
Her Perfect Lie: The Empire Heiress
In a world ruled by power and illusion, the most dangerous role is playing yourself.
When scandal detonates inside the powerful Laurent empire, its fragile heiress, Georgia Laurent, vanishes from public view. Investors panic. Markets wobble. The media circles like vultures.
Then Georgia returns.
Perfectly styled. Perfectly composed. Perfectly convincing.
There's just one problem.
She isn't Georgia Laurent.
She's Sharon Beckley - a struggling actress drowning in debt and one missed audition away from losing everything. When the enigmatic fixer James Barnett offers her an obscene amount of money to impersonate the heiress "temporarily," Sharon accepts. It's a role with strict rules: smile for cameras, memorize the biography, sign where instructed, and never ask questions.
But behind the mirrored walls of the Laurent estate, Sharon discovers this isn't damage control.
It's containment.
Locked wings of the mansion. Security systems recently upgraded. Burned files in marble fireplaces. Offshore accounts bleeding billions from Laurent Global Holdings. And whispers of a former executive whose fatal accident may have been murder.
When Sharon pushes too far, the pressure shifts. Surveillance tightens. James grows colder. The board becomes ruthless.
Then the real Georgia disappears.
No flight records. No secure messages. No proof she's alive.
And suddenly Sharon understands the truth: she wasn't hired to stand in.
She was selected to replace.
Now trapped inside a stolen identity with powerful men determined to preserve the illusion, Sharon faces an impossible choice - become Georgia completely and inherit an empire built on blood...
Or expose the conspiracy and risk being erased permanently.
Because in the Laurent world, identities are assets.
And only one Georgia Laurent is allowed to exist.
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Chapter 6
Chapter 6 – CAMERAS AND CROSSHAIRS
"They're multiplying."
Sharon didn't look up from the tinted window, but she could see them in the reflection-cameras stacked three rows deep, lenses like black mechanical eyes. Waiting. Hunting.
"Good," James Barnett replied smoothly from the seat across from her. "Visibility calms investors."
Visibility.
The word made her throat tighten.
The car slowed as they approached the Laurent Tower plaza. News vans clogged the street. Satellite dishes tilted toward the sky. Reporters leaned against barricades, breath fogging in the cool evening air.
She adjusted the pearl earrings-Georgia's pearls-and studied her reflection.
Posture. Chin level. Shoulders still. Smile, but not wide. Georgia Laurent didn't beam. She permitted.
"You remember the talking points?" James asked.
"Yes."
"Repeat the core line."
Sharon exhaled. "I'm grateful for the board's continued confidence. I've taken time to reflect. Laurent Global is stronger than ever."
James nodded once. Approval without warmth.
The door opened.
Noise exploded.
"Georgia! Is it true the SEC is reviewing offshore subsidiaries?"
"Miss Laurent, did you know Victor Hale personally?"
"Are you under criminal investigation?"
The questions pierced through her practiced composure. Victor Hale. The former CFO who had "fallen" from a private balcony in Monaco.
She stepped out.
Flashbulbs detonated.
Her smile held.
Security guided her forward, but the crowd surged. A hand brushed her sleeve-too deliberate to be accidental.
A voice cut through the chaos, low and male, right beside her ear.
"You shouldn't be here."
Her pulse stumbled.
She didn't turn. Georgia would not turn.
The doors of Laurent Tower swallowed her whole.
Inside, silence fell like a curtain.
But the echo of that voice followed her up the marble lobby.
You shouldn't be here.
As if he knew.
The boardroom screens were already on when she entered.
Every major network displayed her image in split-screen panels. Analysts dissected her posture. Body language experts slowed down footage of her blinking.
"She blinked three times when Victor Hale's name was mentioned," one commentator said.
"That indicates stress," another replied. "Or deception."
Sharon felt sweat collect beneath the silk blouse.
James stood at the head of the table. "This is good," he said to the board. "Engagement metrics are up."
"Engagement?" one director snapped. "The stock dropped six percent in two hours."
Another screen shifted to a grainy image.
A still photo.
Georgia Laurent-real Georgia-three months ago at a private airport hangar.
But something was wrong.
