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Chapter 1 - THE REPLACEMENT BRIDE

My life did not fall apart slowly. It collapsed in one loud, unbelievable moment when my sister vanished forty eight hours before her wedding and the entire responsibility of saving our family landed straight on my shoulders. It started on a Thursday morning. I was still half asleep when my mother burst into my room. Her voice was shaking, her hair was messy, her hands trembled as she held her phone like it was the last piece of evidence in a crime scene.

"Evelyn is gone," she said. Those three words killed the rest of my sleep.

"What do you mean gone?"

"She left," my mother whispered. "She left without telling anyone and she left a message for you." My chest tightened.

"For me?"

My mother handed me the phone like she was handing me a bomb. The message was short, messy, and terrifying: Don't let him find out what I did. And whatever happens, don't take my place. I read it three times, hoping it would suddenly make sense. It didn't. It only made everything worse.

My father paced the hallway like a man standing on a cliff. "Adrian Blackwell is expecting a bride on Saturday," he said. "The entire city is watching this wedding. The investors are already nervous. Our company cannot survive a scandal right now." I stood in the doorway, still wearing an oversized T shirt and confusion.

"And what does that have to do with me?"

My mother turned to me slowly like she already knew the fight she was about to start. "Lila, you have to take Evelyn's place." The world tilted.

"No."

"Yes," she said firmly. "You look enough like her. The veil will cover your face. People will assume she lost weight or changed her hair. We can explain everything after the wedding."

"You want me to marry Adrian Blackwell?"

My mother closed her eyes. "It is only a formality. He will not care. He only needs the alliance." They were both lying. I could see it on their faces. Adrian Blackwell was not a man who did not care. He was the type who noticed every detail and remembered every slight. A billionaire heir with a reputation for being calm in public and ruthless in private. People feared him. People respected him. People never disappointed him. And my sister had just done the one thing no one ever dared; she ran.

I stared at the wedding dress laid across the bed, white silk, perfect stitching, a symbol of a life I never wanted.

"I am the wrong sister," I said quietly. "Evelyn is the perfect one. I am not what he ordered."

My father's voice dropped. "We are out of options. If you do not marry him, the Blackwell deal collapses. And if it collapses, we lose everything." Everything; the company, the reputation, the life they spent years building.

Suddenly I understood. This was not about marriage. This was not about Adrian. This was about survival. By the time they finished talking, the decision had already been made for me.

I put on the dress. My hands shook, my stomach tightened, and my heart raced so fast it felt like it was trying to escape. The mirror reflected a stranger, a bride who was never supposed to exist.

The car ride to the cathedral felt like a funeral procession. Reporters stood outside expecting a perfect wedding. Guests filled the pews, whispering excitedly. Flashlights clicked. Music echoed. Everything looked beautiful. Everything felt wrong. My mother squeezed my arm.

"Just walk. After today everything will settle."

I nodded even though I did not believe her. The doors opened and the world fell silent. That was the moment I saw him.

Adrian Blackwell, tall, composed, danger in a tuxedo. His presence filled the entire altar; sharp jaw, cold eyes, an expression that did not move even when he breathed. And yet the moment he looked at me, I felt something shift. His eyes did not soften. They narrowed. He knew. Not everything, not immediately, but he knew something was wrong.

I walked slowly, step by step. Each click of my heels felt like a countdown to disaster. When I finally reached him he did not take my hand. He did not smile. He barely looked at me.

He spoke quietly but his voice felt like a blade.

"Where is your sister?"

My throat dried.

"I don't know."

He leaned in.

"Don't lie to me Lila."

The way he said my name told me he had memorized every detail of this wedding. He knew Evelyn's height, her posture, her voice, everything. And I was not her.

"I am not lying," I whispered.

Adrian held my gaze for a long heavy moment like he was reading me without permission, then he turned back to the officiant. The ceremony moved quickly but every second felt stretched. The vows tasted bitter on my tongue. I was promising forever to a man who did not want me. He was promising control to a woman he believed tricked him.

When the officiant told him to kiss me Adrian stepped back. No hesitation, no apology, just distance. The guests clapped because they were supposed to. Cameras flashed because that was their job. But even in the noise I could feel his anger like heat against my skin.

As we walked out of the cathedral he leaned close, his voice calm, low, dangerous.

"This marriage changes nothing. You will stay out of my way until I find out what Evelyn did. And when I find her you will tell me everything you are hiding."

My breath caught.

"I am not hiding anything."

He looked at me like he already knew my entire life story.

"You already are. You took her place."

For a second my heart stopped because he was right. I had taken Evelyn's place, but not by choice, not for love, not for hope. I took it because she ran, and I still had no idea what she was running from.

When we reached the car he opened the door but did not look at me.

"Welcome to the marriage you never wanted," he said.

And as I stepped inside I realized something that chilled me from the inside out. This was not just a wedding. It was a beginning, a warning, a trap. And now I was married to the man my sister was terrified of.

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