
In His World
When Elena's parents die, leaving her drowning in debt, a contract marriage to billionaire Adrian Blackwell seems like salvation.
But Adrian's world holds dark secrets.
His first wife, Sophia, looked exactly like Elena. So did his father's first love, Grace. But both women died under mysterious circumstances.
And now Elena is living in Sophia's penthouse. Wearing Sophia's face. Playing Sophia's role.
As Elena uncovers twisted family obsessions, buried murders, and a decades-old genetic conspiracy, she realizes the truth: she wasn't chosen randomly. She was designed for this.
And the last woman who wore her face didn't survive.
Will Elena break the pattern-or become another ghost in Adrian's world?
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Chapter 4
Adrian POV
The car was silent except for the sound of London traffic bleeding through the windows. Elena sat as far from me as the seat would allow, pressed against the door like she wanted to melt through it and disappear into the street. Her hands were shaking. I could see them trembling in her lap even though she was trying to hide it.
I should say something. Explain. But what explanation made any of this better?
"Did your first wife kill herself?"
It wasn't a question. Her voice was flat. Dead. Like she'd used up all her emotion in the bathroom with Maya and had nothing left.
"Yes
"And you didn't think to mention that when you were making me sign a contract to marry you?"
"I told you I was married before."
"You said it ended. You didn't say she died. Her voice cracked on the last word. "And you didn't say I look exactly like her."
I kept my eyes on the road. Easier than looking at her face. "It's complicated."
"Then uncomplicate it."
The traffic light turned red. I stopped. Turned to face her. She was crying. Silent tears running down her face, and she looked about twelve years old. Nineteen. She was nineteen. What the hell was I doing?
"Her name was Sophia," I said. "We had a contract marriage. Like ours. She needed money for her mother's medical bills. I needed a wife for business reasons. It was supposed to be simple."
"What happened?"
"She fell in love with me."
Elena wiped her face with the back of her hand. "And you didn't love her back."
"No."
"Why not?"
The light turned green. I drove. Focused on the road because it was easier than this conversation. "I don't do love. I don't believe in it. My father taught me that emotions make you weak. Make you vulnerable. Sophia knew the deal when she signed."
"But she fell in love anyway."
"Yes."
"And then what? You just ignored her? Treated her like furniture?"
"I treated her with respect. I gave her everything she needed. Money. Security. Freedom to do whatever she wanted. I just couldn't give her what she wanted most."
"You."
"Yes."
Elena was quiet for a long moment. Then, "How did she die?"
"She jumped. From our balcony. Thirtieth floor." The words came out like a memorized sentence. I'd said them so many times. To police. To my father. To myself at three in the morning when I couldn't sleep. "I came home from work. Found her body on the pavement below."
"Oh God."
"The police ruled it suicide. She left a note. Said she couldn't live in a marriage where she loved someone who would never love her back. Said she was tired of being a ghost in her own life."
"That's awful."
"Yes."
"Did you feel anything? When you found her?"
I glanced at her. "What kind of question is that?"
"A real one. Did you feel anything or did you just tick it off like another business transaction gone wrong?"
"I felt guilty."
"Guilty."
"Yes. Guilty that I couldn't be what she needed. Guilty that I let her sign that contract in the first place. Guilty that I didn't see how bad it had gotten." I turned onto our street. The penthouse tower loomed ahead. "But I didn't love her. I felt terrible that she died, but I didn't love her. Is that what you want to hear? That I'm a monster?"
"I don't know what I want to hear." Her voice was small. "I just want to understand what I've gotten myself into."
"You've gotten yourself into a contract marriage with someone who can't love you back. Same as Sophia. Except you know that going in. She didn't."
"Why did you choose me?"
"You needed money. I needed a wife. The timing worked."
"That's not what I'm asking." She turned to face me fully. "Why me specifically? Out of every desperate person in London, why did you pick the girl who looks exactly like your dead wife?"
I pulled into the underground parking garage. Found my spot. Turned off the engine. Sat there in the sudden silence.
"I don't know."
"That's not an answer."
"It's the only answer I have."
My phone buzzed. I pulled it out. Text from Maya.
"She knows. This will be fun to watch."
I deleted it. Elena was watching me. "Who was that?"
"Maya. Being Maya."
"What does that mean?"
"It means she likes to stir things up. Make drama where there doesn't need to be any. She's probably thrilled she got to be the one to tell you about Sophia."
"She said she was there that night. That she saw everything that happened."
"She was there. James brought her over for dinner. Sophia was upset about something. They left early. An hour later, Sophia was dead."
"What was she upset about?"
"I don't remember."
"How can you not remember?"
"Because I wasn't paying attention. I was working. I was always working." I got out of the car. Slammed the door harder than necessary. Elena got out on her side. Followed me to the lift.
We rode up in silence. Thirty floors. Each one felt like a year.
When the doors opened into the penthouse, Elena stopped in the doorway. I'd forgotten she'd never actually been here. She'd been too drunk that I had to put her on our hotel
"It's big," she said.
"Yes."
"And empty."
She was right. The whole place was glass and steel and expensive furniture that nobody ever sat on. A showroom. Not a home.
"Do you want a tour?"
"Not really."
She walked in anyway. Moved through the living room like she was in a museum. Touching nothing. Looking at everything. When she got to the floor-to-ceiling windows, she stopped.
