LOGINThe blindfold came off. I blinked. A chandelier. A fireplace. A mansion i had never seen. And a man i had known my whole life — standing with his back to me, a half-empty bottle on the table beside him. Caleb. "Please." My voice cracked. "I don't know what's happening. I think there's been a mistake—" He turned slowly. The grief on his face curdled into something else entirely. "You put her in that chair," he said. Low. Shaking. "You did that." "I didn't—" He crossed the room in four strides. His hand closed in my hair and drove me to my knees before i could breathe. "You're not going home," Caleb Wren said quietly. "Your sister's wedding is in four days. You look exactly like her." His eyes moved over me, cold and final. "You're going to take her place. Consider it what you owe."
View MoreAt half past nine in the evening, the streets of Harlow buzzed with the restless energy of people who had somewhere to be — vendors packing up their stalls, couples walking hand in hand beneath the amber glow of streetlights, cars crawling through the tail end of rush hour traffic. It was the kind of ordinary Tuesday night that asked nothing of anyone, the kind that promised a warm shower, leftover dinner, and the quiet mercy of sleep.
Nora Voss was counting on exactly that.
She adjusted the strap of her bag against her shoulder and exhaled slowly, her breath misting faintly in the cool evening air. Her feet ached inside her flats, she had been on them since seven that morning and the folder of unfinished reports tucked under her arm felt heavier than it had any right to. The walk from the bus stop to her apartment was only six minutes. She had timed it more times than she could count. Six minutes, and she could finally be at peace.
She turned off the main road onto the quieter side street she always used as a shortcut. The streetlights here were spaced farther apart, and the pavement was uneven in places, but it shaved nearly three minutes off her walk and she knew every crack and dip of it by heart.
She was halfway down the street when she heard the engine.
It was low and deliberate — the kind of sound a car makes when it is not passing through but arrived at its destination already. She didn't think much of it at first. She moved closer to the edge of the pavement out of habit, keeping her eyes forward. The folder shifted under her arm and she reached up to readjust it.
That was when the doors opened.
Three men stepped out before the vehicle had fully stopped. They moved quickly with the practiced efficiency of people who had done this before.
Nora registered the dark clothing first, then the weapons at their hips, then the fact that they were walking directly toward her with no hesitation whatsoever.
"Wait—" she started.
They didn't.
Two of them reached her before she could take a single step back. One grabbed her arm, his grip firm, closing around her wrist, and the other snatched the bag clean off her shoulder. The folder fell to the ground and papers scattered across the pavement in a pale flutter that seemed almost peaceful against the violence of what was happening.
"Let go of me!" Nora screamed. "Let go — someone help — help!"
Her voice tore out of her throat raw and desperate, but the street was empty. The few windows above her were dark. The main road felt impossibly far away now, the sounds of the city muffled, as though the world had simply turned its back.
The man holding her arm said nothing. None of them did. They dragged her toward the idling car with brisk force, and when she dug her heels in and twisted against them, the third man stepped forward and seized her other arm, and together they lifted her half off the ground.
"Please — stop — I don't know what you want, I don't have anything, please just—"
A cloth came down over her eyes. Dark, thick, and tied firmly at the back of her head before she could react.
The car door slammed shut.
She didn't know how long they drove.
Time became strange in the darkness. Nora sat rigidly upright in the backseat, pressed between two of the men, the blindfold cutting off everything but sound and sensation. The leather seat was cold. The car smelled of cologne and something metallic she didn't want to identify. No one spoke. The only sounds were the engine, the occasional muted signal of passing traffic, and the thin, ragged rhythm of her own breathing as she fought to keep herself from coming apart entirely.
She was shaking. She couldn't stop it.
Think, she told herself. Think. Who are these people? What do they want? Is it money? Is it a mistake?
It had to be a mistake. It had to be. She was Nora Voss — she was a junior records manager at a mid-sized logistics firm. She had forty-three dollars in her bank account until Friday and a lease she could barely afford. She was no one. She had nothing anyone could possibly want badly enough to send armed men for.
There has been a mistake, she repeated to herself like a prayer. They will realize it. They will let me go.
The car turned. Then again. Then the road beneath the tires shifted, the kind of surface that came with wealth. The engine slowed and finally stopped.
The doors opened and the firm hands found her arms again and guided her out of the car, less roughly this time but no less firmly, and Nora stumbled on uneven ground before steadying herself. Gravel crunched beneath her feet. The air was different here, carrying the faint scent of cut grass and something floral she couldn't name.
She was guided up steps. Through a door. The temperature changed and the acoustics shifted, sounds acquiring the particular weight of high ceilings and wide rooms.
A mansion. She was sure of it.
She was moved down what felt like a corridor and then her footsteps changed again — harder floor, a room — and the hands released her.
Then the blindfold came off.
Nora blinked, her vision flooding back in fragments.
Warm light from a chandelier overhead. Dark walls dressed in expensive, understated furnishings. A fireplace to her left, burning low. The room was large and impeccably appointed, the kind of space that had been put together by someone with limitless money and no interest in warmth.
