Follow
Chapters
Share
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.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 3

Mrs. Pierce moved fast for a woman in heels.

She crossed the living room in four steps and stopped directly in front of Mia, her finger raised, her voice shaking with something that had been building the entire drive over.

"You." The word came out like a verdict. "It was you all along. Hooking my son, playing the innocent little sister—"

"Mom—" Ethan started.

"Don't." She didn't look at him. She kept her eyes fixed on Mia. "I'm not blind. I've watched you for years. Every dinner, every holiday, every phone call at midnight. You think I didn't notice?"

Mia's face crumpled.

It happened the way it always happened—fast, practiced, devastatingly effective. Her knees hit the floor before anyone could react, and she pressed her hands together like she was praying, tears spilling down her cheeks in perfect, shining tracks.

"Auntie, please." Her voice broke on every word. "I never meant to—I tried to stop it, I swear I did. But Ethan said he loved me. He said it first. I didn't want to hurt Stella, I would never—" A sob cut through the sentence. "I'm so sorry. I'm so, so sorry."

Ethan stepped in front of her.

He actually stepped in front of her. Physically placed himself between his mother and the girl crying on the floor, shoulders squared, jaw set, like he was shielding her from something dangerous.

"Mom." His voice had gone cold and flat. "You don't talk to her like that. Not in front of me."

Mrs. Pierce stared at her son. For a moment she looked genuinely stunned—not angry, just stunned, the way people look when they've said something obvious out loud and the other person still doesn't understand it.

Then the fight went out of her. Her hand dropped. Her shoulders sagged.

Mr. Pierce had been standing near the window the entire time, quiet, watching. He was a careful man. He always thought before he spoke, which meant he usually said less than everyone else and meant more.

He turned to me now.

"Stella." His voice was low and even. "I'm sorry. On behalf of our family—I'm sorry. You deserved better than this."

I looked at him for a moment. He meant it. I could tell he meant it, which somehow made it harder to hear than anything else that had happened tonight.

"Uncle Pierce." I shook my head once. "You don't need to apologize. This isn't your fault. And it's over now—I'm not going to make this into something it doesn't need to be."

He nodded slowly. He looked tired.

The room had gone quiet except for Mia's soft, subsiding sniffles. Ethan still hadn't moved from in front of her.

I was reaching for my bag when Ethan's voice stopped me.

"Wait."

Something in the word made everyone go still.

I turned around.

He was on one knee.

I don't know when he'd gotten down there—I hadn't seen him move. But he was kneeling on the living room floor with a small velvet box open in his hand, and inside it was a ring I didn't recognize, which meant he'd bought it recently, which meant he'd planned this, or some version of this, before tonight.

Mia made a sound behind him. A small, involuntary sound. Her face had gone the color of old paper.

"Stella." Ethan's voice was different now. Softer. The performance of sincerity. "I was wrong. I've been wrong for a long time and I didn't see it until tonight. But I see it now." He swallowed. "I love you. I want to marry you. Please—give me another chance."

His mother pressed her hand over her mouth.

Mr. Pierce looked at the floor.

I stood there and looked at Ethan kneeling in front of me, and I waited for something to move inside my chest. Some reflex of the girl I used to be. The twenty-six-year-old who had wanted this so badly she'd spent thirty years pretending she'd gotten it.

Nothing moved.

I just felt tired.

"You don't love me," I said.

"Stella—"

"You don't." I kept my voice quiet. "You love having me here. There's a difference." I looked at him steadily. "If I leave, the story falls apart. Your mother stops asking questions. Mia stops being the other woman. Everything goes back to being complicated and uncomfortable." I paused. "But if I stay—if I'm the wife—then whatever happens between you and her is just family. It's just how things are. Nobody has to call it what it is."

The ring box stayed open in his hand.

"I'm not a shield, Ethan," I said. "I'm not going to be one."

I walked to my room.

---

He followed me, of course.

I was pulling the last of my things from the closet when I heard him in the doorway. I didn't turn around.

"You can't just leave." His voice had lost the softness. It was back to the tone I knew better—tight, slightly aggrieved, the voice of a man who was used to things resolving themselves around him. "Where are you even going to go?"

