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Substitute Bride For The Comatose Billionaire
img img Substitute Bride For The Comatose Billionaire img Chapter 2
2 Chapters
Chapter 7 img
Chapter 8 img
Chapter 9 img
Chapter 10 img
Chapter 11 img
Chapter 12 img
Chapter 13 img
Chapter 14 img
Chapter 15 img
Chapter 16 img
Chapter 17 img
Chapter 18 img
Chapter 19 img
Chapter 20 img
Chapter 21 img
Chapter 22 img
Chapter 23 img
Chapter 24 img
Chapter 25 img
Chapter 26 img
Chapter 27 img
Chapter 28 img
Chapter 29 img
Chapter 30 img
Chapter 31 img
Chapter 32 img
Chapter 33 img
Chapter 34 img
Chapter 35 img
Chapter 36 img
Chapter 37 img
Chapter 38 img
Chapter 39 img
Chapter 40 img
Chapter 41 img
Chapter 42 img
Chapter 43 img
Chapter 44 img
Chapter 45 img
Chapter 46 img
Chapter 47 img
Chapter 48 img
Chapter 49 img
Chapter 50 img
Chapter 51 img
Chapter 52 img
Chapter 53 img
Chapter 54 img
Chapter 55 img
Chapter 56 img
Chapter 57 img
Chapter 58 img
Chapter 59 img
Chapter 60 img
Chapter 61 img
Chapter 62 img
Chapter 63 img
Chapter 64 img
Chapter 65 img
Chapter 66 img
Chapter 67 img
Chapter 68 img
Chapter 69 img
Chapter 70 img
Chapter 71 img
Chapter 72 img
Chapter 73 img
Chapter 74 img
Chapter 75 img
Chapter 76 img
Chapter 77 img
Chapter 78 img
Chapter 79 img
Chapter 80 img
Chapter 81 img
Chapter 82 img
Chapter 83 img
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Chapter 85 img
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Chapter 87 img
Chapter 88 img
Chapter 89 img
Chapter 90 img
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Chapter 92 img
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Chapter 94 img
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Chapter 100 img
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Chapter 2

Corie Decker's Jimmy Choo heels clicked against the marble with the rhythm of a countdown.

She reached the sofa and inserted herself into the space between Burnett and Hettie, her body angling to claim the physical center of the family unit. Her hand found Burnett's arm, fingers curling around his bicep with the practiced intimacy of twenty-one years of Daddy's little girl.

"Who is this, Mommy?" The voice came out pitched higher than necessary, breathy with manufactured innocence. "A new housekeeper?"

Hettie's spine straightened. She withdrew her shoulder from Corie's casual touch with a movement so subtle it might have been accidental-except Emilie caught the micro-expression of revulsion that flickered across her mother's face before the mask reasserted itself.

"This," Hettie said, her voice carrying a new steel, "is your sister. My daughter. Emilie."

The word hung in the air like smoke.

Corie's hand tightened on Burnett's arm. Her mouth opened, formed a perfect O of shock, and her eyes-those wide, guileless eyes-immediately filled with tears. She released Burnett and stepped toward Emilie, arms spreading for an embrace.

"Oh, Emilie! Oh my God, you're finally home!" The tears spilled over, tracking down cheeks that had been powdered to matte perfection. "I've prayed for this every single day. You must have suffered so much, growing up in-" Her gaze flicked down, took in the t-shirt, the jeans, the sneakers. "-in such difficult circumstances."

She moved closer. The perfume hit Emilie's nose first-something floral and expensive, probably that limited edition Chanel release that cost five thousand dollars an ounce. Corie's arms continued their arc, preparing to enfold, to establish physical and emotional dominance through forced intimacy.

Emilie didn't move.

She sat on the sofa exactly as before, her posture relaxed, her eyes half-lidded. When Corie entered her personal space-close enough that the perfume became cloying, close enough to count eyelashes-Emilie simply shifted her weight.

Two inches. Just enough.

Corie's arms closed on empty air. Her momentum carried her forward, off-balance, and she stumbled. The heel of her left shoe skidded on marble. Her hand shot out, grabbing for the sofa arm, and she caught herself with a graceless lurch that sent her hair swinging across her face.

The tears were real now-humiliation flushing her cheeks as she righted herself.

"Daddy," she whimpered, turning to Burnett with the automatic reflex of a child who'd learned early that male protection could be weaponized. "I was just trying to welcome her. I don't understand why she's being so-"

"So what?" Emilie's voice cut through the performance like a blade through silk.

