Share

Chapter Four

Author: Joyce Claire
last update publish date: 2026-06-05 17:25:13

The police came for Nathaniel at dawn.

I woke to the sound of pounding on the front door and the deep, unfamiliar voices of men who were not here to be polite. By the time I pulled on a robe and made it downstairs, two officers were already standing in the foyer, and Nathaniel was halfway down the stairs with his shirt unbuttoned and his face still heavy with sleep.

Elora stood at the top of the staircase, wrapped in a silk robe, watching everything with wide, innocent eyes.

"Mr. Vance," one of the officers said, holding out a folded document, "you've been served with an emergency restraining order filed by your wife, Elena Vance."

My blood stopped moving.

Nathaniel's head turned toward me so fast I heard his neck crack. His eyes were ice, sharp and cold, and the look he gave me was not confusion or hurt; it was pure, burning hatred. "You did this?"

"I didn't," I said, and my voice came out smaller than I wanted. "I never filed anything."

But the officer was already handing him the papers, and Nathaniel was reading them with a face that grew darker with every line. Elora came down the stairs slowly, her bare feet silent on the marble, and when she reached the bottom she placed a hand on Nathaniel's arm like she was holding him back from doing something violent.

"Maybe big sister finally snapped," she said softly, and her voice was sweet but her eyes were not.

I looked at her and for a second I saw something flicker across her face. Not a look of surprise or she was concerned. It was something else that looked like satisfaction.

She knew something or she had done something.

But I couldn't prove it.

The officers left after Nathaniel signed an acknowledgment of service. He didn't speak to me. He didn't even look at me again. He just walked upstairs, and Elora followed him, and I stood alone in the foyer with my hands shaking and my mind racing.

I called Marcus immediately.

"Did you file a restraining order on my behalf?" I asked, not even saying hello.

There was a pause. "No," he said. "But someone did. I checked the filing this morning. The signature is yours but it's not your handwriting. Someone forged it."

"Who?"

"I don't know yet. But Elena, listen to me. Whoever did this wants to isolate you from Nathaniel. They want him to hate you. And it's working."

I thought about the mysterious texter. The one who had been watching me, who sent the photo of Marcus and said they were protecting me.

"Did you do this?" I typed to the unknown number.

The reply came a minute later. "I'm protecting you. He needs to know you're not weak. You deserve better than a man who never chose you."

My stomach turned. This person, whoever they were, had crossed a line. They had made me look like a liar, and had made Nathaniel my enemy.

I typed back: "Stay away from me."

No reply.

****

I couldn't stay in that house anymore. Not because I was afraid of Nathaniel but I guess a part of me was, but because I needed answers. The texter had sent me an address once before, weeks ago, in a message I had ignored. I scrolled back through my phone, past the photo of Marcus, past the warnings, past the threats dressed as kindness.

There it was. An address on the edge of the city. An abandoned building, according to the map.

I left after dark. Nathaniel was in his study with the door closed. Elora was in the guest bedroom, making phone calls in a low voice I couldn't quite hear. No one saw me sneak out the back door and get into my car.

The drive took forty minutes. The streets grew darker and emptier the farther I went, until I was driving through a part of the city I had never seen before; old warehouses, broken streetlights, buildings with boarded windows. I parked outside a three-story structure that looked like it had been empty for years.

My heart was pounding so hard I could feel it in my throat.

This is stupid, I told myself. You don't know who's in there nor do you know what they want.

But I had spent two years being careful, quiet and doing what I was told.

I was done.

I walked to the door and knocked.

It opened before I could knock again.

And I forgot how to breathe.

Standing in the doorway, frail but very much alive, was my grandmother.

Not a ghost and I wasn't hallucinating. Her hair was white now, and her face was lined with years I had thought she never lived to see, but her eyes were the same; sharp, knowing, the kind of eyes that had always seen right through me.

"Hello, Elena," she said, and her voice was exactly how I remembered it. "I'm sorry I couldn't come to you sooner."

I opened my mouth, but nothing came out. My grandmother was supposed to be dead. She had died when I was nineteen; a stroke, my mother said, sudden and silent. There had been a funeral. I had cried into a handkerchief for three days.

