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I Signed My Sister's Name on Our Marriage License Novel Cover

I Signed My Sister's Name on Our Marriage License

Stella Chen woke up on the morning of her own wedding — five years in the past — with the memory of every betrayal she had yet to survive. Her fiancé Ethan. Her little sister Mia. Twenty years of a marriage that hollowed her out until there was nothing left to bury. This time, she didn't write her own name on the marriage license. She wrote Mia's. Then she bought a one-way train ticket to Harbor City, enrolled in a university two thousand kilometers from everyone who had ever used her, and started over with nothing but the knowledge of how every lie eventually unravels. But the past doesn't stay behind. Ethan comes after her. Mia comes after her. And a man named Gabriel Moore — who once built an empire and grieved her death and never understood why — keeps looking at her like he already knows her from somewhere. He does. He just doesn't know it yet. A second-chance revenge romance about a woman who stopped waiting to be chosen — and chose herself instead.
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Chapter 1

I woke up to the buzzing of my phone.

For a moment, I lay still, watching the morning light filter through the thin curtains of my childhood bedroom. The familiar ceiling. The familiar walls. The familiar weight of expectation pressing down on my chest.

Then I saw the date on my phone screen.

Five years ago.

My hands shook as I picked it up. The notification was a text from Mia: "Sis, are you and Ethan registering today? Take good care of him for me ❤️"

I stared at those words until they blurred. In my first life, I'd read this message as innocent concern from my younger sister. Now I saw it for what it was—a declaration of war disguised as sisterly affection.

I set the phone down carefully, as if it might shatter, and looked at my reflection in the mirror across the room. Twenty-three years old. Dark hair pulled back in a practical ponytail. The white blouse and navy skirt I'd chosen for my wedding registration, thinking I was building a future.

How blind I'd been.

The memory came flooding back—not just of this day, but of the end. My fifty-six-year-old body in a hospital bed, cancer eating away at everything I'd once been. Ethan standing beside me, his face blank with indifference. Our son Aaron kneeling at my bedside, his young face twisted with the cruelty of youth.

"Mom, please divorce Dad. You're not as good as Aunt Mia. Dad suffered his whole life with you."

Ethan had said nothing. His silence had been answer enough.

I'd closed my eyes in that sterile room, feeling the weight of a lifetime of choices I'd never understood until it was too late.

And then I'd opened them again. Here.

---

Mountain City's Civil Affairs Bureau was housed in a gray building that looked exactly like every other government office—functional, impersonal, designed to make promises feel like paperwork.

Ethan was already there when I arrived, checking his watch with the impatient gesture of someone who had somewhere better to be. He wore a white shirt with the sleeves rolled up to his forearms—Mia's favorite look on him. I remembered that detail now, the way she'd always complimented his forearms when he wore his sleeves that way.

"Hurry up and fill it out," he said when he saw me. "I have things to do."

In my first life, I'd rushed to accommodate him, eager to please, desperate to prove I was worthy of the love I thought he offered. I'd filled out the form with careful precision, treating each stroke of the pen like a sacred vow.

This time, I looked at him and felt nothing but cold clarity.

"You can go," I said quietly. "I'll submit it myself."

He didn't even try to hide his relief. "Really? That would help a lot. Thanks, Stella." He was already turning away, keys in hand. "I'll see you at home."

I watched him walk out the door and disappear into the gray November afternoon. Then I turned to the clerk, who was pretending not to watch this exchange.

"I need a pen," I said.

She slid one across the counter with practiced efficiency. I took it and looked down at the marriage application form. My name was already printed in the appropriate box—Stella Chen, female, twenty-three years old, resident of Mountain City.

I picked up the pen and crossed it out.

In the space marked "Applicant," I wrote two words in careful block letters: Mia Chen.

Then I smiled at the clerk and handed over the form.

---

The memories hit me in waves as I walked out of the Civil Affairs Bureau. Not just of this day, but of everything that came after.

I was fifty-six again, lying in that hospital bed while my body betrayed me cell by cell. Ethan stood at the foot of my bed, his face impassive as our son begged me to release him from our marriage. Behind him, partially visible through the doorway, Mia waited—still beautiful at forty-eight, her hand resting possessively on Aaron's shoulder.

"You're not as good as Aunt Mia," Aaron had said, and in that moment I'd finally understood the truth of my life.

I'd spent thirty-three years loving a man who had never been mine.

---

I went straight home after leaving the bureau. Our family home—the house where Mia and I had grown up, where our adoptive parents had raised us after we'd lost our birth parents in an accident. The house that should have been divided between us but had somehow become Ethan's domain.

I heard them before I saw them.

Mia's voice drifted from her old bedroom—the room she'd kept even after moving in with Ethan, the room she still treated as her sanctuary. "Ethan, are you really going to marry my sister? You won't forget about me, will you?"

"How could I?" His voice was soft in a way it had never been with me. "If your sister ever mistreats you, I'll divorce her immediately."

In my first life, I would have burst through that door demanding explanations, only to be painted as jealous and petty while they presented a united front against me.

This time, I turned away from the door and walked to my father's old study.

The computer was still there—the desktop model he'd bought before his death, connected to dial-up internet that seemed impossibly slow now. I sat down and turned it on, listening to the familiar whine of the modem connecting.

Harbor City University's website loaded slowly, pixel by pixel. Two thousand kilometers south of Mountain City. A top-tier school with a competitive computer science program. Far enough away that neither Ethan nor Mia could easily follow.

I began researching application deadlines.

---

Dinner that night was a masterclass in manipulation.

Mia served Ethan's favorite dishes—beef with ginger and scallions, steamed fish with soy sauce, eggplant braised with garlic. She'd always known how to feed his ego along with his stomach.

"So, sis," she said, passing him another helping of beef, "how did the registration go today? Can I see your marriage certificate?"

I looked at her across the table—this woman who had stolen my life piece by piece while pretending to be my beloved sister—and smiled.

"The certificate hasn't been issued yet," I said pleasantly. "But you should start planning your wedding photos."

Mia's smile faltered. "What?"

I turned to look at Ethan, who had stopped eating entirely. "After all, you're the bride. You and Ethan should take those photos together."

The chopsticks slipped from Mia's fingers and clattered against her plate.

Ethan's face had gone completely white.

I took another bite of eggplant and wondered how long it would take them to realize what I'd done.

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