I warmed the Underboss's bed for five years, only to be discarded the moment my twin sister returned.
Haleigh claimed she was dying of terminal cancer.
She was the golden child, the tragic heroine. I was just Bailey-the spare, the placeholder, the glitch in their perfect reunion.
To secure her place, Haleigh framed me with a venomous spider and a deepfake video, turning the men I loved into my executioners.
My own brothers whipped me in the basement while Jameson watched in cold silence.
When I caught fire on the family yacht, they ignored my screams to tend to Haleigh's scratched knee.
The final blow came on the cliffs of Dead Man's Drop.
Accusing me of pushing her, Jameson ordered my brother to dangle me over the raging ocean by my ankles to "teach me a lesson."
They waited for me to beg for my life.
Instead, I pulled a switchblade from my boot.
I didn't cut my brother. I cut my own laces.
I plummeted into the icy black water without a sound, choosing death over their cruelty.
It wasn't until they found my hidden diary-and proof that Haleigh never had cancer-that the monsters realized what they had done.
Now Jameson is tearing the world apart to find his "innocent" Bailey.
But he's looking for a ghost.
The woman who loved him died the moment she hit the water.
Chapter 1
Bailey POV
I watched the man who had shared my bed for five years slip the Douglas family ring onto my twin sister's finger.
The moment my phone buzzed against my hip-confirming the transfer of my entire life savings to an offshore account-I knew the clock had started.
I had exactly sixty minutes to vanish before the most dangerous men in New York realized their sacrificial lamb had just bought a ticket to freedom.
Jameson Blair stood at the altar of the City Clerk's office.
He looked ruinously handsome in his charcoal suit.
It was the same suit he had worn to bury his father last month.
He was the Underboss of the Blair syndicate, the man who controlled the docks, the unions, and until five minutes ago, my heart.
Now, he was Haleigh's husband.
I stood across the street, hidden by the awning of a coffee shop.
Rain slicked the pavement of New York City, matching the cold dampness settling deep in my bones.
Haleigh looked radiant in white.
She didn't look like a woman dying of terminal cancer.
That was the lie she told to come home.
That was the lie that made Jameson push me out of the penthouse I had decorated.
That was the lie that made my brothers, the terrifying Douglas Capos, welcome their golden child back with open arms.
I was just Bailey.
The spare.
The placeholder.
For five years, I had warmed Jameson's bed while Haleigh played rebel in Europe.
I had smoothed over the political cracks between our families.
I had kept the peace.
Jameson turned his head, his gaze sweeping over the street.
For a second, his eyes locked on my figure in the shadows.
My breath hitched.
Those eyes used to look at me with heat, with possession.
Now, they were empty.
He looked right through me.
He didn't see Bailey.
He saw a ghost he wanted to forget.
The doors opened, and the entourage spilled out.
Derrick, Blake, and Kane flanked the couple.
My brothers.
They were large men, violent men who enforced the Douglas will with iron fists.
Now, they were laughing.
They were touching Haleigh's hair, her arms, treating her like porcelain.
They hadn't called me in three weeks.
Haleigh spotted me.
She stopped on the sidewalk and whispered something to Jameson.
He stiffened.
She pulled away from him and walked to the curb.
Traffic separated us, but her voice carried over the noise.
She didn't look sick.
She looked triumphant.
"Did you really think he loved you, Bailey?" she called out.
Her smile was sharp, predatory.
"Or did he just love that I left, and you have my face?"
The cruelty of it was precise.
It was a surgical strike.
Jameson walked up behind her, placing a hand on the small of her back.
It was a proprietary gesture.
He looked at me then.
"Haleigh, let's go," he said.
He called me Haleigh.
He looked right at me, the woman he had promised to marry once the territory lines were drawn, and he called me by her name.
He had erased me.
I wasn't Bailey Douglas anymore.
I wasn't his fiancée.
I was just a glitch in their perfect reunion.
Derrick stepped forward, checking his watch.
"Leave her," Derrick said, his voice rough. "She's just sulking because she lost her meal ticket."
Blake laughed.
Kane didn't even look at me.
They got into the waiting limousines.
The convoy pulled away, splashing dirty water onto the sidewalk.
I stood there until the taillights disappeared.
I reached into my pocket and touched the burner phone.
I had served my purpose.
I had prevented a war between the families by being the obedient substitute.
Now the real bride was back.
The treaty was sealed.
I was a loose end.
And in our world, loose ends got cut.
I turned around and hailed a taxi.
"Where to?" the driver asked.
"Sotheby's International Realty," I said.
My voice didn't shake.
I was done crying.
Jameson Blair was a ruthless man who broke bones and spirits for a living.
I had been foolish to think I was the exception.
I checked the time.