She rose from the sofa. The movement was unhurried, economical, and it revealed what her seated posture had hidden-she was tall. Taller than Corie by a clear five inches, her height built on a frame that carried muscle the way Corie's carried couture.

She stepped forward. Corie stepped back.

"So unwilling to play your game?" Emilie asked. She tilted her head, nostrils flaring slightly. "Interesting. You smell like money. Lots of it. But underneath?" She leaned in, close enough to whisper. "There's something else. Something cheap. Something that reeks of stolen property."

Corie's face went white beneath her makeup. "I-I don't know what you mean. This is Tom Ford. It's-"

"I don't care about the label." Emilie's voice dropped lower, intimate, deadly. "I care about the soul wearing it. And yours, little fake, smells like desperation."

Burnett cleared his throat. "Emilie. That's enough. Corie is your-"

"She's not my anything." Emilie didn't look away from Corie's eyes. "My mother had one child. Me. So unless there's some immaculate conception I'm unaware of, this one came from somewhere else. A stone, perhaps? Or more likely, a hospital nursery with lax security?"

The silence that followed was absolute.

Corie's breath came in shallow gasps. Her hands had curled into fists at her sides, the manicured nails digging crescents into her palms. The mask had slipped entirely now, revealing something sharp and calculating and furious.

"You-" The word emerged strangled. "You ungrateful-"

She raised her hand.

The motion was instinctive, unplanned-the slap of a spoiled child who'd never been denied. Emilie saw it coming in slow motion, tracked the angle of the swing, calculated the force behind it.

She didn't block it.

She simply looked at Corie. Really looked at her, with the full weight of everything she'd survived-every mountain she'd climbed, every enemy she'd buried, every night she'd spent learning to become someone who could never be hurt again.

Corie's hand stopped six inches from Emilie's face.

It hung there, trembling, while something in Corie's eyes-something primal and terrified-recognized what she was facing. Not a rival. Not an obstacle. A predator who had already calculated seventeen ways to kill her where she stood.

Corie's arm dropped. She stumbled backward, her spine hitting the curved banister of the staircase with enough force to bruise.

Hettie moved.

She placed herself between her daughters with a speed that belied her years, her body angled to shield Emilie, her eyes blazing at Corie with a fury that made the younger girl shrink.

"Don't you ever," Hettie said, each word precise as a hammer strike, "raise your hand to my daughter again. Do you understand me? You have lived in my house, worn my clothes, stolen my love for twenty-one years. That debt is paid. From this moment, you are a guest in this home. Nothing more."

Corie's mouth opened. Closed. She looked to Burnett, to Kristyn, to anyone who might intervene.

Burnett stood frozen, caught between twenty-one years of affection and the sudden, terrible clarity of his wife's words.

Corie read his face. She read the room. And she did what she'd always done when the mask failed-she ran.

Her heels hammered the staircase, the sound receding upward, followed by the slam of a door that shook dust from the chandelier.

Hettie turned to Emilie, her hands reaching out, checking for injury. "Are you hurt? Did she-"

"I'm fine." Emilie caught her mother's wrists gently, surprised by the fragility of the bones beneath her fingers. "She didn't touch me."

Burnett made a sound-half sigh, half groan-and collapsed onto the sofa. "Hettie. That was... we don't know for certain about Corie's origins. The DNA tests aren't back. We can't just-"

"Can't just what?" Hettie's voice could have cut glass. "Can't just protect our real daughter from that manipulative little-"

"Mother." Emilie's quiet word stopped the tirade.

Hettie turned. Emilie was watching her with an expression that might have been curiosity-head tilted, eyes narrowed, processing data that didn't quite fit the expected pattern.

"You knew," Emilie said. It wasn't a question.

Hettie's face went still.

"Before today. Before I walked through that door." Emilie stepped closer, her voice dropping to a register that wouldn't carry beyond their small circle. "You knew she wasn't yours. You've known for years."

Burnett's head snapped up. "What? Hettie, what is she talking about?"

But Hettie wasn't looking at her husband. She was looking at her daughter-this stranger with the predator's eyes and the surgeon's hands-and something in her chest cracked open with a mixture of terror and hope.

"Not here," Hettie whispered. "Upstairs. Please."

She turned and walked toward the staircase, her back straight, her pace measured. A woman going to her execution-or perhaps, Emilie thought, following her to freedom.

Emilie followed.

Behind them, Burnett sat alone in the grand hall, surrounded by the wreckage of two families, holding a strand of hair that might prove everything-or nothing-about the girl who had walked back into their lives with a pocket watch and a warning in her eyes.

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