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A Substitute No More, A Queen Returns Novel Cover

A Substitute No More, A Queen Returns

For five years, I was Jameson Blair's fiancée. For five years, my brothers finally treated me like a sister they loved. Then my twin, Haleigh-the one who left him at the altar-returned with a fake cancer story. In five minutes, he married her. They believed her every lie. When she tried to poison me with a venomous spider, they called me dramatic. When she framed me for ruining her party, my brothers whipped me until I bled. They called me a worthless substitute, a placeholder with her face. The final straw came when they tied me to a rope and left me dangling over a cliff to die. But I didn't die. I climbed back up, faked my death, and disappeared. They wanted a ghost. I decided to give them one.
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Chapter 1

For five years, I was Jameson Blair's fiancée. For five years, my brothers finally treated me like a sister they loved.

Then my twin, Haleigh-the one who left him at the altar-returned with a fake cancer story. In five minutes, he married her.

They believed her every lie. When she tried to poison me with a venomous spider, they called me dramatic.

When she framed me for ruining her party, my brothers whipped me until I bled.

They called me a worthless substitute, a placeholder with her face.

The final straw came when they tied me to a rope and left me dangling over a cliff to die.

But I didn't die. I climbed back up, faked my death, and disappeared. They wanted a ghost. I decided to give them one.

Chapter 1

Bailey Douglas POV:

For five years, Jameson Blair was the sun my world orbited around. For five years, I was his fiancée, the woman on his arm at every gala, the one whose name was whispered in the same breath as his. And in five short minutes, I stood on a cold linoleum floor across the street and watched him marry my twin sister, Haleigh.

He had a thousand reasons why we never made it to the city clerk' s office ourselves. A billion-dollar merger that needed his undivided attention. A hostile takeover that couldn't be postponed. A trip to Monaco he couldn' t miss. Our wedding, the real one, with the dress I' d picked out and the flowers I' d agonized over, was always just around the corner, a shimmering promise on the horizon.

"Next spring, Bailey, I promise," he'd murmur into my hair, his voice a low, intoxicating rumble that made me believe anything. "I just need to close this deal, and then all my time is for you."

I believed him. I was a fool, but I believed him because I loved him, and a small, desperate part of me that had been starved its whole life was finally being fed. I thought the warmth in his eyes was for me. I thought the way he held my hand was for me.

Now, standing behind a dusty potted fern in a coffee shop, I watched him slide a simple gold band onto Haleigh' s finger. The same Haleigh who had left him standing at the altar five years ago, running off with some musician to chase a life of excitement that had eventually spit her back out, broken and broke.

The clerk, a woman with a tired face, stamped the document. Jameson never even glanced out the window. His world was inside that sterile room.

The door to the city clerk' s office swung open, and they stepped out into the harsh New York sunlight. Haleigh, my identical twin, looked radiant. You' d never know she was dying. That was her story, at least. Stage-four pancreatic cancer. A "dying wish" to finally marry the man she' d so carelessly thrown away.

She clutched the marriage certificate to her chest, a flash of brilliant white against her crimson dress. It was a victory flag. She waved it, not at anyone in particular, but as if to the whole world. She had won. Again.

"Oh, Jameson," she cried, her voice thick with fake tears. "I'm so sorry. I'm so sorry for what I did to you five years ago. I was so foolish."

She turned, and for the first time, her eyes, my eyes, landed on me across the street. A slow, triumphant smile spread across her face. "But tell me, Jameson," she said, her voice carrying across the street in the quiet afternoon, loud enough for me to hear every syllable. "Did you ever really love her? Or was she just me?"

Time stopped. The yellow cabs blurred into a meaningless stream of color. The city's roar faded to a dull hum. I watched Jameson, my Jameson, the man who had held me through countless nights, who had kissed my tears away, who had sworn he saw me.

His jaw was tight. He didn't answer. One second. Two. Ten. A lifetime.

My lungs burned. A cold dread, heavy and thick as wet cement, began to fill me from the inside out.

He finally looked at me, his gaze empty, a stranger's glance. "Love you?" he repeated Haleigh' s question, but his words were directed at me. A verdict. An execution.

"Bailey," he said, and my name on his lips was an insult. "She's Haleigh."

And there it was. The truth I had spent five years pretending wasn't true. I wasn't Bailey. I was just not Haleigh. A placeholder. A spare. A convenient substitute with the same face.

Haleigh' s feigned tears vanished, replaced by a glittering, victorious smirk. She threw her arms around Jameson's neck and kissed him, a deep, possessive kiss that staked her claim. He kissed her back, his hands tangling in her hair just as they had in mine a million times before.

The world tilted, and I stumbled back, my hand flying to my mouth to stifle a sob that felt like it was tearing me in two.

