LOGIN
It was embarrassing, sitting alone by the roadside, wrapped in the rescue team’s blanket, waiting for my husband to come pick me up.
My car was totaled after crashing into the guardrail; luckily, I’d gotten away with only a few scratches.
Crowds passed by in front of me, but my husband never showed up.
He’ll be here soon,” I assured them, humiliated.
Finally, Andrew appeared. He walked right up to me and grabbed me by the chin. He lifted my face, inspecting it.
My heart clutched.
THAT was his first reaction?
Checking my face.
I shouldn’t have been surprised. All Andrew really cared about was my face, after all.
It was because I looked so much like his first love, the color of my eyes, the shape of my features. It was such a strange, almost unbelievable coincidence.
But she had died many years ago, yet I had always lived under her shadow.
Meeting Andrew was pure chance. His gentleness, his manners, the way he cared for me so attentively, I fell for him instantly.
So when he asked me to marry him, I agreed without hesitation. But later, I realized the cruel truth. It wasn’t me he wanted as his wife. It was my face, the face that always reminded him of her.
So before my husband even asked me if I was okay, he had to make sure that my precious face wasn’t harmed.
“I’m sorry about the car,” I whispered.
His eyes locked onto mine. He was devastatingly handsome, with a sharp jaw line and deep, chocolate colored eyes.
But whenever he looked at me, I knew he was looking at his first love through my face.
And it hurt like hell.
I dropped my gaze and turned my head away. I said nothing, and neither did he. Not to me, anyway. He instructed the firefighters to handle the wreckage and told the medical staff that he was taking me home.
Once we were in the car, Andrew interrogated me.
“What were you doing at Seaside Landing?” He mutters, eyes not leaving the road. “Didn’t anyone tell you there was a dinner tonight?”
I blink once. “No.”
“Are you planning to attend like this?” he glances at me for a minute, eyeing how much of a ruined mess I am.
I say nothing while his knuckles flex around the wheel.
“You just had to go to the beach today of all days?”
I turn to look out the window.
Because if I don’t, I might fucking scream.
The scab I’ve built around my soul for years rips open just a little more. I sigh. I could almost hear my heart pump wild in my chest. Did he really . . . not remember?
“Did you even consider how this would affect things?” he adds, annoyance now laced in his voice.
My jaw tightens. “It’s not like I planned to get hit by a truck.”
The silence that follows is nuclear. He doesn’t yell. He doesn’t react. He simply tightens his grip on the steering wheel though he wants to crush it with one hand.
He was always like that. Never raising his voice, never losing his temper. Always calm, always controlled.
But in that composure, I felt it clearly—he didn’t see me as his wife. To him, I was just a problem to manage, a nuisance in his life to be dealt with.
“It’s my birthday,” I said, my head resting on the window. “I just wanted to see the ocean.”
Andrew fell silent at the mention of my birthday.
He’d forgotten it. Again. I knew it.
Ten years of marriage, and not once had he remembered. Every year, I clung to the hope that he’d remember my birthday, or our anniversary.
But deep in my heart, I knew he never would.
I’d fallen in love with a man who didn’t love me. These were the repercussions.
Andrew was a man of few words. He often spoke in calm, measured tones. In public, he was charming and charismatic.I couldn’t help but love him, even if the feelings weren’t mutual.
We drove in silence the rest of the way home. As soon as we got home, I went to find Oliver. He was in the living room, sulking on the sofa. He had a knitted tulip in his hand.
“Oliver,” I said, gathering him up in my arms. “I’m so sorry I didn’t pick you up today. I…”
“Where were you?” he cut me off, his expression sharp and discerning. He recoiled from my hug. “You were supposed to pick me up! I waited for over two hours, Mom. All the other kids left. I was all alone. How could you be so irresponsible?”
His tone was scolding and I was taken aback.
“I was coming to get you,” I said. “But I got in a car accident. I sent our driver to pick you up.”
“You KNOW I hate being picked up by the driver,” Oliver snapped at me, anger in his eyes. “I’ve told you that. MANY times.” Oliver stood up, the knitted tulip clutched in his hand. “You don’t even care about me.”
“Oliver,” I gasped, “how can you say such a thing? Of course I care about you.”
I looked to Andrew for help, but he didn’t defend me. Instead, he asked Oliver how he got home.
“Aunty Charlotte picked me up,” Oliver declared, immediately perking up. His entire expression changed when he said her name. “She has a new car, Dad. A sports car. It’s so cool.”
