Genre Ranking
Get the APP HOT
My Accidental Billionaire husband
img img My Accidental Billionaire husband img Chapter 7 The Ghost I Married
7 Chapters
Chapter 8 Cookies and Confessions img
Chapter 9 A Storm img
Chapter 10 The One Who Left img
Chapter 11 CEO Of My Life img
Chapter 12 Dinner With The Wolves img
Chapter 13 The Deal of a Lifetime img
Chapter 14 The Unknown CEO img
Chapter 15 Boundaries img
Chapter 16 Ghosts of the Past img
Chapter 17 Ocean Blue eyes img
Chapter 18 The Engagement img
Chapter 19 The mystery woman img
Chapter 20 Why is she after him img
Chapter 21 Don't come to my wedding img
Chapter 22 I'm already married img
Chapter 23 He Said No Sex img
Chapter 24 What it cost being Mrs.Wndsor img
Chapter 25 The Altar of Duty img
Chapter 26 I could be wrong img
Chapter 27 The sky is the limit img
Chapter 28 The Invisible Bride img
Chapter 29 I want to know the stranger who got her pregnant img
Chapter 30 The French Pursuit img
Chapter 31 Forgetting the ghost wife img
Chapter 32 The Confession img
Chapter 33 The Paper Bride img
Chapter 34 The Digital Footprint img
Chapter 35 Where is your ring img
Chapter 36 The Kitchen Table img
Chapter 37 Did you spend time with my husband img
Chapter 38 The Mother's Gambit img
Chapter 39 Chloe the model img
Chapter 40 The Performance of a Lifetime img
Chapter 41 My dick doesn't even perk img
Chapter 42 Blacked out Visor img
Chapter 43 She came Second img
Chapter 44 I just kissed my sister's husband img
Chapter 45 Tell me to stop img
Chapter 46 Turned on by a woman who shouldn't img
Chapter 47 Dinner with the Godmother img
Chapter 48 He's hunting you img
Chapter 49 The Ghost of the Track img
Chapter 50 I'm not done with our conversation from Vegas img
Chapter 51 Digital Ashes and Glass Walls img
Chapter 52 The Quiet Realization img
Chapter 53 The Meeting Trap img
Chapter 54 The Performance img
Chapter 55 Since when do I answer to you img
Chapter 56 Stop trying img
Chapter 57 The Gala trap img
Chapter 58 That was a hell of a dive into the river, Katia img
Chapter 59 late night meeting img
Chapter 60 The morning after the bridge img
Chapter 61 9 AM Sharp img
Chapter 62 I'm fine img
Chapter 63 The Godmother img
Chapter 64 A Wife in Name img
Chapter 65 Martha's Game img
Chapter 66 Blind date img
Chapter 67 The Invisible Shield Launch img
Chapter 68 Catwoman Rides Again img
Chapter 69 Zane Knows Too Much img
Chapter 70 Sunday Trap Part Two img
Chapter 71 The Grandmother Summons img
Chapter 72 Aiden Asks About the Ring img
Chapter 73 Dubai Is Calling img
Chapter 74 IG Goes Global img
Chapter 75 What Delia Found img
Chapter 76 Sparring Partners img
Chapter 77 Mother's New Weapon img
Chapter 78 The Windsor Table img
Chapter 79 Gail Connects a Dot img
Chapter 80 The Seraphina Distraction img
Chapter 81 Aiden and Julian Meet Officially img
Chapter 82 Julian Meets Aiden (His Version) img
Chapter 83 The Question img
Chapter 84 She Can't Sleep img
Chapter 85 David Breaks Ranks img
Chapter 86 The Catwoman Fan Club img
Chapter 87 You Picked the Wrong Woman img
Chapter 88 Delivered img
Chapter 89 She Has Lawyers img
Chapter 90 Milked dick and sucked pussy img
Chapter 91 What Gail Knows img
Chapter 92 Pressure from Above img
Chapter 93 You don't look at me the same way img
Chapter 94 Martha's Kitchen img
Chapter 95 The Morning Call img
Chapter 96 Wheels Up img
Chapter 97 Dubai Arrival img
Chapter 98 First Night in Dubai img
Chapter 99 The Windsor Invitation img
Chapter 100 The Desert img
img
  /  2
img

Chapter 7 The Ghost I Married

Julian

The skyline of Manhattan stretched in front of me, bathed in soft light as the sun filtered through thick gray clouds, painting the city in shades of steel and silver. The windows of my high-rise office offered a sweeping view of it all, an empire of glass and concrete, money and power, but none of it felt satisfying anymore. Not the deals. Not the penthouses. Not the silence that lingered long after everyone left for the day. Six years, and I still hadn't found her. Six fucking years chasing a ghost.

I sat behind my desk, the corner office a cathedral of success, every inch tailored to me-sleek, minimal, spotless. My assistant had left my schedule printed neatly beside my coffee, which had long since gone cold. The ticking of the designer wall clock was the only sound until I heard the door open without a knock.

"Still brooding?" Zane strolled in like he owned the place. He didn't, but he was one of the few people who could walk into my space uninvited and live to tell the story.

I looked up at him, studied the smirk on his face, and knew before he even said a word that he had something to say I wouldn't like.

"By the way you look," I said dryly, "I'm guessing you've got the results."

Zane leaned against the wall, hands in his pockets, always relaxed, always amused. "Six years, man. You've been searching for six damn years."

"And?"

