Masuk
I became Mrs. Damon Sterling at 4 PM on a Saturday.
By 11 PM, I was pretty sure my husband wanted to kill me. "Take off the ring." His voice cut through the silence of the penthouse, cold, sharp, final. We'd been standing in his living room for ten minutes, fifty floors above Manhattan, and those were the first words he'd spoken to me since the car ride from the reception. I looked down at my left hand. The massive diamond caught the city lights streaming through the floor-to-ceiling windows, throwing rainbows across my skin. It was beautiful. Probably cost more than my entire life was worth. It was also a lie. "No," I said. His head snapped up. Those steel-gray eyes, the ones that had looked right through me all day finally focused on me with laser precision. "What did you say?" My heart was hammering but I kept my voice steady. "I said no. I'm not taking off the ring." "That ring was meant for Sophia." He said my sister's name like it tasted bitter. "Not you." "Well, Sophia's in Italy." I met his gaze and refused to look away. "And I'm here. Wearing her dress. Wearing her ring. Married to her fiancé. So I guess we're all stuck with things we didn't want." For a moment, something flickered in his expression. Surprise? Anger? I couldn't tell. Then his face went cold again. "Take. Off. The ring." "Make me." The words were out before I could stop them. Reckless. Stupid. But I was so tired of being passive. Of letting everyone push me around. Of accepting cruelty like I deserved it. Damon moved. One second he was across the room. The next he was right in front of me, so close I could smell his cologne, expensive, masculine, overwhelming. So close I had to tilt my head back to look at him. "You don't want to challenge me," he said softly. Dangerously. "Trust me." "Why not?" My voice didn't shake even though my hands did. "What are you going to do? Divorce me? Break the contract? Let your company stock tank and your father's reputation crumble? Go ahead." His jaw clenched so hard I heard his teeth grind. "You think you're clever," he said, his voice dropping even lower. "Standing up to me. Playing the brave little victim. But let me tell you something, wife..." The way he said "wife" made it sound like an insult. "...you are here because you're useful. The second you stop being useful, you're gone. Ring or no ring. So I suggest you remember your place." "My place?" Something inside me snapped. Maybe it was exhaustion. Maybe it was the champagne I'd barely touched at the reception. Maybe it was twenty-four years of being told I didn't matter finally reaching a breaking point. "My place is right here. In this penthouse. With my name on a marriage certificate and a ring on my finger. I didn't ask for this. I didn't want this. But I did it...I put on that dress, I walked down that aisle, I married you in front of five hundred people. So don't you dare tell me to remember my place when YOU'RE the one who agreed to this." His eyes were chips of ice. "I agreed because the alternative was worse." "So did I!" My voice rose. "You think I wanted to marry a man who looks at me like I'm garbage? Who spent three years with my sister and now can't stand to be in the same room as me? Who's made it crystal clear that I'm nothing but a placeholder?" "Then why did you do it?" He leaned in closer and my back hit the wall. I hadn't even realized I'd been backing away. "Why sign the papers? Why walk down that aisle? Why are you standing here in my home acting like you have a right to be here?" "Because my family would have lost everything!" The words ripped out of me. "Because my father begged. Because I've spent my entire life being the backup daughter, the forgotten sister, the one who doesn't matter, and for ONCE I had a chance to actually be useful to someone!" His eyes searched mine for a long moment. Looking for weakness. Looking for cracks. I glared back at him, refusing to cry. Refusing to break. "You want me to take off this ring?" I held up my hand, the diamond glinting between us. "Fine. The second you call your father and tell him the deal is off. The second you're willing to let Sterling Enterprises take the hit. Go ahead. Make the call." Silence. Heavy. Suffocating. Electric. We stared at each other, inches apart, both breathing hard. The tension was so thick I could taste it. "You've got fire," he said finally, and something in his voice made my skin prickle. "I didn't expect that." "You didn't expect anything about me. You didn't even know I existed until today." "No," he agreed. "I didn't." He reached out...I flinched but didn't back away and his fingers caught my left hand. His thumb traced over the ring, his touch burning despite the coldness in his eyes. "But you're wrong about one thing," he said softly. His breath was warm against my face. "I knew you existed. I just never cared enough to remember." The words were meant to hurt. They did hurt. But I didn't let it show. "Then I guess we're even," I said. "Because I'm going to make damn sure you never forget me now." Something flashed