LOGINMarriage is meant to be a promise sealed in love, yet Ama’s story began with silence, pressure, and a choice that was never hers. Mistaken for her missing twin sister on the day of a high-profile union, Ama is forced into a marriage meant to save two powerful families from collapse. With no time to speak, no chance to refuse, she is pushed into a bridal gown that doesn’t belong to her… and a name that isn’t hers to carry. When power speaks, obedience follows. Bound by duty and fear of destroying her family, Ama walks down the aisle and swears vows to a man she has never met—Daniel Mensah, a cold, untouchable billionaire rumored to have no heart at all. She enters the marriage believing it is nothing but a mistake. But behind Daniel’s distant eyes lies a man who sees through her silence, protects her without question, and slowly becomes the only truth in a life built on lies. Because sometimes… the wrong vow leads you exactly where you were meant to be. Write for the mistake. Write for the love. Write for the Mr. Right found in a union that was never supposed to be.
View MoreChapter 1: The Bride Who Wasn’t Meant to Be
“Ama… you’re going to walk down that aisle.”
The words were calm, but the meaning behind them felt like a chain tightening around her throat.
Ama stood frozen in the middle of the bridal room, her hands trembling as she stared at her aunt. The white gown hanging beside her looked beautiful—too beautiful for something that felt so wrong.
“I can’t do this,” Ama whispered, stepping back until her shoulder hit the mirror. “This isn’t my wedding. I’m not Adjoa.”
Her aunt’s expression hardened instantly.
“You are Adjoa today.”
Ama’s heart dropped.
“No…” she shook her head violently. “I’m Ama. I’m her twin, not her replacement. You can’t just—just turn me into her because she disappeared!”
Silence.
Heavy. Suffocating.
Then her aunt stepped forward, lowering her voice dangerously.
“Adjoa is gone. The Mensah family is here. The contracts are signed. The alliance is the only thing keeping this family from ruin. If this wedding doesn’t happen, we lose everything.”
Ama’s breath shook.
Everything.
The house. The business. Their reputation. Even their safety.
“But this is wrong,” Ama whispered weakly. “What happens when he finds out I’m not her?”
Her aunt grabbed her shoulders tightly.
“Then pray to God he never does.”
Ten minutes later, Ama stood in front of the mirror again.
But she didn’t recognize the girl staring back at her.
The bridal gown fit perfectly—almost cruelly so. The lace hugged her figure, the veil softened her features, and for a moment, she looked like someone else entirely.
Like Adjoa.
Like a lie given form.
Her fingers trembled as the makeup artist adjusted the veil over her face.
“Hold still,” the woman said softly. “You look beautiful.”
Beautiful.
If only beauty could erase fear.
Ama swallowed hard. Her reflection blurred through the veil, and for a second, she almost forgot who she really was.
Not the bride.
Not the chosen one.
Just a replacement.
Outside, the wedding hall was already full.
Guests from powerful families whispered behind elegant smiles. Cameras flashed. Gold decorations shimmered under crystal chandeliers. Everything screamed wealth, power, and expectation.
And at the end of it all—was the altar.
Her fate waiting.
The music started.
A deep, ceremonial melody that made her stomach twist.
Ama’s legs felt weak as she stepped forward. The doors opened slowly, and the entire hall turned toward her.
Dozens of eyes.
Judging.
Waiting.
Whispering.
“She looks nervous…”
“Is that Adjoa Mensah?”
“She’s even more beautiful in person…”
But Ama barely heard them.
All she could hear was her heartbeat.
Loud. Fast. Relentless.
One step.
Another.
The aisle stretched endlessly in front of her, like a path she could never walk back from.
Her fingers clenched the bouquet so tightly it almost hurt.
Don’t fall. Don’t cry. Don’t run.
But then—
She saw him.
Daniel Mensah.
And everything inside her stopped.
He stood at the altar like he belonged to it.
Tall. Impeccably dressed in a black tuxedo that looked tailored to perfection. His posture was straight, his expression unreadable.