Andrew and Oliver launched into a conversation about Aunty Charlotte and her new car, casting me off to the side and completely ignoring me.
Charlotte. Again, I thought to myself.
Charlotte was my step-sister, the daughter of my stepmother. Charlotte had disliked me all through our childhood, but after Andrew and I got married, her attitude towards me shifted.
I’d always found the sudden shift in attitude strange, but when Charlotte returned from studying abroad, I immediately understood what had caused the shift.
While overseas, Charlotte had undergone plastic surgery. She had her face altered…
…to look like mine.
That was when I realized her true intention.
Although she jokingly explained that it was only because she wanted us to look more like real sisters. Everyone went along with it, as if nothing seemed out of place. But I knew what hid beneath her smile, her vicious purpose.
She wanted to replace me, still unwilling to accept that she hadn’t been chosen as Andrew’s wife. She knew that my face was the reason.
As such, I’d always been resistant to Charlotte getting too close to Andrew and Oliver. I didn’t trust her. Not one bit.
After our maid took Oliver to bed, I sat down with Andrew to have a serious talk. I implored him to keep Oliver away from Charlotte.
“Why?” he asked dismissively. “You heard Oliver. He adores his Aunty Charlotte.”
I inhaled a sharp breath. I couldn’t give Andrew a solid reason. What was I supposed to say? ‘Because she’s trying to steal you from me? Because she’s trying to take away my family?’
I didn’t have any concrete evidence, and I knew Andrew would just call me crazy.
“Because I’m his mother,” I blurted out. It was a feeble reason, but it was all I had. “I should have some say over who sees him,” I added.
Andrew didn’t reply for a moment, but then he rubbed his temples with his fingers. “Fine, if you don’t want to give me a valid reason, then fine. But I’m tired, Julia. I had a long day at work and I don’t have the energy to argue with you about this trivial stuff right now.”
“Trivial? My feelings aren’t trivial,” I replied. I knew he wasn’t intentionally trying to hurt me, but his words still stung. “I don’t want Oliver around Charlotte. Oliver is my son too. As his mother, I should have the right to decide who takes care of him.”
I was so frustrated, I couldn’t help but vent. Andrew was trying to be patient and restrained; I could see that. But my feelings were valid. Charlotte was trying to weasel her way into MY family.
“And I’m his father,” he snaps. “If I think Charlotte is good for him, I’ll let her be part of his life. You don’t get to control everything.”
“Jesus, Andrew, do you even hear yourself?” My voice trembles. “I’m asking you to back me up—for once. To put your damn wife above the sister I never fucking trusted. Why is that so hard for you?”
He laughs under his breath. Cold. Cruel. “Wife? You’re being a bit too comfortable with that position, Julia.”
My mouth goes dry.
He watches me—daring me to break.
I clench my fists so hard my nails cut into my palm. I’m shaking. Not from fear. From fury. From years of swallowing shit and pretending it was love.
“Do you even care about my opinion at all?” I ask, voice low, almost hollow.
His eyes don’t waver. “No. I don’t.”
It guts me.
The silence stretches between us, wide and suffocating yet I still I breathe in like it might be the last time I do it in this house.
“ . . .So what now?” I murmur. “You want me to just shut up and take it? Pretend this marriage isn’t rotting from the inside out?”
He leans against the wall, casual and as cruel as he always is. “Why, what are you gonna do? Divorce me?”