"Harbor City." I folded a jacket and set it in the bag.

"That's—that's two thousand kilometers away."

"I know."

He crossed the room and grabbed my wrist.

Not hard. He never did anything hard enough to be called what it was. Just firm. Insistent. The grip of someone who expected to be listened to.

"Think about Mia," he said. "She's fragile. You know how she gets when things fall apart. If you leave like this, if you make a scene—"

I stopped moving.

"That's your reason." I turned to look at him. "That's why you proposed. Not because you love me. Because Mia needs a cover story and I'm the most convenient one available."

His jaw tightened.

"You want to marry her," I said. "So marry her. Stop using me as the reason you can't."

I pulled my wrist free.

He didn't reach for me again.

I picked up my bag and walked out of the room, and I did not look back at the bed or the curtains or the mirror or any of the other things that had once meant something to me in that house.

---

Three days later, I was on a train.

The seat was by the window. Outside, the city dissolved into flat farmland, then low hills, the landscape emptying out the further we got from everything I'd known. I watched it go and felt, for the first time in as long as I could remember, like I was moving in the right direction.

My phone buzzed.

I looked at the screen.

*Ethan: Stella, Mia and I registered today. But I'm not giving up on you. I want you to know that.*

I read it once. Then I pressed delete and set the phone face-down on my knee.

The train swayed gently. Across the aisle, someone was eating instant noodles. A child two rows back was asking her mother how much longer.

I leaned my head against the window glass and closed my eyes.

When I opened them again, I noticed the man sitting directly across from me.

He was maybe thirty, with dark-framed glasses and a book open in his lap, but he wasn't reading it. He was looking at me—not staring, not intrusively, just the quiet, considering look of someone who has noticed something and isn't sure yet what to make of it.

I recognized him.

Gabriel Moore.

The enrollment office. The scholarship paperwork. *Environmental science. Good department.*

He held my gaze for a moment, then glanced back down at his book with the unhurried ease of someone who wasn't embarrassed to have been caught looking.

I turned back to the window.

The hills kept coming.

Keep Watching!
The story is getting intense! Switch to App to continue reading
Unlock All Episodes
Open the Official Website

