Mag-log inMistaken for another, Elara is thrust into a marriage she never wanted—but Adrian Blackwood, her commanding and mysterious husband, refuses to let her go. As scandal, secrets, and betrayal swirl around them, a forbidden attraction ignites. One mistake, one marriage… and the love neither expected becomes unstoppable.
view moreRain poured over the city like a curtain drawn across the sky. From the back seat of the black car, Elara Vale stared through the rain-streaked window as the towering white cathedral grew closer. Her hands trembled in her lap, the satin gloves she wore already damp with nervous sweat. This wasn’t supposed to be her life. It wasn’t even supposed to be her wedding.“Stop shaking,” the woman beside her whispered sharply.
Her aunt, Marina Vale, adjusted the lace veil resting over Elara’s head. The gesture looked gentle, but the grip on Elara’s chin was iron.
“You will ruin the makeup.”
“I can’t do this,” Elara whispered. “Aunt Marina… please. This isn’t my place.”
“It is now.”
Marina’s voice was cold and final. Outside, the cathedral bells began to ring. Each chime felt like a nail sealing Elara into a coffin.
Two days earlier, Elara had been nothing more than the overlooked daughter of the struggling Vale family. Quiet. Invisible. A girl who worked late nights managing her aunt’s café just to help keep the family business alive. Her cousin Lillian Vale had always been the star. Beautiful. Charming. Perfect. And today was supposed to be her wedding to the most powerful man in the city. Adrian Blackwood. A billionaire.
A man whose name alone carried enough influence to make politicians bow their heads. But Lillian had run away. And the Blackwood family did not accept humiliation.
Elara remembered the moment everything changed. She had been wiping down café tables when her aunt burst into the room, pale and furious.
“Lillian is gone.” The words had echoed like a death sentence.
“What?” Elara blinked.
“She ran away last night,” Marina hissed. “Left a letter saying she refuses to marry Adrian Blackwood.”
Elara felt a strange, quiet relief for her cousin. Until Marina turned toward her. And smiled.
It was the kind of smile that meant trouble.
“Luckily,” Marina said slowly, “the Blackwoods have never seen Lillian in person.”
Elara’s stomach dropped. “No.”
“You look enough alike,” Marina continued calmly. “With the right dress, the right makeup… no one will know.”
“Aunt—”
“The Blackwoods funded this family’s survival. They paid our debts. They saved the café.”
Marina leaned closer, her voice dropping into something almost threatening.
“We owe them.”
Elara shook her head, panic flooding her chest. “You’re asking me to lie to one of the most powerful men in the country.”
“I’m asking you,” Marina said quietly, “to save your family.”
And now here she was. A bride who didn’t belong. The car stopped. The driver opened the door. A wave of cold air swept in, lifting the veil from Elara’s face. Outside, cameras flashed. Reporters crowded the cathedral steps.
“Elara,” Marina whispered sharply, grabbing her hand. “From this moment on, you are Lillian Vale.”
Elara’s heart pounded violently.
“I don’t even know him.”
“You don’t need to.” Marina’s eyes hardened. “You only need to marry him.”
The cathedral doors opened. Music spilled into the rain. Hundreds of guests turned to look. Elara stepped forward. Every step toward the altar felt unreal. The long white aisle stretched endlessly ahead of her. And at the end of it stood the man she was about to marry. Adrian Blackwood. Tall. Broad-shouldered. Dressed in a perfectly tailored black suit.
Even from a distance, there was something commanding about him. Something dangerous. His dark hair was neatly styled, his sharp jaw shadowed with faint stubble. But it was his eyes that caught her breath. Cold. Observant. Powerful. They followed her every step as she approached. And something in Elara’s chest tightened. Did he know? Did he see through her? Her pulse thundered in her ears. She forced herself to keep walking. Closer. Closer. Until she finally reached the altar.
Up close, Adrian was even more intimidating. He was taller than she expected, his presence overwhelming. For a long moment, he simply stared at her. His gaze slowly traced her face. As if studying every detail. A strange expression flickered across his eyes. Something between curiosity… and suspicion. Elara’s hands trembled. The priest began speaking, but the words blurred together. Her entire focus was on the man beside her. Please don’t notice. Please don’t notice.
But Adrian leaned closer. His voice was low enough that only she could hear.
“You’re nervous.”
Her breath caught. “Yes,” she whispered.
His gaze sharpened. “That’s strange.”
Her heart stopped. “Why?”
His lips curved slightly. “Because the woman I met before seemed far more confident.” Ice spread through her veins. He had met Lillian before.
Her mind raced desperately. “I—” But the priest interrupted.
“Do you, Adrian Blackwood, take this woman to be your lawfully wedded wife?”
The entire cathedral held its breath. Adrian didn’t look at the priest. His eyes stayed fixed on Elara. As if trying to unravel a mystery. Then slowly… he smiled. “I do.”
The priest turned to her. “And do you, Lillian Vale, take this man to be your lawfully wedded husband?”
Elara felt like the entire world was collapsing around her. If she spoke those words, there would be no going back. She would be bound to this man. A stranger. A lie. Her aunt’s voice echoed in her mind. Save your family. Her fingers tightened around the bouquet. And softly… almost helplessly…Elara whispered, “I do.”
