nted our relationship with her fake brain cancer. He swore his dev
ake wedding with Aurore. He claimed it was "therapy" to cure her ju
aking for months. I found the love letters he wrote to her on our anniversaries, on my birthda
ceholder, a convenient stand-in until h
eworks, I didn't cry. I packed my bags, took the company shar
I put on a diffe
powerful heir my twin sister was suppos
pte
n waiting for an hour. Adelard was never on time, but this wa
familiar car pulled up to the curb, Adelard' s sleek black sedan. My
wasn'
merged, looking pale and fragile. He wrapped his arm around her, his head bent low as if listening to a pr
in a sharp, painful rus
t was him. 'Sorry, baby. Stuck
i
as I typed back a s
. I walked out into the cool night air and didn' t look back. The pain in my chest was a dull
ally, I stopped under a streetlamp and pulled out my ph
er voice bright and happy. "Arah!
g hollow and distant. "Hazelle, about yo
hat about it, Arah? D
Galloway twins to marry him?" I asked, t
laced with confusion. "You know I can't.
d on a crack in the pavement.
a deep
marry Grady Barb
cture her on the other end, her brow furrowed in
h escaping my lips. "He's with Aur
had tearfully re-entered Adelard' s life, claiming her cancer was back and she only had months to live. Ade
rst love. "She has no one else, Arah," he'd pleaded. "It's the rig
ife, my career as a chef, my everything on hold while he played
routine check-up for Aurore that showed she was perfectly healthy. I overheard
e admitted he knew she was f
t explained everything. "Her mental state is fragi
cut Aurore off. For a few blissful months, I thought he had
ts. "You don't even know Grady Barber. This is a business arrangement
" I shot back, the anger finally bubbling up. "It hasn't been love
e firm now. "You get to be with the man you lo
sisterly love. "Okay, Arah. If this is
sion was made. The pain was still there, but it was overshadowed b
back to the hotel where Adelard and I were staying for our "annivers
ew hours later, Adelard came ba
ng ran late, and then Aurore c
at him, not
this is hard to understand. But her condition is really bad this time. The doctor s
m, my expressi
sted something... unconventional. A way to give her that closure so she ca
" I asked, m
an old promise I made to her. The therapist thinks it will act as a final, definitive end to that chapter of her life. After
ysically hurt. The absurdity of his request was so profound it was almost f
me to just sta
hrown something. But I was beyond that. I was somew
is hope
, my voice sho
my quick agreement. "Real
er conditions? Anything else you
while we 'plan' this. It might be better if... if we kept some
t of the way. O
ight nod. "I unde
hole speech prepared. My easy compliance left him wrong-footed, and for a second, he loo