Husband's Twin Deception Novel Cover

Husband's Twin Deception

8.7 / 10.0
The phone call came at 3:47 PM, piercing through the quiet afternoon like a blade. Griffin's voice, strained and shaky, crackled through the speaker. "Layla, I need you to come to St. Mary's Hospital. There's been an accident." My hands trembled as I grabbed my purse, my heart hammering against my ribs. The drive to the hospital blurred past in a haze of panic and prayer. Please let him be okay. Please let him be okay. The mantra repeated in my mind as I navigated through traffic, my knuckles white against the steering wheel. The emergency room buzzed with controlled chaos—nurses rushing past, monitors beeping, the antiseptic smell burning my nostrils.

Husband's Twin Deception Chapter 1

The phone call came at 3:47 PM, piercing through the quiet afternoon like a blade. Griffin's voice, strained and shaky, crackled through the speaker.

"Layla, I need you to come to St. Mary's Hospital. There's been an accident."

My hands trembled as I grabbed my purse, my heart hammering against my ribs. The drive to the hospital blurred past in a haze of panic and prayer. Please let him be okay. Please let him be okay. The mantra repeated in my mind as I navigated through traffic, my knuckles white against the steering wheel.

The emergency room buzzed with controlled chaos—nurses rushing past, monitors beeping, the antiseptic smell burning my nostrils. I found Griffin sitting on a gurney, his left arm in a sling, a bandage across his forehead. Relief flooded through me so intensely my knees nearly buckled.

"Oh God, Griffin." I rushed to his side, my hands hovering over him, afraid to touch and cause more pain. "What happened? Are you hurt badly?"

He managed a weak smile, though I could see the pain etched around his eyes. "Fender bender on Fifth Street. The other guy ran a red light. I'm fine, just some bruising and a dislocated shoulder."

The nurse approached with a clipboard. "Mrs. Wells? We need to process the insurance information for your husband's treatment."

I fumbled through Griffin's wallet, my hands still shaking from the adrenaline. The insurance card sat tucked behind his driver's license, and I handed it over without looking, focused entirely on Griffin's pale face.

The nurse frowned at the card, then looked up at me with confusion. "Ma'am, this card shows the patient's name as Easton Wells, not Griffin Wells. Are you sure this is the correct insurance?"

The words hit me like ice water. I stared at the nurse, then at the card in her hand. "What? That's impossible. Let me see that."

She handed the card back, and there it was in clear black letters: Easton Wells. Not Griffin. Easton.

My mouth went dry. "There must be some mistake. This is my husband, Griffin Wells. Maybe it's a printing error?"

Griffin's expression shifted, something flickering across his features too quickly for me to catch. "Probably just a mix-up at the insurance company," he said, his voice oddly tight. "You know how these things happen."

But I didn't know. In five years of marriage, I'd never seen this name before. Who was Easton Wells?

"I'll call the insurance company tomorrow," Griffin continued, reaching for the card with his good hand. "For now, let's just pay out of pocket."

The drive home passed in uncomfortable silence. Griffin dozed fitfully in the passenger seat while questions churned in my mind. Easton Wells. The name felt foreign on my tongue, yet the card had been in Griffin's wallet, tucked away like it belonged there.

That evening, after helping Griffin settle into bed with his pain medication, I found myself standing outside his study. The door was slightly ajar, and the moonlight streaming through the window cast long shadows across his desk. I'd never gone through his personal things before—trust had always been the foundation of our marriage.

But the insurance card had shaken something loose inside me.

I pushed the door open and stepped inside, my bare feet silent on the hardwood floor. Griffin's desk was meticulously organized, as always. Business documents stacked neatly, his laptop closed, pens arranged in perfect rows. I started with the drawers, my heart pounding as I rifled through contracts and financial statements.

Nothing unusual. Nothing that explained Easton Wells.

Then I noticed the stack of papers behind his computer monitor. Old documents, by the look of them, yellowed with age. I lifted them carefully, and underneath, my breath caught.

Photographs. Old family photos, the kind with that vintage coloring from decades past. I held them up to the moonlight, squinting at the faces.

Two men stood side by side, identical in every way. Same dark hair, same strong jawline, same piercing blue eyes. They looked exactly like Griffin—but there were two of them.