in his eyes. Something hot and dangerous that made my stomach flip. Then he released my hand and stepped back, putting distance between us like he couldn't stand to be close to me another second. "Your room is down the hall," he said, his voice back to ice. "Second door on the left. Mrs. Lee unpacked your things. Stay out of my way and we'll get through this year without killing each other." "That's the plan," I said. He turned to walk away. "Damon." He stopped but didn't turn around. "For the record?" My voice was steadier than I felt. "I'm not Sophia. I'm never going to be Sophia. So if you're planning to spend the next year comparing me to her and finding me lacking, save us both the trouble and file for divorce now." His shoulders tensed. For a moment I thought he might actually turn around. Might say something. But he just kept walking. Disappeared down the hall to the master bedroom. The door closed with a quiet click that somehow sounded like a gunshot. I stood alone in the living room of my new home, wearing a wedding dress that wasn't mine, married to a man who hated me, with a ring on my finger that was meant for someone else. My legs gave out. I sank onto the pristine white couch and finally let myself feel it. All of it. The exhaustion. The fear. The bone-deep realization that I'd just locked myself into a year of this. A year of living with a man who saw me as nothing but a poor substitute for my sister. A year of pretending to be someone I wasn't. A year of surviving. I stood up on shaking legs and walked down the hall to my room, the second door on the left, just like he'd said. It was beautiful. King bed with white linens. Ensuite bathroom. Windows overlooking the glittering city. Everything I could want. Everything except a husband who wanted me. I caught sight of myself in the mirror. Still wearing Sophia's wedding dress. Still wearing the ring. My makeup was smudged, my hair falling out of its style. I looked like the ghost of a bride. That's what I was, I realized. A ghost. A stand-in. A replacement for the real thing. I started to unzip the dress but couldn't reach. The zipper was stuck, or maybe my hands were just shaking too badly. I could ask Damon for help. The thought made me want to laugh. Or cry. Or both. I wrestled with the zipper for ten minutes before finally giving up. I'd sleep in the damn dress if I had to. I wasn't knocking on his door again tonight. I collapsed onto the bed, still fully dressed, and stared at the ceiling. Somewhere down the hall, my husband was probably pouring himself another drink and trying to forget I existed. And I was lying here, married to a stranger, trapped in a wedding dress, wondering how the hell I'd survived today. Wondering how I'd survive the next 364 days. But I'd be damned if I'd spend the next year being invisible. If he wanted me gone in twelve months, fine. But I'd make sure he NOTICED me first. I'd make him see me. Even if it killed us both. 12 hours earlier...EVE'S POV The bathroom felt smaller than usual that afternoon, the walls closing in just a little too tight. I sat on the closed toilet lid, staring at the three pregnancy tests lined up on the marble counter like tiny judges waiting to drop their verdict. My hands trembled so badly I had to clasp them together in my lap, knuckles white, just to keep them still. The soft afternoon light filtered through the frosted window, casting hazy patterns on the tiles, but it did nothing to chase away the cold dread and wild, fragile hope twisting around in my chest. It had been months since we got Lily back. Months of slow healing, of turning our home into a fortress with all those extreme security protocols, of learning to breathe again while Sophia stayed a ghost somewhere out there and Alex fought like hell for bail from prison. Lily was eleven months old now... crawling into everything, pulling herself up on furniture with those chubby little hands, babbling “ma-ma” and “da-da” with such
EVE'S POV The penthouse nursery had changed so much in the past eleven months. The walls were now covered with soft pastel murals of city skylines and tiny stars that glowed gently at night. Lily’s crib had been replaced by a big-girl toddler bed with safety rails, though she still preferred crawling into our bed most nights. Toys were scattered across the floor... blocks, soft books, and a little stuffed bunny that had become her favorite. At eleven months old, Lily was a whirlwind of energy: crawling at lightning speed, pulling herself up on furniture, and babbling constant “da-da” and “ma-ma” that made both Damon and me melt every single time. I sat on the soft rug, watching her stack blocks with intense concentration, her chubby little hands working so hard. Her dark curls... a perfect mix of Damon’s and mine... bounced as she laughed at her own success when the tower stayed upright for three whole seconds before toppling. “You’re getting so big,” I whispered, my voice thick w