You may also like

Alpha Ryu  Novel Cover
9.3
"I want you gone," he launched his fist at me, aiming for my calves. I shut my eyes, waiting for his hit to pack a punch. "You should be in bed by now, if I'm correct," Alpha Ryu's voice resonated in the passage. "You don't order me around Alpha," the figure let out, smashing his fist onto Alpha Ryu. "Maybe it's time you become a lesson to others," Alpha Ryu exhaled, grabbing the figure by the neck before smashing him onto the ground. "You're strong, but you don't have what it takes to kill me." The figure blurted out, sending Alpha Ryu's feet back with his legs. In order to prove her existence and claim her rightful position as Alpha of the Moon Hounds, she must do the impossible: bring back the head of the Ruthless Alpha Ryu of the opposing pack. She doesn’t give up, infiltrating the pack when it’s at its lowest guard and acting as an ordinary maid. In her bid to destroy the pack and have the Alpha’s head, she’s met with the biggest challenge of all—love. Will she fall for his charming, attractive, and Ruthless appearance, or will she find a way to complete her mission and take her stance as the Alpha of the Moon Hounds?
Bound By Blood And Moonlight  Novel Cover
8.3
When the full moon rises, secrets awaken. Elena never believed in the legends—until the night she stumbled into the woods and met Aiden, a man cursed by the moon and hunted by his own kind. He was dangerous, untamed… yet impossibly familiar. Drawn to him by something deeper than fate, Elena soon learns she is not just a bystander in the war between wolves and hunters—she is the key to ending it. But Aiden’s past is soaked in blood, and his pack doesn’t forgive easily. Torn between the beast he hides and the love he feels, Aiden must choose between saving the woman who can break his curse… or losing her forever to the darkness that binds them both. Love, loyalty, and destiny collide under the silver moon in a story where every heartbeat echoes with the call of the wild.
Breaking Free from the Alpha's Grip Novel Cover
8.7
The grand hall of the Moonridge Pack house glittered with crystal chandeliers and polished marble. Pack leaders from across the region had gathered to witness Marshall's coronation as Alpha King. I stood beside him, my fingers trembling slightly as I smoothed down the silver silk of my gown. Five years of devotion, of giving him my blood, my heart, my everything—and tonight was his crowning achievement. "You look beautiful tonight, Luna," Marshall whispered, his golden eyes gleaming with pride. "Every Alpha here envies me." I smiled, though something cold settled in my stomach. The way he looked at me had changed over the months—no longer with gratitude, but with expectation. As if my gift was something he deserved rather than something I freely gave. The ceremony began with Elder Harrison's blessing. "May the Moon Goddess bless Alpha Marshall Turner, now Alpha King of the Eastern Territories." Marshall's aura expanded, filling the room with his power—power that had once been mine to give.
From Ashes, A New Love Reborn Novel Cover
7.0
My husband, the city's most formidable lawyer, destroyed my family to protect his ex-girlfriend. He framed my brother, leading to my parents' deaths and our company's collapse. He promised to free my brother if I stayed. But on the day of the final appeal, he never showed up. My brother lost his last chance at freedom. I later found out why Hamilton was absent. He was at a picnic, celebrating his ex-girlfriend's dog's birthday. My brother's life, my entire world, was worth less than a puppy. The love I had for him shattered into dust. So I underwent an experimental therapy to erase him from my mind. When he finally tracked me down in Paris, begging me to come back, I looked at the man who had been my world and asked, "I'm sorry, have we met?"
My Adopted Sister is my Mate Novel Cover
8.6
"And the night we met again," I whisper, "my wolf recognized you." Silence. "Recognized me how?" she asks carefully. My chest burns even as my pulse thunders in my ears. "As my mate." The word falls between us like shattered glass. Avara laughs. "That's not funny." "I know." "You're my brother." "I know." I find myself inching closer... closer. "Thats impossible. This is sick." "I know," I say again, voice breaking now. "I fought it. Gods, I fought it. I tried to convince myself my instincts were wrong, that my wolf was broken, that I was losing my mind." Her hands shake. "Stop." "I can't," I say hoarsely. "Because every second I'm near you, it gets worse. Because my wolf wants to kneel at your feet and tear the world apart to protect you." ................................. Fifteen years after vanishing from the Silvermoon pack, Kaeden Vane returns, older, lethal, and right on time at thirty-three, the age decreed by the Moon Goddess for succession, having spent years years amassing forbidden knowledge, mastering dangerous magic, and preparing to destroy his father, the man who murdered his mother in a bid for godhood. His return reunites him with Avara Vane, his seemingly fragile, human adopted sister that Silas, their father, adopted as an 'act of mercy'. She is a Nyxarel, whose parents were slaughtered by the man she calls father and who has been conveniently placed and subdued by his father, until it is the right time to use her blood to attain immortality. And one touch is all it takes for Kaeden's wolf to recognize her as his mate, an impossible, unforgivable bond...
Reborn Luna: Rewriting My Tragic Fate Novel Cover
9.6
I was the devoted Luna of the Blackwood Pack, bound to my fated mate, Alpha Ryker. But he coldly rejected our sacred bond for a pure-blooded she-wolf, tossing me aside like garbage. That was when a cold voice in my head revealed the horrifying truth. "Your fate is to be rejected, a tragic footnote in their epic love story." My entire life was a scripted prophecy controlled by a twisted entity. According to the script, I was supposed to be locked away, my inner wolf withering from the broken bond until I died in agony. The entity even confessed to orchestrating the murder of Alpha Gideon, the only father figure I ever had, just to keep our bloodline enslaved to this sick narrative. I refused to be a ghost in someone else's happily ever after. Why should my family die and my soul be erased just to serve a predetermined fate? Instead of crying like the prophecy demanded, I tore my own soul apart to shatter the ancient Scroll of Fate, destroying the entity itself. Opening my eyes again, I was back to being a ten-year-old child. It was the exact day my lifelong trauma began. "Do as I say, Elara. Do not make any more trouble for me." My mother was trying to force me to take the blame for a bully, just to save her own reputation. This time, I am writing the script.