Sharon leaned closer.
The timestamp.
It was dated two weeks ago.
"That's impossible," she murmured before she could stop herself.
The room went quiet.
James' gaze slid toward her. Slow. Calculating.
"Excuse me?"
She recovered. "I meant-the angle is unflattering."
No one laughed.
The image lingered.
If Georgia had been photographed two weeks ago... then who had Sharon been replacing all this time?
A junior board member cleared his throat. "There's also this."
He clicked another image onto the screen.
A zoomed-in shot from tonight's entrance.
Sharon.
But highlighted in red-circled.
A faint scar near her jawline.
Georgia didn't have that scar.
The cameras had found it.
The board began murmuring.
James' voice cut through them. Calm. Controlled. "We will manage the narrative."
But Sharon could feel it now.
The crosshairs weren't just metaphorical.
They were tightening.
Later that night, Sharon stood alone in Georgia's penthouse suite, city lights burning beneath her like a constellation of watchful eyes.
She replayed the footage on her private tablet.
Paused.
Zoomed.
There it was again.
The hangar image.
She enhanced the contrast.
Behind Georgia-real Georgia-was a man partially obscured by shadow.
Sharon froze.
She knew that posture.
She'd seen it in training rooms.
In hallways.
Outside doors.
James Barnett.
But the timestamp was recent.
Meaning-
The penthouse lights flickered.
Once.
Twice.
Her phone buzzed.
Unknown number.
She hesitated before answering.
A woman's voice whispered through static.
"They're watching you."
Sharon's blood turned to ice.
"Who is this?"
A breath.
Then-
"I am Georgia."
The line went dead.
At that exact moment, a red laser dot appeared on the glass wall in front of her.
Steady.
Unwavering.
Centered on her chest.
Sharon did not breathe.
Somewhere across the skyline, someone had a perfect shot.
And someone else had just claimed to be the woman she was pretending to be.
The laser dot moved-
Up.
To her head.
And the lights went out.
Darkness swallowed the penthouse.
The laser dot vanished.
For half a second, Sharon thought she had imagined it.
Then she heard it-
The faint mechanical hum of the motorized blinds beginning to lower.
Automatic lockdown.
Georgia's penthouse was equipped with layered security. Reinforced glass. Motion sensors. Panic protocol.
Which meant one thing.
The system had detected a weapon signature.
Her lungs burned from holding her breath.
"Move," she whispered to herself.
But which direction? Toward the interior hallway? The panic room? The floor?
If it was a professional sniper, they would anticipate a drop.
The emergency lights flickered on-low amber strips along the floor.
Her reflection ghosted faintly against the glass.
She forced herself to think like Georgia.
Not Sharon.
Georgia would not scramble.
Georgia would command.
She walked-slowly-away from the window.
Every step felt like walking through a minefield.
Then-
A crack split the air.
Not loud. Suppressed.
But unmistakable.
The glass did not shatter. It spidered-white fractures blooming inches from where her head had been seconds ago.
Her knees almost buckled.
Someone had fired.
Through reinforced, ballistic glass.
Which meant high caliber. Military grade.
This wasn't paparazzi intimidation.
This was execution.
The internal security system triggered fully now-metal shutters slamming down over exterior windows with violent finality.
She was sealed inside.
Safe?
Or trapped?
Her phone vibrated again.
Unknown number.
Her hands shook as she answered.
"You're slower than I hoped," the woman's voice said.
Cold. Measured. Controlled.
"Who are you?" Sharon demanded.
"You know who I am."
"No," Sharon whispered. "If you were Georgia, you wouldn't need to call."
A pause.
Then a soft, humorless laugh.
"James told you that, didn't he?"
Sharon's heart stuttered.
The woman continued.
"You're in the penthouse. Northwest corner. You nearly died just now."
"How do you know that?"
"Because," the voice said calmly, "I was supposed to."
The words hit like ice water.
"They've been trying for weeks. The board can't force a vote while I'm alive. But a grieving market? That's profitable."
Sharon pressed her back against the marble column, sliding slowly to the floor.
"You're lying."
"Am I?" the woman asked. "Check the hangar photo again. Zoom the shadow."