EVE'S POV The decision to return to my rented office wasn’t easy. Three days after we got Lily back, the penthouse still felt like the safest place in the world. Every corner had been reinforced with new security... biometric locks, constant camera feeds, armed guards rotating shifts like silent shadows. Lily slept in her crib with two monitors and a dedicated operator stationed just outside the nursery door. I hadn’t left her side for more than a few minutes since the rescue. The thought of stepping away, even for a few hours, made my chest tighten with familiar panic. But the project... my project...had been bleeding for too long. The sabotage from Sophia and Alex had gutted most of my progress. Permits stalled, contractors pulled out, funders vanished. If I didn’t fight for it now, it would die completely. And I refused to let them take that from me too. “I need to go in today,” I told Damon over breakfast. Lily was in her bouncer beside us, happily chewing on a teether. “Just
Lily slept peacefully in her nursery, the soft glow of the nightlight casting gentle shadows across her crib. Eve sat beside me on the couch, her head resting on my shoulder, Lily’s baby monitor glowing on the coffee table. It had been three days since we got our daughter back, and the relief was still raw, fragile, like a wound that hadn’t fully closed. Sophia was still out there. The police update this morning had been grim... she had slipped through the net again, disappearing into the city with help from unknown accomplices. Alex remained in custody, but his lawyers were already pushing for deals, and his smuggled messages to Eve continued to arrive through hidden channels. The threats hadn’t stopped. The fear hadn’t left. But tonight, I couldn’t wait any longer. “I need to see her,” I said quietly, breaking the silence. “Catherine. One last time.” Eve lifted her head, searching my face. “Are you sure? After everything…” “I’m sure.” My voice was low, steady, but the weight b
EVE'S POV The new security protocols hummed constantly in the background... soft beeps from motion sensors, the low murmur of extra guards rotating shifts, reinforced doors that now required biometric scans. Lily slept peacefully in her crib, but I checked on her every few minutes, my body still wired from the trauma of her kidnapping. Damon worked from his home office, refusing to leave us even for a short meeting. His presence was a constant, protective shadow. The doorman buzzed. “Miss Eve, your parents are here, they say they want to see Lily and apologize.” I tensed immediately. Damon looked up from his laptop, jaw tight. “You don’t have to see them if you’re not ready.” “I need to,” I said quietly. “For closure. But stay with me.” My parents stepped off the elevator looking exhausted and guilty. My mother, carried a small gift bag with a stuffed toy and baby clothes. My father held a bouquet of flowers. They both had red, swollen eyes. “Eve,” my mother said, voice tremblin
EVE'S POV The penthouse felt heavier than usual the morning after the rescue. Lily slept peacefully in her crib, her tiny chest rising and falling in the soft glow of the nightlight. I stood over her for a long time, just watching, afraid that if I looked away she might disappear again. The emotional reunion last night had been everything... tears, tight hugs, the three of us tangled together on the nursery floor as we whispered promises and thanks. But the fear hadn’t left. It sat in my chest like a stone. Damon came up behind me, wrapping his arms around my waist and resting his chin on my shoulder. “She’s safe,” he murmured, voice still rough from lack of sleep. “We got her back. She’s right here.” I leaned back into him, but my body stayed tense. “I know. But Sophia is still out there. And Alex…” The detective’s call came just after breakfast. Damon put it on speaker in the living room while I held Lily in my arms. “Mr. and Mrs. Sterling, we have an update on Sophia Thompson
Three days of texts from Sophia. Three days of her playing the scared pregnant woman who just wanted to talk, who just wanted Damon to acknowledge what was happening.Finally Damon cracked."We need to confront her," he said. "Get this out in the open, demand the paternity test and end this.""She'
Day three and I was getting used to thiswaking up slow, no alarms, no rushing, just existing Damon was already awake, I could hear him outside on the deckI found him with coffee, looking at the ocean, not his phone, not his laptop, just the ocean“Morning,” I said“Morning.” He handed me a cup. “
We drove back to the city Sunday afternoonNeither of us wanted to leave but we couldn’t hide forever. The week had been good, better than good, we’d talked and laughed and had sex on every surface in that house and figured out we actually liked each other outside of all the chaosBut now the chaos
Eve knew something was up.Damon had been acting strange for weeks, sneaking phone calls, leaving early, coming home late with weak excuses about work meetings that didn't make sense.Part of her wondered if he was having second thoughts. If the whole Sophia thing had messed with his head more than