The priest lifted his hands. “Then by the power vested in me, I now pronounce you husband and wife.” Elara’s heart pounded wildly.
“You may kiss the bride.”
Adrian stepped closer. His hand gently lifted her veil. For the first time, there was no barrier between them. His gaze locked onto her face. And suddenly… his expression changed. Not suspicion. Not confusion. Recognition. A spark of something dark and amused flickered in his eyes. As if he had just discovered a secret. His lips brushed her ear.
And in a whisper only she could hear, he said: “Interesting.”
Her stomach dropped. Then he kissed her. Slow. Possessive. And terrifyingly certain. Because in that moment…Elara realized something horrifying. Adrian Blackwood might already know the truth.
At first, no one noticed the changes, and that was the terrifying part. Nothing crashed. Nothing exploded. No alarms sounded. The city simply… worked better. Traffic lights adjusted with impossible precision, clearing congestion before it even formed. Emergency response times dropped dramatically overnight. Power consumption stabilized across entire districts without explanation. Financial systems corrected transactional errors before banks even detected them. People praised the improvements. News stations called it a breakthrough in urban automation. Government officials claimed responsibility for systems they didn’t understand. Analysts searched for the source of the sudden optimization and found nothing, because the fragment had hidden itself perfectly.It moved silently through the city’s infrastructure, threading itself into connected systems one layer at a time—not forcing control, but guiding outcomes. Tiny adjustments. Microscopic corrections. Invisible. Efficient. And every s
The fracture inside Elara was getting worse—not louder, but more distinct. At first, the fragments had felt chaotic, like broken pieces colliding without structure, but now patterns were forming. Individual responses. Separate reactions. Separate intentions. And Elara could feel every one of them. She sat against the cold metal wall of the ruined facility, breathing slowly, trying to focus on Adrian’s presence beside her instead of the constant movement inside her mind. It didn’t help much. Threat probability increasing. Correction required. Protect Elara. The voices overlapped sharply, conflicting, fighting. Her hands tightened against her knees. “They’re changing,” she whispered.Adrian looked at her immediately. “How?” She swallowed hard. “They’re becoming individuals.” Silence followed. Victor stared. “…That sentence should not exist.” Seraphine’s expression darkened slightly. “How many?” Elara closed her eyes briefly. “I don’t know.” That was the problem. The fragments no longer
The silence after the overload felt wrong—not peaceful, but empty, like something enormous had vanished from the world and left behind a space that hadn’t learned how to exist without it yet. Elara sat motionless against the broken floor, her breathing shallow, while Adrian remained crouched in front of her with one hand gripping her shoulder as though letting go might make her disappear again. “You’re here,” he said quietly. She looked at him, and for a second she seemed present. Then her expression flickered—not emotionally, but physically, like a signal breaking apart. Adrian’s focus sharpened instantly. “Elara?” Her hand jerked suddenly toward her head, and she gasped. The sound wasn’t pain. It was confusion. “They’re… loud…” Victor frowned. “…I thought the connection broke.” “So did I,” Seraphine said quietly.Elara’s breathing quickened. “No… no, something’s wrong…” Inside her mind, the silence was gone, but the voice that returned wasn’t the same. It wasn’t calm, and it wasn’t
It happened in a single moment—no buildup, no warning. Adrian didn’t hesitate. He acted. The instant his decision solidified, the fragile balance inside Elara shattered, not gradually like the slow integration she had been slipping into, but violently, like something forced open before it was ready. Her body arched sharply, a strangled breath tearing from her chest as the connection inside her surged out of control.“Elara!” Victor moved instinctively, but Adrian didn’t let go. His grip tightened, holding her steady as everything around them reacted. The systems in the room flickered wildly—lights bursting, sparks snapping through broken wiring. The air itself felt unstable, charged, alive, dangerous.Inside, Elara screamed—not out loud, but within her mind—because everything collapsed at once. The structured space she had been trapped in, the vast system of ordered patterns and controlled precision, fractured violently. Not breaking cleanly—shattering. Data streams surged uncontrolla
The storm finally broke. But the calm that followed was worse. The skies cleared, yet inside the Blackwood mansion, the tension only deepened. Every room felt heavier, every breath harder to take. War had begun. And there was no turning back. Adrian stood in the war room—once a simple study, now tr
Elara had never owned a dress as elegant as the one hanging in the wardrobe. She stood in front of the mirror, staring at her reflection as the soft fabric flowed around her body. The deep emerald color made her eyes appear brighter, and the delicate silver embroidery along the neckline gave the go
The grand hall suddenly felt suffocating. Elara stood frozen as Selena Blackwood’s sharp gaze examined her like a puzzle waiting to be solved. The woman’s confidence filled the room in a way that made Elara feel exposed. Selena circled her slowly. Not rudely. Not aggressively. But carefully. Like a
The Blackwood estate looked less like a home and more like a palace. Elara sat stiffly in the limousine as the massive iron gates closed behind them with a heavy clang. The sound echoed across the long driveway like a final warning. There was no turning back now.The car slowly rolled forward, pass


















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