LOGINZara Bello had two rules: Keep her head down. Survive. That was before she stepped in front of a bullet for Billionaire CEO Damian Cole. Now she’s his personal PA. Living in his penthouse. Guarded 24/7 by his most dangerous man: Marcus Okafor. Damian is cold, possessive, and convinced Zara belongs to him. Marcus is silent, protective, and looks at her like she’s the only thing worth saving. The tension explodes when Zara finds out she’s pregnant. “Mine,” Damian says. “You were in my bed that night.” But the DNA results tell a different story. The baby isn’t Damian’s. It’s Marcus’s. And that’s when hell breaks loose. Because Marcus isn’t supposed to be a bodyguard. He’s supposed to be a Cole. 28 years ago, Chief Obasi swapped two babies to control the Cole Empire. Now the real heir has been found... and Obasi will do anything to erase him. Kidnapping. Murder. A forced wedding. A war for a company and a bloodline. Zara is caught in the middle. Pregnant with twins. Hunted by a man who wants her dead, and desired by two men who want to own her. One is the billionaire the world knows. The other is the man fate chose. To survive, Zara must uncover the truth about the bloodline swap. To live, she must choose who to trust. But in the Cole Empire, love is a lie... And the truth could get her killed. BLOODLINE SWAP - A Secret Heir, Mafia, Pregnancy Romance
View MoreThe glass didn’t just break.
It exploded. One second Zara Bello was typing away at her laptop, the next the whole damn boardroom erupted in screams. The air turned thick with that sharp, metallic smell of fear and gunpowder. She dropped. Knee slammed into the cold tile first. Pain ripped up her leg like fire. She bit down hard on her lip and tasted blood. Not today. Please God, not today. Her laptop skidded across the long table. That stupid Q3 report she’d killed herself over for two months. If it got ruined, Damian Cole would probably march her out himself with a cardboard box and a fake smile. Idiot. Worrying about a spreadsheet while people are shooting. “Get down!” somebody yelled. But Zara didn’t listen. She crawled under the table because her favorite pen had rolled away and she couldn’t just leave it there. She was that kind of mess. A strong hand suddenly grabbed the back of her blazer and yanked. She landed flat on her back on top of someone warm and solid. He smelled like gun oil mixed with that cheap cedar soap they sold at Oshodi market for five hundred naira. “Don’t move,” the voice growled right against her ear. Rough. Low. “Head down. Eyes closed.” Zara’s heart stuttered. Marcus Okafor. The new head of security. The quiet guy who stood by the elevator every morning with his arms folded and that nasty scar cutting through his left eyebrow. And just three feet away, standing like none of this was happening? Damian Cole. The CEO. The billionaire whose face was plastered on every damn billboard in Lagos. No tie today. Sleeves rolled up. Looking bored, almost. “Damian,” Marcus barked. “Get the hell down.” Damian just adjusted his cufflinks. “They want me. Not the secretary.” Another shot cracked through the room. Closer this time. Zara felt the air shift near her ear. Shit. I’m gonna die in these cheap Zara heels and a blouse I bought in Yaba market. She glanced at her nails. Painted red on Sunday. Already chipped on the thumb from typing like a maniac. Mom would’ve called it a bad omen. Marcus shifted his weight over her, heavy and protective. His gun was out now. She could feel his hands trembling against her side. Not fear. Something hotter. Anger. “Stay with me,” he muttered under his breath. Like he was talking to himself. Zara wanted to say something. Anything. But her throat felt like sandpaper. Three more shots. Then two. Bodies hitting the floor with sickening thuds. Then silence. Just this awful ringing in her ears. Marcus rolled off her in one smooth motion and sprang up. “You hit?” Zara shook her head fast. “No. I don’t… I think I’m okay—” “Good.” He was already scanning the room, jaw tight. “Stay right there.” Damian started walking. Stepping over bodies in his stupidly expensive shoes. There was blood on the toe of one. He didn’t even flinch. He stopped in front of them. Looked at Marcus first, then down at Zara still on the floor. “You moved,” Damian said, voice flat. “I sent an email. During active shooter situations, staff are supposed to remain seated.” Zara let out a shaky laugh. Couldn’t help it. “Yeah, well, that wasn’t in the damn email.” Damian’s jaw flexed. His eyes weren’t cold like everyone always said. They burned. Dark and pissed, like he wanted to tear the whole building apart with his bare hands. Marcus stepped between them. “She’s fine. Back off, Cole.” Not Mr. Cole. Just Cole. Damian’s gaze dropped to where Marcus’s hand rested on Zara’s arm. The air between the two men got thick enough to choke on. Sirens finally wailed outside. Police boots thundered in. Shouts everywhere. Zara pushed herself up. The room tilted. She reached out to steady herself and her palm landed in something warm and wet. Not water. She snatched her hand back. Blood. Not hers. She wiped it on her skirt without thinking, leaving an ugly smear across the gray fabric. Great. HR’s gonna have a field day with this. A