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Billionaire's Placeholder: Now Watch Me Shine

Billionaire's Placeholder: Now Watch Me Shine

For two years, I was the perfect shadow of another woman. I wore the silk robes Brittain Austin bought, styled my hair exactly how he liked, and spoke in a voice pitched half an octave higher than my own. I was a placeholder, a living statue in a minimalist Manhattan penthouse, waiting for a man who looked at me but never actually saw me. Everything shattered when a news alert flashed on my phone: "Caryn Newman Spotted at JFK." The original was back. The woman I was hired to mimic had returned to claim her throne, and my secret two-year contract as her stand-in was set to expire in three days. Brittain didn't even give me the courtesy of a phone call. While he was supposed to be on a business trip, photos surfaced of him shielding Caryn from the paparazzi, his hand on her waist with a tenderness he never showed me. When I walked into his office to return his keys, he didn't look guilty; he just looked annoyed. He pulled out a checkbook and asked, "How much for the hurt feelings?" When I refused his money, he coldly ordered his assistant to freeze every one of my accounts before I even reached the elevator. I stood on the sidewalk with zero dollars, realizing that to him, I wasn't a partner—I was just an expired lease. I had spent two years erasing my soul to fit into his world, only to be tossed out like trash the moment the real thing came home. But Brittain forgot one thing: before I was his doll, I was an actress. I pulled my secret weapon from under the bed—a notebook and a raw film cut he never knew existed. I called my agent and launched a high-profile "showmance" with my co-star that set the internet on fire. As I blocked Brittain's number and moved into a dusty apartment in Queens, I realized the show wasn't over. For the first time, I was the leading lady.
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Chapter 4

Cara walked into the lobby of Austin Media like she owned it. She was wearing a sharp black blazer over her dress, sunglasses on. She headed straight for the private elevators. She tapped her access card against the reader. BEEP. A red light flashed. Access Denied. She tried again. Red light. She laughed, a short, dry sound. He had already cut her off. He was efficient, she'll give him that. A security guard, a man she had brought coffee to three times, stepped forward. "Ms. Clay, I'm sorry, I can't let you up." Cara took off her sunglasses. She didn't plead. She stared him down. "I am here to return Mr. Austin's house keys," she said loudly. "Unless you want me to leave them right here on the floor where anyone can pick them up?" The receptionist behind the desk looked panicked. She picked up the phone. "Mr. Wong? Ms. Clay is here. She's... causing a scene." Two minutes later, Burrel came out of the elevator. He looked tired. "Cara, please," he said, trying to steer her toward a side room. "He's in a meeting." "Is it a strategy meeting on how to rehabilitate Ms. Newman's image?" Cara asked. Her voice carried across the marble lobby. Heads turned. Burrel winced. "Come with me." He swiped his badge. They rode the elevator in silence. The numbers climbed. 40. 50. 60. "He's busy, Cara," Burrel said softly. "Mr. Austin cut his London trip short. An urgent matter regarding Ms. Newman came up." "Busy rekindling old flames?" Cara asked. The doors opened. The top floor was all glass and steel. Cara walked past Burrel's desk. Through the glass wall of the main office, she saw him. Brittain wasn't in a meeting. He was sitting alone at his desk, reading a document. He looked annoyed, not busy. Cara pushed open the heavy glass door. It didn't slam, thanks to the expensive hinges, but it made a solid thud. Brittain looked up. His brows knit together. "Who let you up here?" Cara didn't stop until she reached his desk. She reached into her pocket and pulled out the ring of keys-the penthouse, the Hamptons house, the Malibu villa. She slammed them onto the mahogany desk. The metal jangled violently. Brittain looked at the keys, then at Cara. His expression was bored. "What is this tantrum, Cara?" She didn't sit. She towered over him, or tried to. She pulled the printout of the airport photo from her bag and slid it across the desk. "Your muse is back," she said. "I'm returning my badge." Brittain glanced at the photo. He didn't look guilty. He looked irritated that his privacy was breached. "It was just a ride from the airport," he said. "You're overreacting." Cara laughed. It was a bitter sound. "A ride? Your hand is on her waist, Brittain. You don't touch friends like that." He stood up then. He was tall, looming over her. The air in the room grew heavy. "Watch your tone, Cara. Remember who you are talking to." Cara straightened her spine. She looked him dead in the eye. "I know exactly who I am talking to," she said. "My ex-boyfriend. That's my new identity."

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