Sharon's stomach dropped.
"I saw it."
"Yes. And you recognized him."
James.
"He's cleaning up loose ends," the voice continued. "You're not meant to survive this quarter."
Silence filled the space between them.
Then Sharon asked the question that had been clawing at her since the gala.
"Where are you?"
Another pause.
When the woman answered, her voice lowered.
"Closer than you think."
The line disconnected.
The lights surged back to full power.
A calm automated voice echoed through the penthouse.
"Threat neutralized. Exterior activity cleared."
Neutralized?
Sharon rushed to the control panel embedded in the wall.
She accessed the building's live perimeter cameras.
Street level: empty.
Rooftops: nothing visible.
Opposite tower-financial district high-rise-camera offline.
Offline.
She switched feeds.
Static.
Another.
Static.
Someone had temporarily blinded the surveillance grid.
That required access.
High-level access.
Her phone buzzed again.
This time-a message.
No number attached.
Just a video file.
She hesitated before pressing play.
The screen filled with security footage.
Not from tonight.
From three nights ago.
The penthouse bedroom.
Georgia-real Georgia-arguing with someone off camera.
The timestamp was recent.
Georgia looked exhausted. Frightened.
Her voice was faint but audible.
"You said it would only be temporary."
A male voice responded.
"You're becoming unpredictable."
Sharon leaned closer.
The man stepped into frame.
James Barnett.
Georgia whispered something Sharon barely caught.
"If anything happens to me-"
The video cut to black.
Sharon's pulse thundered in her ears.
Another message followed.
He thinks I'm already gone.
The same unknown sender.
The same woman.
If Georgia was alive...
Then what had Sharon almost died for?
Footsteps sounded behind her.
Sharon turned slowly.
James Barnett stood in the doorway of the penthouse office.
Perfect suit. Calm expression.
Concern carefully arranged across his features.
"Are you hurt?" he asked gently.
Her mouth went dry.
He stepped closer.
"I came as soon as I heard about the incident."
Incident.
As if it were a spilled drink.
He studied her face.
Searching.
Assessing.
Calculating.
"Did anyone contact you?" he asked casually.
There it was.
The test.
Sharon forced her breathing steady.
"No."
His eyes held hers a second too long.
Then he smiled.
"Good."
Behind him, unnoticed at first, one of the interior security monitors flickered back to life.
Sharon's gaze drifted past his shoulder.
The rooftop feed across the street had restored.
And on it-
A man packing up a long rifle.
Security zoomed automatically on facial recognition.
The image sharpened.
Clear.
Undeniable.
It wasn't a stranger.
It was a Laurent Global security contractor.
Authorized by James Barnett.
Sharon's eyes snapped back to James.
He followed her line of sight.
For one fraction of a second-
His mask slipped.
Just enough.
He saw what she had seen.
And he understood.
She knew.
James didn't reach for his phone.
He didn't shout.
He simply closed the office door behind him.
Locked it.
And said quietly-
"You weren't supposed to access that feed."
Good. We don't slow down now.
We tighten the noose.
"You weren't supposed to access that feed."
James' voice wasn't angry.
It was disappointed.
Which was worse.
Sharon didn't move.
The office suddenly felt smaller. The air heavier.
Behind him, the door lock engaged with a muted mechanical click.
Not loud.
Not dramatic.
Just final.
"I didn't access anything," she said carefully. "It was already on."
James studied her face.
Searching for cracks.
For fear.
For confession.
"You're shaking," he observed softly.
Because someone just tried to kill me.
Because you're standing between me and the only exit.
Because I just saw your contractor with a rifle.
But Georgia wouldn't say any of that.
Georgia Laurent would tilt her chin.
Georgia would remain untouchable.
So Sharon straightened her spine.
"Of course I'm shaking," she replied coolly. "A bullet just kissed my window."
Something flickered in his eyes.
Interest.
Not guilt.
Interest.
"You handled it well," he said. "Most people would have panicked."
"Most people don't have reinforced glass."
He took another step forward.
Not threatening.
Measured.
Predatory.
"You're adapting quickly," he said.
The words landed wrong.
Adapting.