But it was his eyes that froze her completely.
Dark. Sharp. Observant.
Not warm. Not welcoming.
Studying her.
Like he was reading something she hadn’t written.
Ama’s breath caught.
This was the man she was about to marry.
A stranger.
A billionaire.
A name feared and respected across the country.
And she had just stepped into his life wearing someone else’s identity.
Each step she took toward him felt heavier.
The closer she got, the harder it became to breathe.
Something about him was… unsettling.
Not cruel.
Not kind.
Controlled.
Dangerously controlled.
When she finally reached the altar, she couldn’t look up immediately. Her hands shook as she stood beside him, close enough to feel his presence, but too terrified to meet his eyes.
Then it happened.
A shift in the air.
Daniel turned slightly toward her.
And looked at her face.
Not the veil.
Not the crowd.
Her.
Ama felt it instantly.
That gaze.
It lingered too long.
Too focused.
As if something about her didn’t match what he expected.
Her pulse spiked.
Did he know?
Impossible.
No one knew.
No one could know.
Still, she forced herself to remain still, her breathing shallow as the priest stepped forward.
“Dearly beloved, we are gathered here today…”
The words blurred into background noise.
Ama couldn’t focus.
Her mind was spinning.
If he finds out… I’m finished.
If anyone finds out… my family is ruined.
If Adjoa ever comes back…
The thought broke off sharply.
Because Adjoa wasn’t here.
And Ama was.
In her place.
Living her life.
Stealing her destiny.
“Do you take this woman as your lawfully wedded wife?” the priest asked.
A pause.
A single heartbeat stretched into eternity.
Ama didn’t dare look up.
Then—
“I do.”
His voice was calm.
Deep.
Certain.
Final.
Ama’s fingers tightened around the bouquet.
That was it.
No hesitation.
No emotion.
Just acceptance.
Like she was already chosen.
The priest turned toward her.
“Do you take this man as your lawfully wedded husband?”
The entire hall waited.
Ama’s throat went dry.
This was the moment.
The turning point.
She could stop it.
She could confess everything.
She could run.
But then—
Her eyes lifted slightly.
And she saw her aunt in the crowd.
The look on her face wasn’t pleading anymore.
It was warning.
Sharp. Terrified. Final.
If this fails… everything collapses.
Ama’s heart shattered in silence.
Her lips parted.
But no sound came out.
The silence stretched.
Too long.
Too loud.
People shifted uncomfortably.
Whispers began.
“Why is she not answering?”
“Is something wrong?”
Ama’s fingers trembled violently.
She closed her eyes.
Forgive me.
“…I do.”
A wave of applause erupted instantly.
Music swelled.
Smiles returned.
The ceremony continued as if nothing was wrong.
But inside Ama—
Everything had already fallen apart.
Because the moment she spoke those two words…
She had just married a stranger.
A man who didn’t know her real name.
A family that didn’t know her face.
A life that wasn’t meant to be hers.
And standing beside her…
Daniel Mensah turned slightly.
His gaze lingered on her once more.
Longer this time.
Quieter.
More dangerous.
As if somewhere deep inside him…
He had already begun to suspect
that the woman he just married…
was not the woman he was promised.
