LOGINElara Vale was the twin no one knew, sent to replace her glamorous sister in a marriage of convenience. Adrian Wolfe believed he married Alessia, but the quiet, clever woman at his side is nothing like the woman he expected. Before secrets emerge, his first love, Lillian Hart returns, beautiful, ambitious, and desperate to reclaim the man she once loved. As old feelings resurface, Adrian notices subtle differences in his wife, strength, intelligence, and calm determination that don’t match Alessia’s reputation. When the shocking truth comes to light, Adrian discovers the woman who stood by him for three years is not Alessia… but Elara, the twin they sent away. And she harbors a secret no one expected, a truth that could change everything.
View MoreElara Vale stepped off the train, and into a life that was never meant to be hers.
Cold wind brushed through her hair as the city surged around her. Voices overlapped. Cars pushed forward. Lights flickered without pause.
Everything moved. Everything demanded attention.
Except her.
She stood still for a moment, taking it in, the noise, the pace, the pressure. This was a place where hesitation had consequences.
Ashbourne did not wait.
For twenty-two years, she had lived far from this. The countryside had been quiet. It had taught her patience, slow mornings, long silences, the kind of stillness where even the smallest movement mattered.
This place was the opposite. Everything here was seen. Judged. Remembered.
She let out a slow breath, steadying herself. Then she stepped forward.
Elara exhaled slowly, steadying herself. Then she stepped forward.
Because she understood something the city didn’t, being seen wasn’t the same as being known. And she had spent her life making sure it stayed that way.
Tonight, she would stop being Elara Vale.
Tonight, she would become someone else.
A black sedan waited at the curb. A sharply dressed man nodded as she approached.
The driver opened the back door.
Elara slid inside, posture straight, expression calm. No words were exchanged.
The door shut, and the car pulled away.
City lights blurred past. She watched silently, the turns, the stops, the rhythm of traffic.
Observe first. Speak later.
Gradually, the noise faded. The streets grew wider, quieter. Buildings gave way to high walls and guarded gates.
Then she saw it.
The Vale mansion rose behind tall iron gates. Even in dim light, its wealth was unmistakable. The driveway curved through perfectly maintained gardens, leading to a grand entrance.
This was where she had been born. And where she had never belonged. She walked forward without hesitation.
Inside, the grand foyer was silent.
Her parents were already waiting.
Richard Vale stood straight, hands behind his back, his expression unreadable. Solen Vale stood beside him, composed and distant, as though this meeting had been scheduled, not lived. Neither moved toward her.
“Elara,” her mother said, her tone polite, distant. “You arrived on time. Good.”
Elara inclined her head slightly. “Good evening, Mother. Father.”
The words felt formal, because they were. For years, she had only known them through photographs, perfect images in newspapers and magazines. To the world, Richard and Solen Vale were powerful, respected, untouchable. To Elara, they had always been strangers.
Then she saw the third person in the room.
Her twin sat on the sofa, one leg crossed over the other, scrolling through her phone as if the room didn’t exist.
Alessia Vale. She looked exactly as the world described her. Perfect. Flawless. Carefully composed.
Her long dark hair fell in perfect waves, styled with precision. Her skin was smooth, untouched by sun or imperfection. Her dress fit perfectly, elegant without effort.
She looked up briefly, eyes scanning Elara with measured curiosity. Then returned to her phone. Dismissed.
Elara didn’t react. But she noticed everything.
Same face. Same features. Same structure.
Yet everything about them screamed difference.
Alessia was a portrait: polished, composed, untouched. Elara was lived: hair tousled from travel, skin warmed by sun, posture measured, controlled.
Alessia’s world adjusted around her. Elara moved within the world, unseen unless she chose otherwise.
The contrast was quiet, but unmistakable.
“You know why you were called back,” her father said.
Elara nodded. “Yes.”
Her mother stepped forward. “You will take your sister’s place.”
No hesitation, no softening. Just a decision already made.
Elara’s gaze shifted briefly to Alessia. No reaction.
“She has other priorities,” her mother continued evenly. “Travel. Social commitments. She has no intention of marrying now.”
Her father’s tone hardened. “But Adrian Wolfe expects a wife.”
The name carried weight. Adrian Wolfe. CEO of Wolfe Dominion Group. A man whose influence reached far beyond the city.
“The agreement is already in place,” her father said. “We will not delay it.”
Her mother’s eyes settled on Elara. “So you will stand in for your sister.”
A quiet pressure filled the room. “You will marry Adrian Wolfe.”
Silence followed, not shock, not confusion. Just stillness.
Elara had known pieces of this before she arrived. But hearing it spoken, clearly, directly, made it real.
Three years. Twenty million dollars. Then she would disappear.
Her thoughts drifted to the woman who had raised her. The world believed she was her grandmother. She wasn’t. Just a maid who had once worked in this house.
The night Elara was born, everything had gone wrong. Alessia came first, strong, healthy, crying loudly. Elara came minutes later, weak, barely breathing.
Her mother had nearly died during the delivery. And someone needed to be blamed.
A jinx. That was what they called her. Within days, she was sent away.
