day before my wedding. The sky w
ff voice on the other
this i
but your fiancé, David Peterson, was involved in a gang-related
clattered onto the hardwood floor. The world went silent, then rushed back in a roar of white noise. Dav
of ice that made it hard to breathe. I was five months pregnant
hand, her face a mask of sorrow, but her eyes were strangely dry. His identical twin brother, Mark, was supp
d ended. Da
h, I tried to kil
ing pills. Mrs. Peterson found me, her f
edsheet in my closet. A neighbor, checking in on
for an end to a pain that was too large to carry. Each time, I was found. Each time, I
ping my hair, the city lights a distant, indifferent glitter. But I couldn't do it. I thought of the b
it was for my own good, so they could watch over me.
as slightly ajar. I heard voices inside, hushed and urgent. It was Mrs. Peterson and a man wh
my hand pressed
aid, her voice tight with strain. "Sarah is fall
ld. David? But
David's voice-replied. It was him. It was unmistaka
a?" his mo
rk. She needs me," David said. "Pretending to be Mark is the o
r wasn't Mark. It was supposed to be David. He had faked his de
Is that also to 'protect' her?"
... we have a connection. She ne
David. While your pregnant fiancée is tryin
he repeated, the words a hollow excuse
shed for death-it was all based on a lie. A monstrous, selfish lie. He hadn't died to protect me. He had "died" to be with
d into something hard and sharp. The pain d
ack to my room, the one they had given me, the one that felt like a cage.
n Thorne. David's biggest business rival. A man David hated, a man who had once, half-jokingly at a charity g
button. He answered
, his voice deep
my own voice su
, this is S
ss Miller. I was sorry to hear
words tasting like ash. "
o
g. "The one for a hundred-million-dollar