"You're alive," I finally whispered. "You're actually alive."

She stepped back and held the door open wider. "Come inside, child. We don't have much time, and I have so much to explain."

I walked past her into the building, and even though it looked abandoned from the outside, the inside was warm and clean; a small apartment hidden behind the broken windows. There was a couch, table, and a kettle on a hot plate. She had been living here.

"Why?" I asked. "Why did you let everyone think you were dead?"

"Because your mother and father couldn't be trusted with what I knew," she said, lowering herself onto the couch. "And because the only way to protect you was to disappear."

Before I could ask what she meant, my phone buzzed.

It had been ringing before I got here.

I pulled it out of my pocket. Three messages, all from a number I didn't recognize.

"Ms. Elena, this is David, Marcus's assistant."

"He was in a car accident an hour ago. He's at City Hospital."

"He's asking for you. Please come."

The phone slipped from my hand and clattered onto the floor.

My grandmother looked at me with knowing eyes. "What is it?"

"Marcus," I said, and my voice cracked. "He's been hurt."

She didn't ask who Marcus was. She just stood up and took my hand, and her grip was stronger than I expected.

"Go," she said. "We'll talk later. But Elena, I'm not going anywhere. I've been waiting years to find you again. I can wait a little longer."

I bent down, picked up my phone, and ran for the door.

Behind me, my grandmother's voice followed me into the night: "You're stronger than you know, child. Now go prove it."

I didn't look back.

Because for the first time in years, I had two people who needed me, and I wasn't going to lose either of them.

Continue to read this book for free
Scan code to download App

Latest chapter

  • The Substitute Bride's Twins    Chapter Nine

    The train was gone, leaving the platform exposed once more and all around me, life moved in a blur,businessmen checking their watches, tourists dragging luggage, and children chasing parents through the terminal but the one person I cared about was nowhere to be seen."Grandmother!" I shouted but no answer came. I walked forward Marcus followed immediately on my heels. "Elena, wait."But I was already moving, reaching the exact spot where Grandma had been standing less than thirty seconds earlier. There was nothing, no sign of her, no sign of the man, and no proof that either of them had ever been there."It's impossible," I breathed.Marcus looked through the crowd, pointing toward a nearby staircase. "They didn't disappear, but there are multiple exits here." My stomach twisted me, a busy station offered hundreds of escape routes the perfect place to stage a meeting, or a warning. We searched for nearly an hour, but found completely nothing. Eventually, Marcus persuaded me to stop.

  • The Substitute Bride's Twins    Chapter Eight

    The room went silent after the video ended. Marcus replayed the video again and again, but neither of us spoke.The grainy footage showed the hooded figure kneeling beside Marcus's car, tampering with it before walking away. Then, turned just enough for the camera to catch part of his face, it wasn't not clear, and not enough for certainty, but it was enough to recognize and was enough to make Marcus pale.I looked at him. "Who is it?" His jaw tightened. "Not yet," anger flashed through me. "Marcus.""I need to verify something first."I stood abruptly. "You expect me to sit here after everything that has happened," "I expect you to stay alive." His voice came out sharper than intended, we stared at each other and for several seconds neither of us moved, and then he sighed. "I'm not hiding it from you.""Then tell me.""I could be wrong," his expression remained grim. "And if I'm wrong, telling you now will send you chasing ghosts."I hated that he had a point. Eventually, I sat back

  • The Substitute Bride's Twins    Chapter Seven

    The room suddenly felt incredibly small, beween the decaying walls of the old apartment, the hidden lockbox, and the birth certificate trembling in my hands, everything else seemed to fade into the background compared to the words Marcus had just spoken."He's supposed to be dead."I stared at him, my heart hammering violently against my ribs. "What do you mean by supposed to be dead…Marcus looked deeply uncomfortable, for the first time since I'd known him, he seemed genuinely, completely unsettled.He gently took the document from my shaking fingers, his eyes lingering on the father's name before he let out a long, slow exhale."I never met him personally," he admitted…."Then how on earth do you know who he is?""Because I've spent years working with corporate records, inheritance disputes, and estate law," Marcus explained, his voice tight.My stomach knotted. "And?"Marcus hesitated, I absolutely hated when people hesitated especially tonight, “Marcus, tell me." "He was one of the