The clock was ticking on my life.
I wasn't going to wait for them to discard me completely.
I was going to sell the last thing I owned to the highest bidder, but this time, the price would be my freedom.
Bailey POV
Mr. Abernathy's office reeked of old money and mahogany polish.
With a trembling hand, he slid the deed across the glossy expanse of his desk. He clearly wasn't accustomed to clients settling their accounts with untraceable offshore funds.
"The island is uncharted, Miss Douglas," he warned. "No electricity grid. No cell towers. It is completely off the map."
"Perfect," I replied.
I signed the papers, my hand steady.
I wasn't purchasing a vacation home.
I was securing a grave to resurrect myself in.
I left his office with the coordinates burned into my memory. The private jet was scheduled for two days from now.
I just had to survive the next forty-eight hours.
I hailed a cab back to the Blair Estate.
I still had clothes there, but more importantly, I had my passport hidden beneath the floorboards.
The wrought-iron gates swung open automatically for me. They hadn't revoked my biometric access yet.
That was their mistake.
I stepped into the house.
It was quiet.
Too quiet.
I made my way to the kitchen.
The scene before me stopped me dead in my tracks.
Jameson stood at the stove.
He was stirring a pot of risotto, wearing a chef's apron over his crisp dress shirt.
In five years, Jameson had never so much as boiled water for me.
He had never cooked a meal.
He barely ate dinner with me unless it was a mandatory business function.
Haleigh sat perched on the marble island counter, swinging her legs like a petulant child.
She held a glass of wine in one hand.
Derrick and Blake leaned against the fridge, casually eating olives from a jar.
They looked like a family.
A twisted, violent, perfect family.
And I was the intruder.
Jameson turned and locked eyes with me.
The domestic softness in his face vanished instantly.
The mask of the Underboss slammed back into place.
"Where have you been?" he demanded, his voice ice-cold.
"We expected you at the ceremony," Haleigh chimed in.
She took a leisurely sip of wine.
"It would have been nice to have my sister there to support me."
"Support you marrying my fiancé?" I asked.
The words tasted like ash on my tongue.
Derrick scoffed.
"He was never yours, Bailey. You were just holding her spot."
"For five years?" I shot back.
I looked at Jameson, searching for a flicker of humanity.
"I warmed your bed for five years, Jameson. I nursed you when you took that bullet to the shoulder last winter. I stood by you when your father died."
Jameson turned back to the risotto, dismissing me entirely.
"That was your duty," he said, not even deigning to look at me.
"Haleigh is my wife. You are her sister. Act like it."
"She has cancer," Kane said, stepping out from the pantry. "Show some respect."
"She looks healthy enough to drink wine," I countered.
Haleigh's eyes narrowed into slits.
She hopped off the counter and sauntered over to me.
She held out a small, velvet box.
"I got you a gift," she said, her voice dripping with false sweetness. "A peace offering. For missing the wedding."
I didn't want to take it.
Jameson turned off the stove.
"Take it, Bailey," he commanded. "Don't be difficult."
I took the box.
It felt unnervingly light.
I lifted the lid.
Something dark and skittering blurred inside.
Pain exploded in my finger.
I screamed and dropped the box.
A black widow spider skittered across the pristine floor tiles.
My finger throbbed with a sharp, burning fire.
"Oh my god!" Haleigh shrieked.
She clutched her chest, stumbling back against the counter.
"She tried to throw it on me! She brought a spider to kill me!"
I stared at her in shock, my breath hitching.
My hand was already swelling, the venom racing up my arm.
"You gave it to me," I gasped.
"Liar!" Haleigh screamed. "Jameson, my heart! It's the stress!"
Jameson was at her side in a heartbeat.
He scooped her up into his arms as if she were made of glass.
"Get the car!" he roared at the brothers.
Derrick shoved me aside as he sprinted to the door.
I hit the wall hard.
My vision blurred.
"Jameson," I whispered. "He bit me."
Jameson looked at me.
He looked at my hand, which was rapidly turning angry shades of red and purple.
Then he looked at Haleigh, who was sobbing dry tears into his shirt.
"Stay here," he snarled at me.
"If anything happens to her heart because of your jealousy, you're dead."
He turned and ran out the door with her.
My brothers followed him without a backward glance.
They left me alone in the kitchen with the spider.
The room began to spin.
I slid down the wall.
My heart hammered against my ribs, irregular and terrified.
They left me.
They actually left me to die.
Bailey POV
I woke up to the rhythmic, monotone beep of a monitor.
The light was harsh and fluorescent, burning against my retinas.
It wasn't a private suite at the Blair family clinic, with its high thread-count sheets and discretion.
It was a curtained partition in a public city hospital.
"She's awake," a soft voice said.