The Wrong Vow, My Perfect MatchBook Two: The Green DawnChapter 210: The Fifth DawnThe chamber fell into complete silence.Only the slow heartbeat of the living roots could be heard.Thump.Thump.Thump.The words of the First Rootkeeper echoed through the underground forest."The Fifth Dawn is almost ready to bloom."Ama looked around."The Fifth?"The Rootkeeper inclined their head."Yes."Harbor frowned."There were only four."The Rootkeeper smiled."Were there?"The question lingered.No one answered.The Rootkeeper walked toward the center of the chamber.The living earth opened beneath their feet.A pool of crystal-clear water emerged.Its surface reflected no faces.Only light.Green light.The Rootkeeper gestured for Ama to come closer.She knelt beside the pool."What do you see?"Ama gazed into the water.At first...Nothing.Then gentle ripples spread across the surface.One image appeared.The First Dawn.Children looking at the stars with wonder.Dreams being born.The
The Wrong Vow, My Perfect MatchBook Two: The Green DawnChapter 209: Beneath the Living RootsThe voices did not call in unison.Each spoke differently.Some were deep.Some were soft.Some sounded like children.Others carried the wisdom of countless centuries.Yet together...They formed a single greeting."Ama."The staircase of living roots continued to rise.Each step wove itself from emerald vines.Golden moss bloomed along the edges.Tiny silver flowers opened where each root touched the earth.Blue streams of light flowed beneath the living wood.The four colors of the Dawns.United.The great green tree bowed.Not from weakness.From respect.The forest that remembered grew silent.Even its ancient face lowered toward the staircase.Harbor whispered,"I've never seen the roots move."The child smiled."They don't move."Harbor blinked."They invite."Ama looked at the opening beneath the tree.There was no darkness below.Only warm green light.It felt familiar.Not because
The Wrong Vow, My Perfect MatchBook Two: The Green DawnChapter 208: The Forest That Remembers"Return what was never meant to be named."The words rolled across the meadow.Not shouted.Rooted.Every blade of grass bent beneath their weight.The flowers that had bloomed only moments before folded their petals.The butterflies vanished into the sky.Ama stepped forward.She refused to let the child stand alone.Behind her, Harbor guided the people into a wide circle.No panic.Only quiet determination.The newly named man stood beside Ama.His eyes never left the approaching forest."I remember them now."Ama glanced at him."Who are they?"He took a slow breath."They are the Keepers of What Was Left Behind."The nearest tree stopped at the edge of the meadow.Its bark shifted like living skin.One glowing eye became two.Then a face emerged from the trunk.Ancient.Weathered.Neither cruel nor kind.Simply old."You abandoned your duty."The voice echoed through every branch.The n
The Wrong Vow, My Perfect MatchBook Two: The Green DawnChapter 207: The First Spoken NameThe world waited.No wind stirred the meadow.The rivers became still.Even the butterflies hovered in silence.The glowing butterfly rested between the child and the former Shadow.Upon its wings shimmered a single name.Not written in ink.Not carved in light.It seemed alive.Changing ever so slightly with every heartbeat.The former Shadow hesitated."I..."Its voice trembled."I do not deserve this."The child smiled."Names aren't earned."A pause."They're received."Ama felt those words settle deep within her.She remembered Harbor accepting his name.Not claiming it.Accepting it.The difference mattered.The former Shadow slowly extended a trembling hand.Before their fingers could touch the butterfly—The child gently shook their head."No."The Shadow stopped."Not with your hand."The child reached forward.Resting a tiny palm over the Shadow's heart."With this."The heartbeat gre
The Wrong Vow, My Perfect MatchChapter 180: The Thing Beneath the Sea“…that we forgot what destroyed the first Dreamers.”The words hung in the air.Cold.Heavy.Wrong.The joy that had filled the bridge moments before vanished.The blooming silver tree.The laughter of forgotten lives.The relie
The Wrong Vow, My Perfect MatchChapter 179: When the World AnsweredThe first silver tree bloomed.For the first time in all of existence.Flowers of silver light unfolded across its branches.Thousands.Then millions.Each blossom shining like a tiny star.The moment it happened, something change
The Wrong Vow, My Perfect MatchChapter 178: A Story Shared Becomes ForeverA story shared becomes forever.The words shone across the ancient door.Simple.Beautiful.And impossibly old.Ama stared at them.The forgotten lives beyond the threshold stared too.The Last Dreamer looked as though he h
The Wrong Vow, My Perfect MatchChapter 177: The Dream No One SawThe covenant was never meant for one Dreamer.The words echoed across the bridge.For a moment, nobody spoke.Nobody moved.Ama stared at the Keeper.The Last Dreamer looked stunned.Even the First Dreamer had fallen silent.As if th












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