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My Sister Stole the Wrong Billionaire Novel Cover

My Sister Stole the Wrong Billionaire

In my first life, my sister Hazel thought she had won. On adoption day, she shoved me aside to grab the hand of the "gentle" billionaire, Brad Moss, leaving me to be claimed by the terrifying, ruthless heir to the city's darkest empire: Alexander Moran. She whispered, "Enjoy your suffering." I just smiled. Because I had lived this life before. She thought she dodged a bullet by stealing Brad, but she just swallowed a bomb. She has no idea that her "perfect" fiancé is a sadistic monster who will lock her in a cage. And she has no idea that the cold, terrifying Alexander Moran doesn't want a helpless victim for a wife—he wants a partner in ruthlessness. When Hazel tries to ruin my reputation with a staged assault, she expects to find me broken and crying. Instead, she opens the door to find me standing over my attacker, covered in blood, holding a knife, and smiling. "You're late, Hazel." This isn't a fairy tale. It's a hostile takeover. My sister wanted to steal my life, but I’m about to burn her fake empire to the ground—and my new billionaire husband is handing me the matches.
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Chapter 3

Hazel's scream hit the chandelier and shattered across the ballroom like glass on marble.

Every conversation died. Every champagne flute froze halfway to painted lips. The string quartet's last note hung in the air, then dissolved into nothing.

I stood at the center of it all, midnight-blue silk catching the light of a thousand crystals overhead, and I did not move.

Not this time.

Eleanor had spent the last hour parading me through the room like a prize thoroughbred. Her hand on my shoulder, firm and proprietary, guiding me from one cluster of silk-draped socialites to the next.

"This is Carmen," she'd said to each of them, her voice carrying the quiet authority of a woman who had never once needed to raise it. "My future daughter-in-law."

The reactions were predictable. Polite smiles. Curious glances. A few raised eyebrows aimed at my background, my unknown surname, the orphanage that clung to me like cheap perfume no matter how expensive the dress.

But Eleanor's word was law in this city, and no one questioned her. Not to her face.

Then Hazel walked in.

She came through the arched double doors on Brad Moss's arm, wearing a white dress that probably cost more than my old shelter's monthly food budget. Her hair was pinned up with pearl clips. Her smile was blinding.

But her eyes — her eyes found me across the room in under three seconds, and the color drained from her face like water from a cracked bowl.

"Eleanor." Brad extended his free hand, his voice warm as bathwater. "Thank you for the invitation. Hazel's been looking forward to this all week."

Eleanor accepted his handshake with the barest nod. "Mr. Moss. How generous of you to attend."

The dismissal in her tone sailed right over Brad's head. He was already scanning the room, cataloging faces, calculating worth. I knew that look. I'd watched it for years from across dinner tables where I wasn't allowed to speak.

Hazel pulled free of his arm and drifted toward me. A waiter passed between us carrying a tray of red wine, and she plucked a glass without breaking stride.

"Carmen." She smiled. "You look so pretty tonight. Almost like you belong here."

"Hazel." I kept my voice even. "You look like you're trying very hard."

Her smile twitched. She raised the wine glass — casual, careless — and her wrist flicked.

The red arc caught the light for half a second. I stepped left. The wine splashed across the marble floor in a dark stain that spread like a bruise.

Not a single drop touched me.

Hazel stared at the empty glass in her hand. Then at the floor. Then at me.

"Oops," she said, loud enough for the nearest circle of guests to hear. "Clumsy me."

"Very," I said.

Something ugly flickered behind her eyes. She set the glass down on a passing tray and turned to face the room, her voice rising to a pitch designed to carry.

"Can someone explain to me why this girl is being introduced as a Moran? She's never even met Alexander. She showed up this morning. This morning!" She jabbed a finger toward me. "She's a charity case off the street, and Mrs. Moran is dressing her up like a doll and calling her family?"

Murmurs rippled through the crowd. Heads turned. A woman in emerald silk whispered behind her hand to the man beside her.

Eleanor stepped forward. The temperature in the room dropped ten degrees.

"Miss Hazel." Eleanor's voice was quiet, but it cut through the noise like a razor through ribbon. "You are a guest in my home. You will conduct yourself accordingly, or you will be escorted out. There will not be a third option."

Hazel flinched. For one second, the mask cracked and I saw the scared nineteen-year-old underneath — the girl who pinched her cheeks for color and performed sweetness like a survival skill.

Then Brad's hand closed around Hazel's elbow. Tight. Possessive.

"That's enough," he said through his teeth, pulling her back a step. His smile stayed fixed for the crowd, but his grip whitened her skin.

I saw his eyes.

The room was bright, warm, full of music and money. But Brad Moss's eyes held a dull red heat that had nothing to do with the wine or the chandeliers. It was the look he wore behind locked doors. The look that preceded silence, then pain, then silence again.

My body remembered before my mind did. My lungs seized. My feet moved backward on instinct, one step, two —

I collided with something solid and warm.

A hand caught my waist. Fingers pressed against the silk at my hip, steady and sure, holding me upright when my knees wanted to buckle.

Alexander.

I hadn't heard him come downstairs. Hadn't heard a single footstep. But he was there, standing behind me like he'd been there all along, his chest a wall against my spine.

"Breathe," he said, low enough that only I could hear. His thumb shifted once against my hip. Not gentle. Grounding.

Hazel's gaze locked onto his hand at my waist, and whatever restraint she had left snapped clean in half.

"You don't know what she is!" Hazel's voice cracked high and raw. She wrenched free of Brad's grip and pointed at me with a shaking finger. "She's just a stray! And she's impure! She was assaulted!"

The word hit the ballroom like a grenade.

Silence. Total, suffocating silence.

"A man broke into her room at the shelter," Hazel continued, her voice climbing, frantic, feeding on the shock in the room. "Everyone knew. Everyone. She's damaged goods — she's nothing — she's —"

My stomach dropped.

The memory surged up without permission. A hand over my mouth. The dark. The mattress springs screaming beneath me. The smell of cigarettes and sweat and the sound of my own muffled crying that no one came to answer.

She set that up. She told that man which room was mine. She destroyed me once with those words — whispered them to every family that ever considered sponsoring me, until no one would touch me, until I was untouchable, until Brad Moss was the only one left willing to claim damaged merchandise.

My vision blurred. My fingers curled into fists at my sides.

But I was not that scared young girl anymore. Not really. I had decades of scar tissue wrapped around my spine, and I would not break on this floor for her entertainment.

I opened my mouth.

Alexander's hand tightened at my waist — hard, sudden, almost bruising.

He didn't look at me. He didn't look at Eleanor, or Brad, or the hundred frozen faces staring from the edges of the room.

He looked at Hazel.

Then he stepped forward, his arm leaving my waist, and in one fluid motion, drove his foot into Hazel's stomach.

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