"That's the balcony."
"Yes."
"The one where she died."
"Yes."
Elena pressed her hand against the glass. "I can't do this."
"Can't do what?"
"Live here. Sleep here. Wake up every day and see where she died. I can't."
"You signed a contract."
She spun around. "I was drunk. I didn't know any of this. I didn't know about Sophia. I didn't know about the balcony. I didn't know I look exactly like a dead woman."
"You still signed."
"So void it. Tear it up. Let me go."
"I can't."
"Why not?"
"Because I need you. My father is dying. I have two months to prove my marriage is real or I lose everything to James. You leave now, I lose."
"So find someone else."
"There's no time. And I've already introduced you as my wife. To my father. To James. To Maya. Everyone knows now. If you disappear, they'll know it was fake."
"It is fake."
"It has to look real."
Elena laughed. It was a terrible sound. Broken and sharp. "This is insane. This whole situation is insane. You're asking me to live in a dead woman's house, play her role, look at her balcony every single day, all so you can inherit money you don't even need."
"It's not about the money."
"Then what's it about?"
"It's about not letting James win. It's about proving to my father that I can do this. That I can be what he needs me to be."
"What about what I need?"
The question hung in the air between us. I didn't have an answer. Didn't even know what she needed beyond money and a way out of debt. Didn't know if I cared.
No. That was a lie. I did care. I just didn't want to.
"What do you need, Elena?"
"I need to not be here." But she didn't move toward the door. Just stood there, hugging herself, staring at the balcony like it might swallow her whole.
I walked past her. Unlocked the balcony door. Slid it open. Cold air rushed in. February in London was brutal, all wind and wet and gray.
"Come here."
"No."
"Elena. Come here."
She came. Slowly. Like she was walking to her own execution.
I stepped out onto the balcony. The city sprawled below us. Thirty floors of nothing but air and concrete waiting at the bottom.
"This is where Sophia jumped," I said. "Right here. She climbed over this railing and let go."
"Why are you telling me this?"
"Because you'll see this balcony every day. From the living room. From your bedroom. From the kitchen. It's unavoidable. So you need to decide right now if you can handle that."
Elena stood in the doorway. Wouldn't come any closer. "Can you handle it?"
"I don't have a choice."
"Everyone has a choice."
"No. They don't. I chose my path years ago when I signed the first contract with Sophia. When I let my father dictate my life. When I decided business was more important than anything else. Now I'm stuck with the consequences."
"Then why am I here? Why drag me into your consequences?"
"Because I'm selfish. Because I need to win. Because you said yes when I asked."
She stepped out onto the balcony. Just one step. She was shaking. From cold or fear, I couldn't tell. Probably both.
"I hate you," she said.
"I know.
"I hate that I'm trapped."
"Are you?" I looked at her. Really looked at her. Nineteen years old. Parents dead two weeks. Drowning in debt she'd never signed up for. "Or could you walk away? Break the contract? Deal with the financial consequences? It would be hard. Brutal. But possible."
She was quiet.
"You're here because some part of you wants to be," I said. "Maybe it's the money. Maybe it's because you have nowhere else to go. Maybe it's because being here, even in a dead woman's apartment with a man who can't love you, is better than being alone with your grief. I don't know. But you're choosing to stay."
"That's not fair."
"Nothing about this is fair."
Elena walked to the railing. Looked down. I tensed, ready to grab her if she did anything stupid. But she just stood there. Looking at the place where Sophia died.
"Can I handle this?" she asked. Not to me. To herself. To the city. To the ghost that lived in this apartment whether I acknowledged it or not.
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8.6
It was my birthday, but instead of celebrating, I was bleeding on the floor of my own bedroom. My sister Serena had just smashed a champagne bottle over my legs, her eyes filled with a dark madness because our father allowed me to wear the family diamonds.
To escape her, I bolted into a pitch-black guest suite, only to be grabbed by a man who felt like a wall of solid muscle. He was drugged, unstable, and pinned me against the wall, his teeth sinking into my neck in a primal claim that left a permanent mark.
I managed to flee, but the nightmare was just beginning. My father didn't care about my injuries; he only cared that I had "insulted" the man in that room—Delos French, the most powerful CEO in New York. He threatened to stop paying for my mother’s critical care facility unless I went to Delos and begged for his forgiveness.
My brother Julian was even worse, intentionally pouring scalding coffee over my bandaged wounds just to see me flinch. They forced me into a revealing gold dress, treating me like a high-priced commodity to be sold to the highest bidder to save their failing company.
I didn't understand how the people who were supposed to love me could be more predatory than the monster in the dark. I had spent my life fixing their scandals, yet they were ready to throw me to the wolves the moment I became useful as a pawn.
But when I stood before Delos French at his gala, he didn't see a trophy. He recognized my scent, my touch, and the fire in my eyes. He trapped me in his private lounge, kneeling to clean the blood from my injured feet.
"Marry me," he whispered, his voice a low, terrifying growl. "And I will give you the power to burn your family to the ground."
I looked into the eyes of the man who had hunted me and realized he was the only one offering me a weapon to destroy the people who had broken me.
"Okay," I whispered.