My hands began to shake. One of the men had his arm around a woman I didn't recognize. The other stood slightly apart, his smile not quite reaching his eyes. On the back of the photo, in faded ink, someone had written: "Griffin and Easton, Summer 1995."

Griffin and Easton.

The insurance card suddenly made terrible sense. But it also made no sense at all.

I sank into Griffin's chair, the photographs scattered across the desk before me. Twin brother? In five years of marriage, Griffin had never mentioned a twin. Never mentioned any siblings at all. He'd told me his family was gone, that he was alone in the world except for me.

Who was Easton Wells? And why did Griffin have his insurance card?

Upstairs, I could hear Griffin shifting in bed, the floorboards creaking under his weight. I gathered the photographs quickly, my heart racing as I tried to put everything back exactly as I'd found it. But as I climbed the stairs, each step felt heavier than the last.

Lying in bed beside my sleeping husband, I stared at the ceiling until the early hours of morning. Every breath he took, every small movement, made me wonder: who was the man sleeping next to me?

And somewhere in the darkness before dawn, I heard it—the soft murmur of Griffin's voice drifting from the hallway. He was on the phone, speaking in hushed tones to someone whose voice sounded exactly like his own.

"The arrangement needs to hold," he whispered. "She still doesn't suspect anything."

Continue Reading

Husband's Twin Deception of Contents

Ch. 1 Ch. 2 Ch. 3
Ch. 4
Ch. 5
Ch. 6
Ch. 7
Ch. 8
Ch. 9
Ch. 10

You may also like

New Release Novels

Alpha Rejected True Mate Novel Cover
9.5
The greenhouse was my sanctuary in a pack house that had never felt like home. Dawn hadn't yet broken when I slipped inside, the familiar scent of damp soil and blooming flowers wrapping around me like an embrace I'd long been denied elsewhere. My fingers trembled slightly as I reached for the watering can—a weakness I couldn't afford to show outside these glass walls. I focused on the white lilies, my favorites. Their pure petals reminded me of what I once was—hopeful, untainted. Before the mate bond that became my prison. "You're wilting too, aren't you?" I whispered to a drooping bloom, gently supporting its stem. My wolf, Luna, whimpered softly in the back of my mind. Once silver and strong, she now barely stirred, weakened by the sickness that had been consuming us both since I gave too much blood to save William three years ago. A sudden tremor ran through my bones, stronger than the usual morning weakness.
Between Ruin And Revenge: Her Regret Novel Cover
8.4
I worked three double shifts at the garage just to buy a velvet-boxed cake for my wealthy girlfriend, Arleen. But when I pushed open the VIP room door, I saw her lover kissing her bare leg. She didn't push him away. Instead, she laughed and swirled her martini. "I only forgot Finn because I knew he would stay. He is a poor boy from Queens who follows me around like a loyal dog." Later that night, her lover intentionally crashed a Porsche to scare me, sending a piece of jagged metal into my skull. Lying in a growing pool of my own blood, I watched Arleen crawl out of the wreckage. She didn't even look at me. She threw herself at her uninjured lover, screaming for a medic. "He just got scraped by a piece of plastic. He is faking it. Deal with Jaquez first!" When I woke up, I wasn't free. Arleen had locked me in a private hospital wing with 24-hour security, planning to isolate me and keep me as her broken, captive toy forever. My blind, pathetic devotion finally froze into absolute disgust. I looked at the heart monitor next to my bed and grabbed an IV needle. I severed the sensor wire to trigger a flatline, slipped out the fire stairs while the nurses panicked, and burned my identity to ashes. This time, I was going to disappear to London, build my own empire, and watch hers burn.
Inheriting My Billion-Dollar Family Empire After My Boyfriend's Affair Novel Cover
7.7
I was ready to reveal my true identity, imagining Charles's proposal, but then I overheard the conversation. "Are you and Tracy Davis getting married?" "What about Victoria?" "She's nothing special, just a mistress." Fury coursed through me as I walked away. Tracy Davis, the girl who tormented me in high school, was now a part of Charles's plans. I ended things with Charles, then orchestrated the merger of all the companies that had humiliated me-at their wedding ceremony.
Darkly His: The Billionaire's Fake Fiancée  Novel Cover
7.3