As if she were a specimen.
As if this were a test.
Sharon let silence stretch.
Then-
"I received a message."
James' face stilled.
Just slightly.
"A message?" he asked.
"Yes. Someone claiming to be me."
There it was.
A calculated risk.
If he already knew Georgia had contacted her, this would confirm alignment.
If he didn't-
She would see it.
James didn't blink.
"What did the message say?"
"She said," Sharon replied evenly, "that you were cleaning up loose ends."
Silence.
Heavy.
Dense.
James didn't react.
Not with anger.
Not with outrage.
He exhaled slowly.
"Paranoia," he said. "Stress fractures judgment."
"Is she alive?" Sharon asked.
The question hung between them.
James held her gaze.
Then smiled.
"The real question," he said quietly, "is whether that matters."
Her stomach dropped.
He wasn't denying it.
He wasn't confirming it.
He was reframing it.
Power shift.
"If she's unstable," he continued, "the board loses confidence. Markets drop. Shareholders panic. Sometimes... strategic narratives are necessary."
Strategic narratives.
Like hiring an actress.
Like staging recovery.
Like staging death?
"You knew about the shot," Sharon said softly.
"I knew someone would test the perimeter."
Test.
Not attempt.
Test.
"You mean kill me," she corrected.
"No," James replied calmly. "Kill uncertainty."
The words were ice.
He stepped closer until he was standing just inside her personal space.
"You are Georgia," he said quietly. "To the world. To the board. To the banks. To the prosecutors who are sniffing around offshore transfers."
There it was.
Confirmation.
There were investigators.
"And if I stop cooperating?" she asked.
He didn't hesitate.
"Then you stop existing."
No raised voice.
No threat.
Just fact.
Her pulse thundered in her ears.
Then-
Her phone vibrated again.
James' eyes dropped instantly to it.
"Answer it," he said.
The same unknown ID.
Sharon lifted it slowly.
Put it on speaker.
Silence.
Then-
A breath.
Familiar now.
Measured.
The woman spoke.
"James."
The temperature in the room changed.
Not metaphorically.
Actually.
James didn't move.
But something hardened behind his eyes.
"You shouldn't be calling this line," he said.
So calm.
So composed.
"So I'm alive?" the woman asked lightly.
Sharon's breath caught.
No disguise.
No attempt to pretend.
The real Georgia Laurent was on the line.
"You're creating instability," James replied.
"You tried to kill my proxy."
Proxy.
Not Sharon.
Not a woman.
An asset.
The woman on the phone laughed softly.
"You always did underestimate women who survive you."
Sharon's mind raced.
This wasn't fear.
This was history.
There was history here.
"Where are you?" James asked.
"Safe," Georgia replied. "For now."
"You're making this worse."
"No," she said. "You are."
A pause.
Then Georgia continued.
"Check the news."
The line went dead.
All three phones in the room buzzed simultaneously.
Sharon's.
James'.
And the office wall screen flickered automatically to a financial news alert.
Breaking banner across the bottom.
LAURENT GLOBAL CFO FOUND DEAD IN APPARENT SUICIDE.
Sharon's stomach dropped.
James didn't move.
The report continued:
"Authorities confirm the body of Chief Financial Officer Daniel Moreau was discovered late tonight. Sources suggest the investigation into alleged offshore discrepancies may have escalated-"
The feed cut abruptly.
James slowly turned toward Sharon.
His expression was no longer concerned.
No longer patient.
It was calculating damage.
"Timing," he murmured.
Then he looked at her.
Truly looked.
As if recalculating her worth.
"You see," he said quietly, "this is why we needed control."
CFO dead.
Sniper attack.
Real Georgia alive.
And now-public scandal.
Sharon's mind locked onto one terrifying realization.
If the CFO had been silenced-
Then Georgia was next.
And Sharon?
Disposable.
James' phone vibrated again.
He glanced at it.
His jaw tightened for the first time.
"What?" Sharon demanded.
He didn't answer immediately.
When he did, his voice had changed.
"Georgia Laurent just accessed her primary bank authentication from an offshore node."
He lifted his eyes slowly.
"But that account is biometrically locked."