Maria.
The housekeeper.
She was sitting in a hard plastic chair, clutching her rosary so tightly her knuckles were white.
Her eyes were red and swollen.
"Maria?" I croaked.
My throat felt like shredded sandpaper.
"I found you," she whispered, her voice trembling. "I came to clean the kitchen. You were on the floor. Foam at your mouth."
She reached out, her calloused, warm hand stroking my hair.
"I called the ambulance. Not the family doctor. The ambulance."
"Where are they?" I asked.
I already knew the answer.
"With Haleigh," Maria said, looking away. "She... she told them she had palpitations."
"And me?"
Maria looked down at her lap.
"Mr. Jameson said you were seeking attention."
A tear leaked out of my eye.
It was hot and angry, burning a track down my cheek.
"How long?" I asked.
"Two days," Maria said.
"Today is my birthday," I whispered.
Maria squeezed my hand.
"I know, bambina. I know."
She reached into her bag and pulled out a cupcake.
It was smashed against the wrapper, but it had a single unlit candle stuck in the ruined frosting.
"Happy birthday, Bailey."
I ate the cupcake.
It tasted like salt and grief.
I signed the AMA forms an hour later.
The doctors protested, warning me about residual toxins and cardiac stress, but I walked out.
I had a flight to catch tomorrow.
I had to get my passport.
I took a taxi back to the estate.
The bass was thumping from the house, vibrating through the soles of my shoes as I stepped onto the pavement.
Luxury cars lined the driveway.
It was a party.
I walked through the front door.
The living room was packed with soldiers, associates, and high-ranking mobsters.
A massive banner hung across the staircase.
Welcome Home Haleigh.
Not Happy Birthday Bailey.
Just Haleigh.
Haleigh was in the center of the room, holding court.
She was wearing a scandalous red dress.
She was opening gifts.
Diamond earrings from Derrick.
A new car key from Blake.
Jameson stood behind her, his hand possessively on her shoulder.
The perfect Don.
The perfect husband.
\ The room went quiet when they saw me.
I was still wearing my hospital clothes-scrubs and a thin jacket.
I looked like a wreck.
"You're alive," Kane said.
He sounded disappointed.
"Stop making a scene, Bailey," Jameson said. His voice was low, dangerous. "Go change."
"It's our birthday," I said, my voice hollow.
Haleigh laughed, a tinkling, cruel sound.
"Oh, Bailey. Always making it about you. I almost died of a heart attack because of your prank."
"My prank?" I asked.
"The spider," she said, rolling her eyes. "Everyone knows you collect weird things."
The room murmured.
They believed her.
Of course they believed her.
She was the star.
"Let's watch the video!" Haleigh squealed, clapping her hands. "Jameson made a montage of my time in Europe!"
She pointed the remote at the massive screen on the wall.
Jameson smiled.
He had edited it himself.
A labor of love.
The screen flickered to life.
But it wasn't Haleigh in front of the Eiffel Tower.
It was grainy footage.
A bedroom.
Haleigh was there.
And so was the son of the Russian Bratva leader.
Our sworn enemies.
The audio crackled through the surround sound speakers.
"The Douglas family is a joke," Haleigh's voice rang out, crystal clear. "Jameson is a boring stiff. I'm just waiting for the old man to die so I can sell the territory codes."
The room froze.
The air was sucked out of the space.
Haleigh dropped her wine glass.
It shattered, the sound like a gunshot in the silence.
Jameson stared at the screen.
His face went pale, then dark red.
This was treason.
This was a death sentence.
I stared at the screen.
I didn't do this.
I didn't switch the video.
Haleigh spun around.
Her eyes locked on me.
Panic flared in her gaze.
She pointed a shaking finger at me.
"She did it!" Haleigh screamed. "She faked it! It's AI! It's a deepfake! She's trying to frame me because she's jealous!"
Jameson turned to me.
His eyes were black holes.
The logic didn't matter.
The truth didn't matter.
He needed a target for his rage.
He needed to protect the image of his wife, even if she was a traitor.
"Bailey," Jameson said.
It was a growl.
"What have you done?"
Derrick stepped forward.
"She's trying to destroy the family honor," he said.
"She needs to be taught a lesson," Blake added.
They were closing in on me.
Like wolves.
I backed up until I hit the wall.
"It's her voice," I said, my voice shaking. "Jameson, listen to it."
"Silence!" Jameson roared.
He grabbed my arm.
His grip was bruising.
"Get everyone out," he ordered the guards. "Now."
The guests scrambled for the exits.
They knew what happened behind closed doors when the Blair family was angry.
I looked at Jameson.
"Please," I whispered.
"You wanted attention, Bailey?" he hissed, dragging me toward the basement door. "Now you have it."