And standing at the far end of it, with his back to her, was a man.
He was tall. Broad-shouldered beneath a dark dress shirt with the sleeves rolled to the elbows. He stood before the window, one hand braced against the frame, looking out at the black grounds beyond. He hadn't moved when she was brought in. He didn't move now.
Nora swallowed hard. Her throat was raw from screaming.
"Please." Her voice came out smaller than she intended. She straightened herself, pulling in a breath. "Please, I don't — I don't know what's happening. I don't know who you are or why I'm here, but I think there's been a mistake. A serious mistake. I'm no one important, I don't have enemies, I don't—"
She pressed her lips together when her voice began to shake.
"I'm begging you. Whatever this is — whoever you think I am — please, just let me go home."
The man at the window was still.
Then, slowly, he turned.
Nora's words died in her mouth.
The first bouquet arrived on Tuesday morning.Claire carried it into Nora's office with an amused smile and set it carefully on the corner of her desk. White lilies and blue hydrangeas filled the room with a fresh scent, and tucked between the stems was a small envelope with Liam's name written across the front."I've already read the card," Claire admitted. "Not on purpose. It wasn't sealed."Nora looked up from her laptop."What does it say?"Claire cleared her throat dramatically."Saw this dinosaur puzzle and thought Liam might enjoy it. No pressure. Just wanted him to have it. — Caleb."She placed the envelope beside the flowers."That's... actually quite sweet."Nora stared at the handwriting for a long moment before reaching for the intercom."Claire.""Yes?""Could you arrange for it to be sent back?"Claire blinked."The flowers too?""Everything."Claire hesitated. "They're for Liam.""I know.""And you're sure?"Nora nodded once. “Unopened."Claire looked as though she wante
Monday morning arrived with a stack of emails waiting in Nora's inbox.Most of them were routine updates from department heads, but one stood out immediately. The subject line read Grant Implementation Meeting, and beneath it was a detailed agenda outlining the first phase of the funding process.She opened the attachment and skimmed through it.The grant committee had assigned a liaison to work directly with NovaCrest throughout the implementation period. The name at the bottom of the document made her pause.Fred Lawson.A knock sounded on her office door before she could think about it any further.Claire stepped in carrying a folder and two coffees. "Your nine o'clock just arrived. I wasn't sure if you wanted tea or coffee this morning, so I guessed.""You guessed correctly."Claire smiled as she placed the cup on Nora's desk."Mr. Lawson is waiting in Conference Room Two. I told him you'd be there in a minute."Nora nodded."Thank you."She picked up the folder, took one sip of c
Something was wrong.He just didn't know what.The meeting broke up a few minutes later.Conversations replaced presentations as people drifted into smaller groups, exchanging business cards and discussing future partnerships. Mr. Hales was pulled aside almost immediately by one of the investors, while members of Nora's team gathered around her to offer quiet congratulations on securing the grant."You've earned this," Claire said, handing her a folder she'd forgotten on the conference table. "I don't think I've ever seen you smile that much in one meeting."Nora managed a small laugh. "Trust me, it was mostly for their benefit."Claire smiled, assuming it was a joke."Enjoy the rest of your day, Ms. Voss. I think you've earned that too.""I wish I could."She slipped the folder into her handbag and excused herself before anyone else could stop her. If she left now, she could still collect herself before the afternoon caught up with her."Nora."His voice followed her into the corrido
The knock on Nora's office door came just as she sent her last email."Come in," she called, closing the document on her screen.Claire stepped inside with her tablet tucked against her chest. "The investors are here, and Mr. Hales asked me to remind you the board meeting starts in fifteen minutes. The grant committee arrived a few minutes ago."Nora glanced at the clock in the corner of her monitor and let out a quiet breath. She had promised herself she wouldn't let Lena's visit affect the rest of her day, yet the hours had disappeared while she buried herself in reports and budgets. It had worked for a while, but only because numbers demanded her attention in ways memories never stopped asking for."I'll be there in a few minutes."Claire lingered by the door instead of leaving straight away. "Are you sure you're alright? You seem... different a d tensed"Nora offered the same smile she'd been giving everyone since morning. "I'm fine. Just trying to get through a busy day."Claire
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Nora had a routine.She had always had routines. They were the architecture of her life — the thing she had built first when everything else was gone.This one was particular to this city, this flat, this chapter.Six-fifteen: up. Six forty-five: Liam up, breakfast. Seven thirty: school run. Eight
The call came at half past eleven that night.Nora was awake — she usually was at that hour now, sitting in the low light of the room with her phone and a book she hadn't actually read in two days, the same page open, the words sitting on the surface of her eyes without going in.It wasn't her phon
Three days after the procedure, Liam asked for orange juice and threw a small fit when the nurse said no.Nora watched it happen from the chair with the detached calm of a woman who had refereed worse. Liam was four and he was recovering and he had opinions about everything, and the opinions were






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