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His Mistress Was My Sister Novel Cover

His Mistress Was My Sister

Rain pelted against the windshield of my parked BMW, creating a rhythmic soundtrack to my shattering world. I sat motionless outside the Manhattan courthouse, my trembling fingers clutching my phone so tightly my knuckles had turned white. The screen displayed what should have been impossible—Instagram photos of Ethan, my fiancé of five years, standing in a crisp black tuxedo beside my heavily pregnant younger sister, Emma. Their matching gold bands gleamed under the courthouse lights. I couldn't breathe. Five years. Five years of supporting him through every failure, every setback, every moment of doubt. Five years of putting his tech startup before my own marketing career. Five years of planning our future while my father lay comatose, his last conscious wish to see me happily married. A sob escaped my throat, raw and painful.
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Chapter 2

I woke to the sound of knocking. Persistent, measured knocking that cut through the haze of my tear-induced sleep. The digital clock on my nightstand read 5:47 AM. Dawn was just breaking over Manhattan, casting long shadows across my apartment floor.

Stumbling to the door in my wrinkled clothes from yesterday—I hadn't even changed before collapsing into bed—I peered through the peephole and froze.

Nathan Grant stood in my hallway, his tall frame impeccably dressed in a charcoal suit despite the ungodly hour. I hadn't seen him in months, not since that awkward charity gala where Ethan had monopolized my time.

"Olivia." His voice was steady when I opened the door, his eyes taking in my disheveled appearance with concern but no judgment. "May I come in?"

I stepped aside wordlessly, suddenly conscious of my puffy eyes and tangled hair. Nathan walked in with the quiet confidence that had built his tech empire, setting his leather briefcase on my coffee table.

"I saw your post," he said, his voice gentler than I remembered. "And I have a proposition."

He opened the briefcase and pulled out a stack of official-looking papers. Courthouse paperwork. Marriage registration forms.

"What is this?" My voice cracked from hours of crying.

Nathan's eyes—those intense eyes that always seemed to see right through pretense—held mine. "A solution. A marriage of convenience."

I laughed, a hollow sound that hurt my throat. "You can't be serious."

"I've never been more serious." He laid the papers on the table between us. "Your father's last wish was to see you married. I know how much that means to you."

I sank onto my couch, staring at the documents. "Nathan, you don't have to rescue me. I'll survive this humiliation."

"This isn't about rescuing you." He sat beside me, close enough that I could smell his familiar sandalwood cologne. "This is about giving you back control. And yes, about shielding you from further humiliation."

His words hung in the air between us. I studied his face—the strong jawline, the slight crease between his brows that appeared when he was dead serious about something. We'd been friends since childhood, before his family moved away, before he became the tech wunderkind whose face graced business magazines.

"Why would you do this?" I whispered.

Something flickered in his eyes—something I couldn't quite read. "Because you deserve better than what they did to you."

My phone buzzed on the table. Ethan's name flashed on the screen—the seventh call since my post went viral. I silenced it without a second thought.

"Okay," I said, surprising myself. "Let's do it."

* * *

The courthouse was eerily familiar from the photos I'd seen yesterday. Nathan's hand rested lightly on the small of my back as we climbed the steps, a gesture that felt both foreign and strangely comforting.

"Are you sure about this?" he asked one last time as we approached the registration desk.

I nodded, a new resolve hardening within me. "I'm sure."

The process was clinical, bureaucratic. Sign here. Initial there. Present identification. The clerk barely looked up as we completed the paperwork that would legally bind us together.

And then I heard it—the desperate shout that made my blood run cold.

"Olivia! Stop!"

Ethan burst through the doors, his usually perfect hair disheveled, his eyes wild. He rushed toward me, dropping to his knees in front of everyone.

"Please," he begged, grabbing for my hands. "Don't do this. It was a mistake—a terrible mistake. Emma manipulated me. Your mother said it was just temporary, to save your sister's reputation until we could figure something else out."