young paramedic dropped down in front of her, sweating bullets. “Ma’am? Your name?” “Zara. Zara Bello.” Her voice sounded all wrong. Too high. Too thin. “You hurt anywhere?” “I’m fine, just—” The cramp hit her low in the belly. Deep. Pulling. She sucked in a sharp breath through her teeth. The paramedic noticed. “Cramping?” “It’s nothing,” Zara said quickly. “Just stress.” Her period was fourteen days late. She’d blamed the new job. The crazy 6 a.m. buses. Surviving on bread and tea. But this felt… different. Damian crouched beside her. Too close. His cologne wrapped around her — expensive, clean, annoying. “Hospital,” he said. Not asking. “No. I need to get home. My sister’s probably—” “Hospital,” Marcus said at the exact same time. The two men glared at each other over her head. “Like hell,” Marcus growled. “Excuse me?” Damian replied, soft and dangerous. “You heard me.” Zara tried to stand. Her legs gave out immediately. Both men grabbed her at once — Marcus on her left arm, Damian on her right. For one weird second the three of them were tangled together. She pulled away hard. “I said I’m fine.” She wasn’t. Another cramp twisted through her. And that wet feeling again. Please not now. Please don’t let me be pregnant. Please. The test was still sitting in her bathroom. Unopened. She’d bought it three days ago and lost her nerve every single time she looked at it. Damian watched her too closely. “You’re pale as hell.” “I’m fine.” “You’re lying,” he said quietly. Marcus cut in. “Give her some space, man.” “I’m her boss,” Damian reminded him. “And I’m the one who just took a bullet for her,” Marcus shot back. Zara blinked. “Wait, what?” Marcus glanced down. There was a dark gash along his side, blood soaking through his black shirt. “You’re hurt,” she whispered. “It’s nothing.” But his face was tight, pain lines around his mouth. Damian spotted it too. “Medic! Over here.” Two paramedics rushed over. One took Marcus. One stayed with her. They checked her blood pressure — 150 over 90. Way too high. “Panic attack,” the guy said. “You need to sit down.” “I need to leave,” Zara muttered. The police were dragging the shooters out in body bags. One was still alive, coughing blood onto the fancy marble floor. Zara looked away fast. Her phone buzzed in her pocket. Sister: You alive? It’s all over the news. Zara typed back with shaky fingers: I’m fine. Heading home soon. Another cramp slammed into her. She doubled over, biting back a groan. “That’s it,” Marcus said. He scooped her up like she weighed nothing. One arm under her knees, the other around her back. “Put me down—” Zara started, but she didn’t really fight. She couldn’t. Damian stepped right in front of them, blocking the door. “Put her down. I’ll call my driver.” “Your driver?” Marcus scoffed. “I’ve got her.” “You’re bleeding,” Damian said. “So are a lot of people today,” Marcus replied. Zara squeezed her eyes shut. Just stop. Both of you. Please. Then the intercom crackled to life. Static. Then a wet, old laugh. “Mr. Cole,” Chief Obasi’s voice filled the room. “Congratulations. You survived.” Damian went completely still. “Pity about the heir though,” Obasi continued. “Family business and all that. We really should run a DNA test. Just to be sure who the real Cole is.” Dead silence. Even the police froze. Damian’s face drained of color. Marcus’s grip on Zara tightened until it almost hurt. “What the hell did he mean?” Zara whispered. No one answered. Obasi laughed again, low and ugly. “See you soon, children.” Click. The elevator dinged. Marcus carried Zara inside. Damian followed right behind. Three people. One tiny metal box. The doors slid shut. Zara stared at her hands. Blood still under her nails. Her stomach kept twisting. Baby? Is there even a baby? She looked up. Marcus was watching her, eyes dark with worry. Damian stared too, face blank but his hands clenched into fists so tight the knuckles were white. The elevator started its slow descent. Twenty-seven floors. Twenty-seven floors to figure out how her entire life had just gone to shit. Zara pressed a hand to her stomach. Please be okay. She didn’t even know who she was praying for anymore. When the doors finally opened, chaos waited. Reporters everywhere. Flashing lights blinding her. And somewhere in the crowd, a man with a scar and a nasty smile lifted his phone. He took a picture. Of her. Stuck right between them. Shit.The rain hit like bullets. Zara was soaked before she made it from the car to the hotel. Marcus had his jacket over her head. It didn’t help.“Damian booked 2 rooms,” Marcus said. “One for you. One for me.”“Where’s his?” Zara asked, teeth chattering.“Penthouse floor,” Marcus said. “We’re on 12.”The elevator dinged. The moment the doors opened, the lights died. Black.“Generator should kick in,” Marcus said, hand on Zara’s back.It didn’t.“Stay here,” Marcus said. “I’ll check the hallway.”Zara grabbed his sleeve. “No.”“Zara—”“I’m not staying alone,” Zara said.Marcus sighed. “Fine. Room.”Room 1204.Marcus swiped the card. Nothing. “Power’s out,” he said, pushing the door open manually. Dark. It smelled like rain and hotel soap.Zara fumbled for her phone. Flashlight on. One bed. King size. One tiny couch. One bathroom.“Shit,” Zara said.“What?” Marcus asked.