Only one person could unlock it.
The real Georgia.
Which meant-
She wasn't just alive.
She was moving.
And she was taking something.
James stepped back.
Already shifting into crisis mode.
"You will not leave this penthouse," he said sharply. "Security will increase. No outside contact. No deviations."
He moved toward the door.
Then paused.
"And Sharon?"
Her name.
Not Georgia.
Sharon.
He knew she had crossed the line.
"If she contacts you again," he said quietly, "you tell me. Or I will assume you've chosen a side."
The door unlocked.
He stepped out.
The lock engaged again from the outside.
Sharon stood alone.
The news ticker still rolling.
CFO dead.
Markets trembling.
Real Georgia active offshore.
And a man who had just confirmed she was expendable.
Her phone vibrated one last time.
A new message.
From Georgia.
Just three words.
He killed him.
Sharon stared at the text.
Then another message followed.
And you're next.
Blackout.
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9.7
For three years, I endured being treated like a walking ATM and a maid by my husband's family, biting my tongue to keep the peace.
Then, my husband's buddy suddenly dropped off a nine-year-old boy at my front door.
The crumpled note from my husband casually explained it was his illegitimate son, blaming me for being barren and demanding I raise the kid as our own.
My mother-in-law was absolutely thrilled, parading the boy around as the true heir at the dinner table.
"Some trees just don't bear fruit, no matter how much water you give them," she sneered.
My brother-in-law cheered, and my drunk father-in-law demanded I cook a feast to celebrate.
They actually expected me to continue paying the mortgage, buying the groceries, and cleaning up their endless messes, all while raising the living proof of my husband's betrayal.
I looked at the parasites who had drained me dry for years, acting like they were doing me a favor by letting me stay in a house that my money paid for.
I didn't scream, and I didn't cry.
I simply called my lawyer to file for an immediate divorce, froze every single bank account and credit card they relied on, and drove off to my grandmother's secluded cabin in the woods.
Let them see how long they survive without my money.

8.0
I spent two years as the perfect, dutiful wife to Foster Baird. I was his unpaid PR consultant and his emotional punching bag, enduring his mother’s snide comments about my orphan background all for the sake of a "marriage" I thought was real.
But when I went to the City Clerk’s office to replace a damaged document, the clerk looked at me with genuine pity.
"There is no record of a marriage license for you and Foster Baird. Legally? You aren't married."
The betrayal went even deeper. I returned to our penthouse to find Foster’s mistress on our sofa, alongside a five-year-old boy who shared Foster’s exact features. Foster hadn't just cheated; he had a secret family that predated our entire relationship. He had even bribed a doctor to lie to me about being infertile just to keep me docile and focused on his business. When the mistress moved into my guest wing the next day, Foster demanded I act as their hostess and serve them dinner.
I watched them play happy family in the home I built, realizing I was never a wife—I was just "cheap labor" he intended to discard once his company stock stabilized. He thought I was a barren charity case with nowhere to go.
He was wrong. That same afternoon, I received a call from the executor of the Arthur Kensington estate. I wasn't a nobody; I was the long-lost biological daughter and sole heir to a five-billion-dollar fortune.
While Foster was busy planning my replacement, I was accessing the Kensington Trust. I didn't scream, and I didn't cry. I simply bought a fifty-million-dollar mansion and hired a team of forensic accountants to dismantle the Baird Group from the inside out. I crushed my old phone under my designer heel and looked at my new security detail.
"Let's get to work," I said.

8.1
Desperate for a way out of rejection and poverty, Pearl Augustine accepts a nanny job with an outrageous salary-working for billionaire Ace Warren. What she doesn't expect is his daughter.
Mia Warren is spoiled, sharp-tongued, and feared by everyone in the mansion. Behind her cruelty is a lonely child longing for a mother. As Pearl becomes the only one who can reach her, walls begin to fall-especially those around Ace, a grieving man hiding behind wealth and control.
What started as "just a job" quickly turns into something dangerous: attachment.
Sometimes, healing begins where you least expect it.

7.9
Some cages are lined with silk. Some chains are dipped in gold. But they still hold you captive.