The old caretaker took her in without question. She raised her, protected her, cared for her through illness, taught her everything, and gave her a quiet life.
Now, that life was slipping. Age had caught up. Illness had settled in. The medicine she needed was beyond what Elara could manage alone.
Elara could survive. But the woman who raised her might not.
This agreement... It was never for herself.
“You understand the terms,” her mother said. “Three years. Then you leave. No contact with this family. No contact with Adrian Wolfe.”
Elara lowered her gaze. “I understand.”
To them, she was nothing more than a replacement. A solution.
But they didn’t know everything. She had already built a life of her own, quiet, precise, unseen.
Her mother studied her carefully. “There will be changes,” she said.
Elara remained still.
“Your appearance must match Alessia exactly. Your hair. Your skin. Your expression.”
A pause. “Even the way you carry yourself.”
Her gaze sharpened. “You look alike. But not enough.”
Elara glanced at her sister again. Alessia didn’t try. She didn’t need to. Every detail about her had been shaped over years, by routine, by attention, by a life built around being seen.
Elara understood. Everything about her would have to change.
Alessia finally looked up again, a faint, amused smile forming. “Relax,” she said lightly. “It’s not that hard.”
Elara met her gaze calmly.
Alessia had always been admired, protected, free.
Elara had learned something else entirely... being overlooked was power.
The night passed in quiet formality. Measured words. Controlled expressions. Nothing wasted.
Later, a maid led Elara to a guest room, clean, elegant, but impersonal.
“Rest,” her mother said at the door. “Tomorrow, your preparation begins.”
She paused. “One mistake, and everything falls apart. Do you understand?”
“I understand,” Elara replied.
The door closed softly. Silence settled over the room.
Elara stood alone. She walked slowly toward the mirror. Her reflection stared back, calm, steady, unchanged.
For now.
She lifted a hand, tracing her face. The same face, but not the same life.
Soon, even that difference would disappear.
Not just resemblance. Replication.
Adrian Wolfe was out there, unaware. The woman he would marry was a stranger.
Elara held her gaze a moment longer. She had spent twenty-two years unseen. Tomorrow, she would become someone else.
But beneath it all... she would still be watching.
And this time... she would not be the one left behind.
Aria arrived home late the night before. By the time she stepped inside, the house was already quiet and Caelum was asleep.She stood outside his room for a moment without going in. The hallway light spilled gently across the bed, showing his small frame rising and falling with steady breaths. He looked peaceful, untouched by the weight of everything happening beyond those walls.She didn’t wake him. A part of her wanted to, but she didn’t.She had missed dinner with him again. It wasn’t the first time, yet it still stayed with her as she walked away.The next morning, she decided to make it up to him. Before the noon meeting with Solen, she would spend time with her son.She woke early and went to his room. Caelum was still asleep.Morning light softened the room as Aria stepped inside and sat carefully on the edge of his bed. For a while, she just watched him.There was something steady about Caelum that grounded her. In the middle of her life filled with pressure and constant decis
The moment Aria left the conference room, the door closed behind her with a quiet finality that seemed to linger in the air.For a few seconds, no one spoke. Then the room slowly came back to life.At first, it was just chairs shifting, the rustle of papers, the low sound of people releasing held breaths. Then voices followed, careful at first, then louder, as if everyone needed to remind themselves they still had the right to speak.“Was that necessary?” someone muttered.Another gave a short, uneasy laugh. “You heard her. She wasn’t asking.”The older board member who had spoken earlier remained silent longer than the rest. Burt Higgins leaned back in his chair, jaw tight.Years ago, he had been one of the few who understood Aurelia Nexus. Not just the numbers, but the engineering behind it. Back then, he had been useful, practical, sharp. That was how he entered early, when the company was still fragile. Aria had listened to him then, not because she needed him, but because she res
Solen Vale’s detention was never made public.There were no headlines, no press releases, no blurred footage of her being taken in. The entire arrest had been contained from the start, handled under a restricted investigation known only to a small circle.Both the Wolfe and Vale families ensured it stayed that way.Not to protect Solen. But to avoid alerting whoever had been behind her.If she was only one part of something larger, exposing the arrest would only push the real threat deeper underground. Adrian and Cedric agreed on that without hesitation. Whatever game was being played, they needed visibility on the board, not panic in the shadows.For now, the silence held. The world outside continued as if nothing had changed.
Aria remained seated long after Adrian told her about the divorce. The call was still open, but neither of them spoke for a while.Everything looked the same, the desk, the window, the quiet movement outside, but nothing felt the same anymore. Her life had stayed the same on the surface, while everything underneath had shifted.Finally, Adrian broke the silence. “There’s another matter we need to address.”Aria leaned back slightly. “That sounds serious.”“It’s practical,” he replied.That alone made her more attentive. “What is it?”A brief pause.“Caelum’s legal status.”Her expression changed slightly. “What about it?”His voice stayed calm, but more deliberate now. “If his legal identity is based on incorrect records or incomplete paternal registration, it needs to be corrected.”Aria went still. That wasn’t what she expected.“He shouldn’t stay tied to something false any longer than necessary,” Adrian continued. “Not legally. Not socially.”Her fingers tightened around the phone






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