Julia’s POVLooking at Andrew, I saw the love radiating from his eyes. But even so, I paused.Is that what it meant? Were Andrew and I in love again? It felt like we were. We’d been through so much and we were still here, by each other side. Was the moment I’d been waiting for? The moment when everything would snap into place and Andrew and I could finally start a new life together?I couldn’t think of a less romantic place than the hospital, but at the end of the day, what did it matter? All that mattered was that I was with Andrew.Biting my lip, I tucked a stray strand of hair behind my ear. And then I nodded.Oliver’s entire face lit up and he grinned from ear to ear.“Really?” he asked, taking a step towards us. His happy reaction made me laugh out loud.“Yes, really,” I told Oliver. Then I collected Oliver onto my lap and took Andrew’s hand. “I love you,” I said to Andrew. “I always have. Even in the darkest times, my heart stayed with you.”Andrew’s eyes welled up with tears as
Andrew’s POVAfter lunch, a nurse came by and asked if Oliver wanted to watch a movie with some of the children from the children’s ward downstairs. Apparently it was something the hospital did for kids every Sunday.Oliver nodded excitedly, then he took off with his hand in the nurse’s.The moment he was gone, I turned to Julia.“I’m so sorry,” I said. “I should have let Oliver come sooner. I was being prideful and stupid.”“It’s okay,” she said, gathering up the lunch mess we’d made. “I understand.”Reaching her wrist with my good arm, I stopped her.“That’s the thing, Julia. You always understand. You’ve always been so supportive. Listen, I’ve had a lot of time to think here in the hospital. There are things I need to say to you. I wanted to say them that night at the gala, but then, well, the night went sort of sideways.”Julia rolled her eyes and chuckled. “That’s an understatement,” she said. But she put down the plastic bag and perched on the side of the bed.Looking into her e
Andrew’s POV“Look who’s here?” Julia popped her head into the door. Struggling to sit up, I remembered that my arm was paralyzed and my heart dropped.The doctors told me it was permanent, but I didn’t believe that. With modern medicine and all the technology breakthroughs, there had to be a way to repair my arm. It had become a fixation of mine the past few days in the hospital.Julia reminded me that I was lucky to be alive whenever I brought up my arm. Wasn’t that enough, she asked.And of course I was grateful. For all intents and purposes, I should have died. Apparently, I did. For a few minutes at least.But still…I was so angry at myself for the whole ordeal. It had all been my fault as far as I was concerned, since I’d ignored Charlotte and her plan. I should have turned her into the police the moment I found she was trying to rob my corporate account. If I had, then none of this would have happened, I would still have a working arm.Julia stepped into the room, with Oliver
Julia’s POVFive days later“All right, cowboy,” I said, entering Andrew’s room. “I have homemade lasagna, or spaghetti and meatballs. Pick your poison.”Andrew smiled at me from the hospital bed. He changed his position, struggling to sit up.“Don’t move,” I chastised him. “Remember what the doctor said? You need to rest. And that means no sitting up.”Walking over to his bed, I punched the button that lifted his seat to a sitting position. I was happy to see that a bit of color had returned to his cheeks.He was looking better than he had yesterday, but he was still a far cry from his old self.His heart had stopped the day after his surgery, so they’d taken him back in. Officially, he’d died. That’s what the doctor told me. But he was a fighter, and they managed to resuscitate him.It was a miracle, and overcome with emotion, I’d literally collapsed onto my knees right there, in the hospital hallway.Andrew was now officially stabilized, and out of the woods, so to speak. But he st
Julia’s POV“I’m sorry, but visiting hours are over.”A nurse stood at the door, a sympathetic smile on her face. I barely glanced up at her, Andrew’s hand in mine as the machine beeped to the left of him.“I’m not leaving,” I told her firmly. She was the third nurse to come by in less than an hour.“But miss,” she started.I lifted my head and shot her a glare. She paused, her expression still sympathetic.“Okay, love,” she said softly. “You can stay. But just for tonight.”I was going to stay as long as I damn well pleased, I thought to myself. There was no way I was leaving Andrew’s side.His naked chest was wrapped in a giant bandage. He was hooked up to an IV, his eyes closed. They’d done emergency surgery on him, but the damage from the bullet was extensive.He was stable, for now. But the doctor wasn’t giving me any guarantees. The next twenty-four hours would be crucial.I could barely bring myself to think about it, but there was the very real possibility that Andrew wasn’t g
Julia’s POVMy heart dropped as Charlotte barged into the room. The look on her face made my blood turn cold. She knew that Andrew had lied to her about the code to the safe, and she was clearly on the brink of coming undone.Somehow, I’d managed to loosen the ropes on Andrew’s hands, but I wasn’t sure what good that would do. The men in black were trained criminals. Andrew couldn’t take them on. I wasn’t even sure Andrew knew how to throw a punch, much less attack two hardened criminals.Plus they had weapons and we didn’t. Knowing the cards were stacked against us, my heart hammered in my chest. What were we going to do? Where were the police? Were they close? It felt like we were in an impossible situation.We desperately needed the police to arrive. Andrew had done everything he could to stall Charlotte, but we were out of time. She’d figured it out and now she was furious. I could feel her fury radiating off her in waves.With wild eyes, Charlotte glanced at Andrew, the gun still







