/0/97675/coverbig.jpg?v=39452a808f91f9e37a1d673cc0fc0000)
iancée. For five years, my brothers fin
m at the altar-returned with a fake cance
he tried to poison me with a venomo
ning her party, my brother
less substitute, a pla
tied me to a rope and left me
ked my death, and disappeared. They wan
pte
Dougl
oman on his arm at every gala, the one whose name was whispered in the same breath as his. And in five shor
ided attention. A hostile takeover that couldn't be postponed. A trip to Monaco he couldn' t miss. Our wedding, the real one, with
voice a low, intoxicating rumble that made me believe anything.
esperate part of me that had been starved its whole life was finally being fed. I th
Haleigh' s finger. The same Haleigh who had left him standing at the altar five years ago, running off
he document. Jameson never even glanced out the
Haleigh, my identical twin, looked radiant. You' d never know she was dying. That was her story, at leas
white against her crimson dress. It was a victory flag. She waved it, not
fake tears. "I'm so sorry. I'm so sorry for wha
ile spread across her face. "But tell me, Jameson," she said, her voice carrying across the street in the qu
's roar faded to a dull hum. I watched Jameson, my Jameson, the man who had held m
idn't answer. One secon
avy and thick as wet cement, bega
lance. "Love you?" he repeated Haleigh' s question, but
y name on his lips was a
wasn't true. I wasn't Bailey. I was just not Haleigh. A plac
rms around Jameson's neck and kissed him, a deep, possessive kiss that staked her claim. He ki
y hand flying to my mouth to stifle a so
it. It wa
oors flew open, and my three older brothers-Derrick, Bl
the oldest, boomed, holding up a bottle
her in a group hug, their voices a
, are yo
dn't be ou
get you
lly started treating me with the warmth I' d craved my entire life. They didn' t e
igh, the conquering hero, into the car. Jameso
ammed shut, and
forgotten accessory to a life
against the cold glass of the coffee shop window. Th
, everyone she met. I was the quiet, forgotten spare. She got the praise; I got the hand-me-downs. She got the lead in the school play; I was in the chorus. She got
lair family was enraged. My brothers, who had adored her, swore they no longer had a sister named Hal
igh' s name, his hands framing my face, his breath thick with whiskey and grief. "Why did y
despair, he made me an offer. "Marry me, Bailey," he' d whis
rong. I knew I was a substitute. But I thought, I pray
sai
ed the world. He held me and told me I was beautiful. My brothers, Derrick, Blake, and Kane, became the older brothers I' d al
fe, I believed I was loved.
ks ago, Halei
he protection-it all snapped back to her like a rubber band, leavin
nto a sob. Tears streamed down my face, hot and useless. A man walking h
duct on a shelf, kept in pristine condit
m
spark in the ove
a substit
gs felt like lead, but I forced them to move. I wouldn' t go back to
my hand, a useless gesture. They w
rent city. "I won't take your scraps
y chest. A pain so profound it felt physical.
straigh
g, until a sleek, black taxi pulled up
miss?" the
ialized in the portfolios of the ultra-wealthy, a firm my grandmother had used. A
l Realty on Lexington,"
er chair opposite a man named Mr. Abernathy. His su
said gently, "how
g in my lungs. I met his gaze, my own r
e surprisingly steady. "The most remote, u
 
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