So that' s it. It was all a lie.

A black town car screeched to a halt at the curb. The doors flew open, and my three older brothers-Derrick, Blake, and Kane-poured out, their faces wreathed in smiles.

"We came as soon as we heard!" Derrick, the oldest, boomed, holding up a bottle of champagne. "A celebration is in order!"

They rushed to Haleigh, enveloping her in a group hug, their voices a cacophony of concern and adoration.

"Haleigh, are you okay?"

"You shouldn't be out of bed!"

"Let's get you home."

My brothers. My protectors for the last five years. The ones who had finally, finally started treating me with the warmth I' d craved my entire life. They didn' t even glance in my direction. I was invisible. A ghost at the feast of their reunion.

I stood there, trembling, as they bundled Haleigh, the conquering hero, into the car. Jameson followed, his hand protectively on her back.

The car door slammed shut, and they were gone.

They left me on the sidewalk, a forgotten accessory to a life that had never truly been mine.

My knees gave out. I didn't fall, but I caught myself against the cold glass of the coffee shop window. The sting of the impact was a distant, unimportant pain.

I was born three minutes after Haleigh. From that moment on, I lived in her shadow. She was the bright, vivacious one, the one who charmed our parents, our brothers, everyone she met. I was the quiet, forgotten spare. She got the praise; I got the hand-me-downs. She got the lead in the school play; I was in the chorus. She got Jameson Blair, the heir to the Blair Corporation, the most sought-after bachelor in New York; I got to watch from the sidelines, my heart a silent, aching spectator.

Then she ran. Left him at the altar with nothing but a note. The Douglas family was humiliated. The Blair family was enraged. My brothers, who had adored her, swore they no longer had a sister named Haleigh. "You're our only sister now, Bailey," Kane had told me, his hand on my shoulder, his eyes hard.

A week later, a drunk and broken Jameson stumbled into my apartment. He had called out Haleigh' s name, his hands framing my face, his breath thick with whiskey and grief. "Why did you leave me, Haleigh?" he' d slurred, his thumb tracing my cheekbone, my jawline-our jawline.

He looked into my eyes and saw her. And in that moment of his despair, he made me an offer. "Marry me, Bailey," he' d whispered, his voice cracking. "Let's show them. Let's show her."

I was so desperately in love with him. I knew it was wrong. I knew I was a substitute. But I thought, I prayed, that over time, he would learn to see me. Just me.

So I said yes.

For five years, it was a dream. Jameson showered me with affection. He bought me a gallery to showcase my paintings. We traveled the world. He held me and told me I was beautiful. My brothers, Derrick, Blake, and Kane, became the older brothers I' d always dreamed of. They took me to games, taught me how to invest, called just to check in. They were protective, warm, present.

For the first time in my life, I believed I was loved. Truly loved for who I was.

Then, two weeks ago, Haleigh came back.

And just like that, the dream shattered. The love, the affection, the protection-it all snapped back to her like a rubber band, leaving me with nothing but the stinging emptiness of where it used to be.

A strangled laugh escaped my lips, a painful, broken sound that turned into a sob. Tears streamed down my face, hot and useless. A man walking his dog gave me a wide berth, his expression a mixture of pity and alarm.

I was a stand-in. A temporary fix. A product on a shelf, kept in pristine condition until the original came back in stock.

No more.

The thought was a spark in the overwhelming darkness.

I won't be a substitute anymore.

I pushed myself off the window, my movements stiff and robotic. My legs felt like lead, but I forced them to move. I wouldn' t go back to the villa they all shared. I wouldn' t go back to being their shadow.

I wiped my tears with the back of my hand, a useless gesture. They were already being replaced by more.

"I won't," I whispered to the indifferent city. "I won't take your scraps of affection. I won't take your pity."

A visceral, gut-wrenching pain shot through my chest. A pain so profound it felt physical. I doubled over for a second, gasping for air.

Then I straightened up.

I walked, not knowing where I was going, until a sleek, black taxi pulled up beside me. Without thinking, I got in.

"Where to, miss?" the driver asked.

An address came to mind. The headquarters of a bespoke real estate firm that specialized in the portfolios of the ultra-wealthy, a firm my grandmother had used. A trust fund she' d left me, untouched and forgotten, suddenly felt like a lifeline.

"Sotheby's International Realty on Lexington," I said, my voice hoarse.

Forty minutes later, I was sitting in a plush leather chair opposite a man named Mr. Abernathy. His suit was impeccable, his concern genuine but discreet.

"Miss Douglas," he said gently, "how can we help you?"

I took a deep breath, the air shuddering in my lungs. I met his gaze, my own reflection a ghostly image in his pupils.

"I want to buy an island," I said, my voice surprisingly steady. "The most remote, uninhabited, and inaccessible one you have."

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