Zara hated red. Too loud. Too much. Too "look at me".But the dress Damian sent was red. Silk. Slit to the thigh. Back out.“Ma’am,” the stylist said. “Turn.”Zara turned. The mirror hated her. Her bump wasn’t showing yet—just seven weeks. But the dress hugged her stomach anyway.I look like bait.Marcus knocked once, then walked in. He stopped. Sunglasses in hand. Gun under his jacket.His eyes went from her shoes to her face, then back down.“You’re wearing that,” Marcus said. Flat.“Damian said I have to,” Zara said, picking at the strap. “It’s for the gala.”Marcus’s jaw ticked. “It’s for him.”“What?”“Nothing,” Marcus said. “We’re leaving in five.”Eko Hotel. Victoria Island.Chandeliers. Champagne. Women in diamonds. And Damian—black tux, no tie. Like he owned the air.The moment Zara walked in on Marcus’s arm, the room turned. Whispers. Phones. *Who’s that?*Damian’s eyes found her. Went cold. Then hot. He crossed the room in four steps.“Took you long enough,” Damian said to
Zara hated the penthouse by day three.Too quiet. Too big. Too many people calling her ma’am.“Ma’am, breakfast.” “Ma’am, your schedule.” “Ma’am, Damian said—”She wasn’t ma’am. She was twenty-four, broke, and pregnant.“Can you all stop calling me that?” Zara said at breakfast.The housekeeper blinked. “Yes, ma’am.”God.Damian had already left for a 5am meeting. Marcus sat at the kitchen island with coffee and his gun right next to it. Like that was normal.“Morning,” Marcus said.“Morning,” Zara replied, grabbing a piece of toast. “I need to go out.”“No,” Marcus said.“I need groceries,” Zara lied. “For Tolu. She’s out of meds.”Marcus sipped his coffee. “I’ll send someone.”“I’ll go,” Zara insisted. “You can come if you’re that worried.”Marcus stared at her. “You’re serious.”“I’m serious,” she said. “I’m not a prisoner.”Marcus sighed. “Fine. Thirty minutes. And you wear this.”He tossed her a heavy bulletproof jacket.Zara put it on. “I look like a tank.”“You look safe,” Ma
The flowers hit the floor first.White lilies. Marcus’s favorites. He used to leave them on his mom’s grave every Sunday. Now they were scattered across the marble, wet and ruined.“Don’t,” Zara said softly.Marcus stood in the doorway, rain dripping from his clothes. The pregnancy test was still in his hand. Unopened.Damian picked up his phone and played the video again. Marcus with another woman. Red dress. Same scar on his eyebrow.“What the hell is this?” Marcus asked. Voice flat.“I was about to ask you the same thing,” Damian replied.Zara’s heart didn’t pound. It just dropped. Like an elevator with the cables cut.“That’s not me,” she whispered.“Looks like you,” Damian said.“It’s not.” Her voice got louder. “I’ve been here all night. With you.”Damian looked at her for a long second, then back at Marcus. “Then who is she?”Marcus stepped inside and closed the door. Water pooled around his boots. “I don’t know. But I know who set this up.”“Obasi,” Zara said.“Obviously,” Dam












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