Nineteen-year-old Cassia Hale becomes the sixth bride of billionaire Killian Thorne, not out of love, but as payment for her father's gambling debts. One threat against her fifteen-year-old sister. One signature. And her life as she knew it is over.
Thrust into a mansion with five other wives, Cassia quickly learns she's different. Killian doesn't just want her, he's obsessed. She's the only one he intends to legally marry, the only one who can give him an heir, the only one who matters. But in a house where wives compete for survival and a mysterious fortune lies buried beneath the gardens, being the favorite makes her the biggest target.
Isla, the cunning queen bee, sees Cassia as an existential threat. Nessa, the jaded rebel, warns her to run while she can. Vera drowns in forbidden love with a servant. Mira watches everything with calculating eyes. And sweet, kind Thalia hides the most dangerous secrets of all.
When groundskeeper Dash offers Cassia escape and what seems like genuine love, she's torn between the monster who owns her and the man who might save her. But as drugged seductions, calculated betrayals, and murders disguised as accidents tear through the mansion, Cassia discovers the other wives aren't her only problem.
Someone is systematically eliminating the competition. Bodies are disappearing. Lies are unraveling. And Killian's dark empire, built on weapons dealing and blood money is more dangerous than she ever imagined.
As Cassia falls pregnant and the mansion descends into chaos, she must navigate deadly games where jealousy kills and trust is fatal. One by one, the other wives fall, exposed, destroyed by their own schemes, until only one question remains:
Will Cassia become another casualty? Or will she claim her crown as the only woman fierce enough to stand beside a monster and transform him into a king?
From captive to queen. From six brides to one. This is the story of how Cassia Hale became Mrs. Thorne and survived to rule his empire.
A dark, intensely erotic romance about power, obsession, and choosing love with your eyes wide open.
⚠️ Trigger Warnings:
Forced Marriage/Captivity
Dubious Consent (initial encounters)
Sexual Content (explicit, intense)
Violence
Emotional Manipulation
Power Imbalance (age gap, wealth gap, power gap)
Threats to Family Members (Lila)
Dark Themes (obsession, possession, control)
Death (side characters)
Psychological Intensity
Potentially Triggering Romance Dynamic

8.8
On the eve of my glamorous Waldorf Astoria wedding, I went to the penthouse to surprise my fiancé, Hugh, wearing my late mother's heirloom pearls.
Instead, I heard my stepsister's familiar laugh and caught them tangled together on the sofa.
Through the cracked door, I heard Hugh slur that he was only marrying me for my family's financial backing.
"As soon as I secure my inheritance, she's the first thing I'm getting rid of," he promised her.
Floy giggled and asked for my mother's pearl necklace, my only legacy. Hugh agreed without hesitation, mocking my dead mother's naivety and my desperate dreams of building a family.
Every sweet word he had ever said was a lie, a knife he had been patiently sliding between my ribs for years. They planned to strip me of everything the moment I signed the prenup.
I didn't cry or scream. The crushing weight of their betrayal hollowed me out, leaving behind a terrifying, absolute calm.
Why should I be the one to lose everything while they stole my future and insulted my mother's memory?
I calmly walked down the hall, set the prenuptial agreement on fire, and vanished into the rainy night.
If Hugh wanted to play dirty for the Maxwell empire, I would play for keeps.
Using a forgotten, century-old family covenant, I was going to marry Hugh's uncle-the comatose, paralyzed war hero, Fleet Maxwell.
I would return not as a naive bride, but as their worst nightmare: his aunt, and the new lady of the house.

8.6
Beneath the full moon, secrets ignite.
Ava Sinclair is a brilliant heiress hiding a dangerous past that could destroy everything she holds dear. Adrian Blackwood is a powerful billionaire with a secret darker than anyone could imagine.
Their worlds collide in a storm of passion and intrigue. Sparks fly, loyalties are tested, and every choice brings them closer to danger-and each other.
As nights grow longer and the moon rises higher, Ava begins to uncover the truth behind Adrian's mysterious life. She must decide whether love is worth the risk when desire and danger blur.
Experience romance, mystery, and supernatural thrills in Moonlit Billionaire: Alpha Secrets.