"And maybe it's time to stop. Let her go, Julian. You're getting married. The Kensington girl."

I leaned back in my chair and closed my eyes for a second. My temples throbbed. The Kensington girl, Jesus fucking Christ.

"I don't even know what's going on with that family," I muttered. "At first, I was betrothed to Katia. Then they switched it to Delia. Like I'm a fucking product on clearance."

Zane chuckled. "Well, you kind of are. You're the Windsor heir. People expect you to marry like it's chess."

I gave him a look. "I don't even know what Delia looks like."

"You don't have to," he said with a shrug. "It's not a love match. You're marrying her for your grandmother. Duty. Legacy. All that Windsor shit."

"If not for Grandma..." I trailed off.

"If not for Grandma, you'd still be playing Phantom King in Vegas and chasing a girl whose name you don't know."

I said nothing.

Zane pushed off the wall and pulled out his phone. "Well, since you're marrying Delia Kensington, you might as well know what she looks like."

I raised an eyebrow as he tapped on his screen and handed me the phone. Instagram. Of course. A carefully curated feed of designer clothes, overpriced cocktails, vacations in Bali and Saint-Tropez, and the kind of artificial smiles you see on department store mannequins. Delia was pretty, no doubt. Blonde, bright-eyed, and painfully polished. But nothing about her felt real.

"She's not my type," I muttered.

Zane smirked. "Keep scrolling."

I did. And then I stopped.

A photo, captioned "Happy Birthday, sis, -stared up at me. Two women, side by side, but only one of them made my heart stop. She wasn't smiling in the usual way. It wasn't for the camera. She wasn't performing. She wasn't posing. There was something distant in her expression, like her mind was somewhere else. Delia was all teeth and fake affection. But her sister Katia was...real and beautiful. That name was tagged.

"She's more my type," I said quietly.

Zane nodded. "Katia. The one you were originally promised to."

"Random face on the internet, yes," I muttered, eyes scanning the screen.

Zane looked over. "Just another Kensington girl?"

I shook my head. "No. I don't know. I'm just saying the face looks familiar, that's all. But my brain doesn't remember a damn thing."

The bitterness in my voice was sharp, even to my own ears. The truth stung more every time I said it.

"It pains me that I've been chasing a ghost for the past few years. And now I have to marry some girl named Delia." I say and then go on. "The pilot told me we were making out in the chopper," I added, voice low. "Said there were stains, blood on the seat. The staff at the hotel had to burn the sheets. I woke up alone the next morning. With a ring, no name, and no trace of her."

Zane winced and leaned back in his chair. "Still can't believe you went through with it."

"I was drugged," I snapped, rubbing my temple. "Your idea of a bachelor send-off nearly got me married to a stripper."

Zane laughed. "That's slander. She wasn't a stripper."

"Right. And I wasn't blackout drunk, bleeding, and legally married to a woman I couldn't describe to a police sketch artist. Your fault, you spiked our drinks."

He held up his hands in mock surrender, the usual grin on his face fading slightly. "Tell Grandma yet?"

I shot him a cold look.

"Okay, okay," he muttered. "I'm just saying... she's been patient. For a Windsor."

I leaned forward and set the phone down on the desk with deliberate control. "You know what pisses me off the most?"

Zane raised an eyebrow. "What?"

"She's not looking for me."

The silence that followed was heavier than I liked. Zane didn't speak. Maybe for once, he didn't know what to say.

"I didn't imagine this," I went on, my voice quieter now, sharper. "The papers were real. The license. The ring. The night. It all happened. She married me. My pilot saw us. My lawyers confirmed the registration. So why the hell has she vanished?"

Zane gave a light shrug. "Maybe she doesn't remember either."

I scoffed. "She remembers. Trust me. You don't forget getting married in Vegas. Especially not to someone like me."

He stayed quiet.

"She's choosing not to come forward," I said.

"She probably thought you were just some drunk idiot with a private jet and a hard-on," Zane said. "Let's be real, Julian. That night? That wasn't exactly your finest moment."

"No," I muttered. "It wasn't."

He stood and stretched like he had all the time in the world. "Anyway. You should go home. Your grandmother's been asking more questions lately."

I stood slowly. "I'll tell her I lost the ring."

Zane froze at the door. "You're serious?"

My eyes met his. "Dead serious."

He stared at me for a beat, then nodded and left, mumbling under his breath about secrets and stubborn men.

I walked to the window and looked out over Manhattan. The streets were small from up here, ants moving through glass veins. I didn't see any of it.

I saw the blackout. The blood. The blurred memory of a voice I couldn't place. Hands on my skin. A woman's body in the dark. My ring on her finger.

But never her face. Not even once. She was gone. And the worst part was, I had no way of finding her.

She could walk past me on the street, and I wouldn't even know. She could be anyone.

I closed my eyes and tried, one last time, to conjure the memory. A detail. A sound. A name. But there was nothing. Just the flash of heat. Her breath in my ear. Her body under mine. Her voice-

"Then fuck me."

I opened my eyes, my jaw clenched tight. She was gone. But not forgotten.

I didn't care who she was. Or why she left. I didn't care what name she went by now, or if she even wore the ring anymore.

What I cared about was one simple, irrefutable fact:

She was mine.

And one day, sooner or later, I'd find her. Even if I had to tear this city apart.

I grabbed my coat and headed for the door. Time to see Grandma.

Previous
                         
Download Book

COPYRIGHT(©) 2022