7.1
Aurora Andrews has never known a life free from pain. Orphaned and left in the care of her cruel uncle and aunt, she endured years of abuse that taught her the safest place was in the shadows.
But even in college, her silence couldn't shield her from the cruelty of her peers. Just as she reaches her breaking point, fate intervenes in the form of Alexander Mark, the powerful and enigmatic CEO of the Vanguard Group company.
Alexander saves her from a nightmare, but one impulsive, accidental night binds their fates together. When the morning light comes, he leaves her with a heartless dismissal, assuming she is just another gold digger looking for a payout. But Aurora carries a secret more precious than anything.
Forced to drop out of school to protect her unborn baby, Aurora fights to survive in a world that wants to break her. But the shadows of her past are closing in; what will happen when her abusive aunt and uncle discover she is pregnant?
And what will become of her when Alexander Mark walks back into her life, unaware of the child growing in her womb?
He left her thinking she was a whore. But the truth is far more dangerous. When their paths inevitably cross again, will he accept the child as his own? Or will he destroy the only chance Aurora has at a happy ending?
"I'm not a whore, I promise you, Sir.
I just wanted to save you... and nothing else."

8.2
Zarah never imagined marrying a stranger-especially a cold billionaire with a dark past.
Forced into a contract marriage to save her sick mother, she agrees to one year without love.
But secrets, jealousy, and forbidden feelings begin to blur the rules.
When the contract ends... will love survive?

9.4
Owned By You
9.4
Deborah grew up as the only girl among six overprotective brothers, each powerful, intimidating, and fiercely loyal. In their eyes, no man is ever good enough for their sister. They swore that only they would choose the man worthy of her hand.
But Deborah has a secret that could destroy everything. Behind closed doors and hidden glances, she's been having an affair with Luther Cain, the cold, handsome CEO of one of the country's most powerful companies... the Cain Industry..... and her brothers consider their greatest rival.
As their forbidden relationship deepens, passion turns into danger. Lies begin to unravel. And when her brothers discover the truth, Deborah must choose between the family that raised her, and the man she's willing to burn the world for.

9.4
Dorene survived a terrifying night with a bleeding, dangerous intruder in her hotel penthouse, only to receive a far more devastating blow the next morning.
A black and gold envelope arrived. It was an engagement invitation. Her boyfriend of seven years, Kadyn, was marrying her sweet, innocent best friend, Dolly.
Refusing to hide, Dorene crashed the gala in a blood-red gown. But Dolly was ready. Grabbing Dorene's wrists, Dolly purposely threw herself backward into a tower of champagne glasses, shrieking about her stomach and her unborn baby.
"If anything happens to Dolly or my child, I swear to God, I will destroy you!"
Kadyn roared, holding the weeping Dolly in the broken glass. He didn't ask a single question. He branded Dorene a jealous monster. To completely break her dignity, he publicly handed her over to the city's most notorious, sleazy playboy just to appease Dolly's fake tears.
"Give him a shot," Kadyn told her coldly.
Seven years of love were ground into the marble floor. She was framed, publicly humiliated, and discarded like trash by the two people she trusted most.
Dorene didn't shed a single tear. She gave them a smile of pure, freezing mockery and walked out of the gilded cage into the freezing Manhattan night. She didn't know that as she left, the lethal, blood-stained man from her penthouse was watching from the shadows, ready to help her burn their world to the ground.

9.1
The Billionaire's Blood Debt
Two empires. One scorched-earth debt. No mercy.
Elara Vance was never supposed to be more than a pawn-the brilliant architect daughter of a man who traded souls for power. But when the world's financial foundations crumble, she finds herself signed over to the one man capable of burning her father's legacy to the ground: Dante Moretti.
Dante is no savior. He is the "Lion of the Underground," a billionaire predator fueled by a decades-old vendetta. He didn't just buy Elara's freedom; he bought her life, her loyalty, and her every breath. In his obsidian tower, the lines between prisoner and queen blur in a fever dream of high-stakes espionage and raw, primal obsession.
As they hunt a shadowy global cabal from the neon streets of London to the ancient ruins of Greece, Elara discovers that the only thing more dangerous than Dante's enemies is the "disgusting" heat of his touch. In a world where every secret is a weapon and every kiss is a betrayal, she must decide: will she dismantle the system that caged her, or become the ultimate weapon for the man who owns her soul?
The debt is blood. The price is total surrender.