The clerk looked up, suddenly interested in the drama unfolding. Other couples waiting their turn stared openly.

Before I could respond, Nathan stepped between us, his voice low but carrying an unmistakable authority. "You need to leave. Now."

"You don't understand," Ethan pleaded, looking around Nathan to catch my eye. "Olivia, five years. Five years together. You can't throw that away over one mistake."

"One mistake?" I finally found my voice. "You married my sister."

Nathan's hand found mine, his grip firm and grounding. "The clerk is waiting for our signatures, Olivia."

I met Ethan's desperate gaze one last time. The man I had loved. The man I had sacrificed for. The man who had betrayed me in the most profound way possible.

"Goodbye, Ethan," I said, turning back to the clerk.

As security escorted him out, his pleas echoing through the marble hallway, I signed my name beside Nathan's. Mrs. Olivia Grant. A name I never expected to have, attached to a man I never expected to marry.

* * *

The knock at my apartment door that evening was more of a pounding. I knew who it was before I even checked.

"Open this door immediately!" Victoria's voice commanded from the hallway.

Nathan, who had insisted on coming up to ensure I was settled, raised an eyebrow. "Your mother?"

"And sister, I'd bet," I sighed, moving toward the door.

Sure enough, both Victoria and Emma stood in the hallway, Emma's pregnancy even more prominently displayed in her tight dress.

"What have you done?" Victoria hissed, pushing past me into the apartment. Her eyes narrowed when she spotted Nathan. "Mr. Grant. I wasn't aware you were involved in my daughter's... theatrics."

"Mrs. Lawrence," Nathan nodded coolly. "I'm involved in my wife's life, yes."

Emma's face contorted with rage. "Wife? You actually went through with it? Are you insane?"

Victoria pulled a document from her designer handbag, slapping it onto my coffee table. "This is a family council resolution. You will annul this farce of a marriage immediately and issue a public apology to Ethan and Emma."

I picked up the paper, scanning its contents. The Lawrence family letterhead. Signatures I recognized—my mother's, Emma's, even forged signatures from distant relatives who probably had no idea what was happening.

"A family council?" I laughed bitterly. "You forged these signatures."

"That's irrelevant," Victoria snapped. "What matters is that you're making a spectacle of our family. This ends now."

Emma stepped forward, her voice suddenly syrupy sweet. "Olivia, we can fix this. The pregnancy was just a test—to see if Ethan was truly loyal to you. He failed, obviously, but we expected you to forgive him after a cooling-off period. Not... this." She gestured dismissively toward Nathan.

Something inside me hardened. I walked to my door and held it open. "You've crossed a line. Both of you. Get out."

"You don't mean that," Emma's sweet facade cracked. "You need us."

"No," I said firmly. "I don't."

As they left, hurling threats and insults, I locked the door behind them and leaned against it, exhausted.

Nathan's phone rang. He answered, his voice shifting into business mode. "Yes, the Mayo Clinic. Tomorrow morning. The Lawrence family will cover all expenses."

I looked up sharply. "What are you doing?"

"Arranging for your father's transfer," he said simply, covering the mouthpiece. "The hospital he's in is understaffed and underequipped."

A lump formed in my throat. In all the chaos, I hadn't even thought about what this meant for my father's care.

As Nathan continued the call, I opened my laptop to access my father's medical fund accounts. I needed to ensure the transfer would be covered. But as the screen loaded, my heart sank.

The account balance was far lower than it should have been. Payments were missing—large withdrawals made by Victoria Lawrence over the past three months.

"Nathan," I called, my voice shaking. "I think my mother has been stealing from my father's care fund."

He ended his call and came to look over my shoulder, his expression darkening as he scrolled through the transaction history.

"This ends now," he said, his voice steel. "No one takes advantage of you or your father again."

As he pulled out his phone to make another call, I realized that for the first time in years, I wasn't facing my battles alone.

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