting. This wasn’t a misunderstanding that could be excused.
Her sister—her reckless, impossible sister—had thrown her into a contract marriage negotiation with Jinyan Lu.
Panni felt the floor tilt beneath her.
“There must be some mistake—”
“There is no mistake,” he cut in, his tone smooth but unyielding. “You agreed to the meeting. You agreed to the arrangement.”
Agreed?
Her sister must have made the agreement. But Annie wasn’t here.Panni’s voice came out barely audible. “Can you… tell me why you need this?”
“It isn’t why I need it.” His jaw tightened, the first flicker of emotion breaking through. “It’s why I must honor it.”
He slid a contract toward her with deliberate precision.
“My grandmother’s last wish.” His eyes lowered briefly. A shadow crossed his expression, one she couldn’t decipher. “She wanted to see me settled, with someone who could stand beside me. I intend to fulfill that, regardless of circumstance.”
Panni didn’t move. She couldn’t.
“I believe,” he continued, “that you are capable of handling this role. And I have no interest in sentimentality. This marriage would be mutually beneficial.”
Panni stared at the contract.
Rules. Conditions. Boundaries.
No emotional involvement.
No public scandals. No lies.Her vision blurred. She had already violated the last one.
“Miss Su,” Jinyan said quietly, “is something the matter?”
Everything.
Everything was the matter.But Panni straightened, trying to keep her voice steady.
“What if… I’m not the woman you think I am?”
He leaned back slightly, eyes narrowing. “Explain.”
Panic clawed up her throat. If she told the truth, her sister would be ruined. Destroyed. The Lu family wouldn’t simply shrug off the deception.
Panni forced a faint smile. “I only meant… I’m not confident whether I meet your expectations.”
A heavy silence fell.
Then, unexpectedly, his gaze softened by a fraction—barely enough to notice.
“Confidence can be learned,” he said. “Integrity cannot. And despite arriving late, you still came. That alone suggests you’re willing to uphold commitments.”
Panni bit her lip. If only he knew.
Jinyan tapped the contract lightly. “If you have concerns, voice them.”
She had a thousand. But none she could safely reveal.
Instead, she found herself asking the question she dreaded:
“What exactly… would be expected of me?”
His answer was calm. “To be my wife in name. To accompany me publicly. To maintain privacy. To uphold my grandmother’s trust.”
“Nothing more?”
“Nothing more,” he echoed—but his eyes lingered on her a moment too long, as if searching for something he couldn’t name.
The rain intensified outside. Thunder rumbled like an omen.
Panni looked down at the contract again. Every path ahead of her looked dangerous—but only one could protect the people she loved.
Her hand trembled as she lifted the pen.
Jinyan watched her closely, unreadable.
With a breath that shook her entire body, Su Panni signed the contract—stealing her sister’s place, her name, and a future that didn’t belong to her.
When she lifted her eyes, Jinyan’s expression had shifted—approval mixed with a hint of something darker.
“Welcome to the arrangement,” he said softly.
Before she could respond, her phone buzzed violently in her pocket.
A single message.
From an unknown number.“You shouldn’t have signed that. You’re not Su Annie.”
Panni’s blood ran cold.
I looked at the gold mark on my skin, the shape of the silver ring that the child had burned into me. It was pulsing in time with the lighthouse. Jinyan was asking me to lobotomize him. He was asking me to take the brilliant, terrifying, beautiful mind that had both broken and saved me, and turn it into a hollow shell.Can love survive this? Can I live with the version of Jinyan that doesn't know my name? He thinks he is being noble, but he is still trying to control the ending. He is still trying to be the Architect of my freedom. But I am the Subject who learned how to rewrite the code. I am not going to break his mind. I am going to overwhelm the Grandfather with the one thing he never accounted for: the sheer, destructive weight of a woman’s devotion."I'm not breaking you," I said, my voice vibrating through the amber flu
[The Crucible of the Key]The world was dissolving into the very thing I had feared most: the amber fluid of my origin. It pooled around our ankles, thick and smelling of synthetic life and ancient, stagnant grief. The lighthouse loomed above us, a monolith of silence, while the Grandfather and the child—our child—vanished behind its heavy doors. Jinyan was anchored to the rocks by the silver tendrils erupting from his own flesh, his body becoming a living component of the architecture he had spent his life trying to outrun.I had used the most jagged parts of my heart to break Jinyan’s reset, flaying his soul with lies to keep his mind human, only to realize that the Grandfather didn’t want his mind anymore—he wanted his agony. As the amber tide rose to claim us, I understood that Jinyan wasn't just a man I loved, but the lock to a world-ending gate, and the only way to save him was to
[The Lighthouse of the Lost]The lighthouse did not broadcast light; it broadcast silence. A heavy, pressurized silence that felt like being submerged in deep water without the weight. Standing on the jagged rocks of the shoreline, the inflatable raft a discarded scrap of rubber behind us, I felt the world narrowing until it was only the width of the man’s chest in front of me. The air smelled of salt and burning copper, a scent that always preceded Jinyan’s internal collapse.I had pulled Jinyan back from the brink of becoming a god, dragging his consciousness out of the very trees of the orchard, only to find that his father had left a sleeper-protocol buried in the marrow of his bones—and as the lighthouse began to pulse with the rhythm of Jinyan’s own heart, I realized that to save the man I loved, I would have to become his executioner, severing the bond that m
[The Living Fortress]The world did not end in fire, but in a horrific, silent expansion of love. The simulated orchard had burned away, but the reality that replaced it was infinitely more terrifying. I lay on the damp, cold earth, my fingers clawing at grass that felt like coarse hair. The sky was a bruised purple, devoid of the silver lines, but the air vibrated with a low, rhythmic thrum—the sound of a lung breathing.I had begged Jinyan to protect me from his father, to use our shared malfunction as a shield, only to realize that he had taken my request to its most literal, nightmarish conclusion: he had dissolved his physical form to become the very ground I stood on and the air I breathed, leaving me trapped in a sanctuary made of his own consciousness where the only way to touch him was to break his heart.I reached out to touch Jinyan, expecting the solid, scorched fabric of his coat. Instead, my hand plunged into the trunk of a gnarled apple tree. It didn’t feel like wood. It
[The Sovereign’s Choice]The morning didn't arrive with a bang, but with the soft, persistent chime of a high-priority notification. It was a sound I had learned to loathe—the intrusion of the city into our sanctuary.
[The Sensory Breach]The red pin on the monitor screen didn't just mark a coordinate; it pulsed. Or maybe it was my pulse that was flickering, out of sync with the world.The Sector
[The Glass Throne]The morning light in the Spire was sharp, clinical, and unforgiving.Jinyan stood by the window, his back to me, the line of his shoulders rigid with a tension I c
[The Shadow of the Origin]The celebration of the "Glass Treaty" was a low hum in the distance, a world away from the sanctuary of our private quarters. But the sanctuary felt violated.It started with a frequency—a localized vibration in the air that made the fine hairs on my arms stand up. It was


















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