WARNING ⚠️: This book contains sex scenes and mature contents not fit for readers below 18+. If you love steamy romances and emotional stories, this book is the one. By day, Damon follows her rules in the kitchen: chopping, kneading, burning his fingers, and surviving her sharp mouth. By night, she follows his. Damon Blackwell is a cold, dangerous billionaire who hates Christmas, women, and anything that smells like joy. Haunted by tragedy and trauma, and memories of the girl he once loved and lost, he lives like a machine: money, control, and pleasure without attachment. Then his grandparents and three ruthless brothers dare him to do the impossible: Live like a normal man for 12 days to Christmas: no staff, no luxuries, no protection, no control and no bad temper. He has to change and be easygoing with investors. Fail, and he loses the biggest business deal of his life. Indulgence is over for him. The only place Damon knows he can grab survival? A small-town Christmas cooking competition hosted by that one woman who broke his heart years ago. Merry Steele never expected to see Damon again. The man she left without a word. The man who haunted her dreams after she broke his heart back now stands in her kitchen offering a deal she can't refuse: Cook for him. Sleep with him. Pretend to be his fiancée until the end of the year. The pay is tempting. The temptation is even greater. Before Christmas, can they resist the heat, desire, and lingering love they once shared and keep it strictly business? As family obligations, enemies, and a high-profile Christmas ball close in, Damon and Merry must correct old heartbreak, passion, and dangerous feelings. Will Damon ever forgive his fuckmate? Can Merry resist the billionaire who once stole her heart... or will old flames burn hotter than ever under the snow, the lights, and the Christmas feelings?
He Gave My Wedding Dress To His Secretary Novel Cover
8.0
The day before the wedding, the extravagant custom-made Victorian-style dress my husband ordered finally arrived. I gently touched my slightly rounded belly and asked him for a divorce. Colton's secretary called, her voice trembling as she explained, "Mrs. Carpenter, this is all my fault. I misunderstood your preferences. Please, don't blame Mr. Thompson." Colton's calming voice came through the phone, leaving me with just one sentence: "Don't regret this." I packed my things and left without a backward glance. After gathering my belongings, I was ready to leave, dragging my suitcase behind me, when I ran into Colton just coming home. He saw the suitcase in my hand and furrowed his brow, his voice cold and detached. "Mina, you're still upset?
He Married Me Just for Money Novel Cover
8.3
“Don’t stop,” she whispered. “She won’t come up.” I did. I stopped breathing. Thinking. Existing. The voice came from inside my bedroom—our bedroom. My sanctuary. I stood frozen in the hallway, dinner still warm downstairs, candles flickering in a room that no longer mattered. The scent of truffle butter still clung to my sleeves. Through the door—left carelessly ajar—I saw enough. A woman with auburn hair and wine-colored nails was curled into my husband's side, her lipstick smeared across his throat like a bruise. Her fingers skimmed down his back, possessive, practiced. Oliver moaned softly. A sound I hadn’t heard in months. I didn’t scream. I didn’t cry. I turned. Through the adjoining bathroom, I slipped into the walk-in closet, hiding behind the luxury he insisted I needed. Dresses lined in neat rows. Shoes in pyramids. A fortress of silk and leather and betrayal. I sat down, gripping the hem of my dress, listening. “I don’t know why you’re still stalling,” Lily said, her voice languid and confident. “She’s not stupid, Oliver. She’s suspicious. You said she keeps asking questions.” He sighed. “Let her ask. She won’t do anything. Not until it’s too late.” A beat. “She’s planning something tonight,” he added, almost amused. “Made some kind of fancy dinner. Probably filet again. It’s sweet, in a tragic way.” Lily giggled. “You think she’s figured out we’ve been using her?” “Scarlett sees what she wants to see. She’s desperate. That’s what makes it easy.” There was movement on the bed. Sheets shifting. “She still has no idea about the inheritance?” Lily murmured. “None,” he said. “Her father’s trust releases next month. Once the money hits the accounts, I’ll serve the papers. I’ve already started moving things offshore.” My throat closed. I bit the inside of my cheek so hard I tasted blood. So this was what I got from our five-year marriage.
Chapters
Read now
Share