  • The Substitute Bride's Twins    Chapter Six

    The silence inside the hospital room felt heavier than a concrete marcus was the first one to break it, he slowly lowered himself back onto the edge of the bed, while his eyes locked onto mine."Did your grandmother really just say that Clara and Richard aren't your actual parents?"I swallowed hard, my throat feeling completely dry. "I don't know," I whispered, even to me, the words sounded ridiculous. For twenty-six years, Clara and Richard had been my parents though they were terrible and cruel people but they were the only parents I had ever known.Now, a woman who was supposed to be resting in a grave had destroyed my entire life's certainty with a single sentence, marcus rubbed a hand over his face, looking exhausted. "We need answers."I nodded firmly. "We're going back to her place.""Tonight?, Yes Tonight."Neither of us wanted to wait another second my phone stayed completely silent after the call hanged up,there was any new messages,follow-up or an explanations…..nothing.T

  • The Substitute Bride's Twins    Chapter Five

    The automatic doors of City Hospital slid open, and I rushed inside I even barely remembered parking the car.Just a few minutes ago, I had been standing face-to-face with my grandmother, the same grandmother I thought was dead ,the next thing I knew, I was racing through traffic with shaking hands, praying I wasn't too late to save Marcus.He couldn't be dead,he just couldn't be.The receptionist pointed me toward the emergency wing, and I broke into a full run, when I reached his room, I shoved the door open so hard it slammed loudly against the wall.Marcus looked up and thank God he was aliv, relief hit me so hard my knees almost gave out right there, his left arm was wrapped in a cast, a deep cut ran across his forehead, and dark bruises covered one side of his face but he was breathing."Elena," he said, his voice sounding rough and strained.I crossed the room in seconds. "What really happened?"Marcus studied my face for a moment, and his expression softened. "You look worse th

  • The Substitute Bride's Twins    Chapter Four

    The police came for Nathaniel at dawn.I woke to the sound of pounding on the front door and the deep, unfamiliar voices of men who were not here to be polite. By the time I pulled on a robe and made it downstairs, two officers were already standing in the foyer, and Nathaniel was halfway down the stairs with his shirt unbuttoned and his face still heavy with sleep.Elora stood at the top of the staircase, wrapped in a silk robe, watching everything with wide, innocent eyes."Mr. Vance," one of the officers said, holding out a folded document, "you've been served with an emergency restraining order filed by your wife, Elena Vance."My blood stopped moving.Nathaniel's head turned toward me so fast I heard his neck crack. His eyes were ice, sharp and cold, and the look he gave me was not confusion or hurt; it was pure, burning hatred. "You did this?""I didn't," I said, and my voice came out smaller than I wanted. "I never filed anything."But the officer was already handing him the pa

  • The Substitute Bride's Twins    Chapter Three

    The welcome home dinner was exactly what I expected, which somehow made it worse.My mother arrived an hour early to "help," which meant she stood in the kitchen and told me everything I was doing wrong while I chopped vegetables and seasoned meat and checked the oven temperature for the tenth time

  • The Substitute Bride's Twins    Chapter One

    "Make a divorce papers ready, with my name and Nathaniel's boldly written on it,,” I demanded, my voice came out steadier than I expected. "And I need them fast."I clearly heard him sigh on the other end of the phone. He knew more than anyone how desperate I am right now and I hope he wouldn't go

  • The Substitute Bride's Twins    Chapter Two

    I sat down across from them, keeping my back straight and my hands still. The silence stretched between us like a rope about to snap, and I could feel Elora watching me the way a cat watches a bird through a window; curious, patient, already certain of the ending.Before anyone could speak, the doo

More Chapters
Explore and read good novels for free
Free access to a vast number of good novels on GoodNovel app. Download the books you like and read anywhere & anytime.
Read books for free on the app
SCAN CODE TO READ ON APP
DMCA.com Protection Status