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Sinful Ties: My Ex Husband, My Stepbrother  Novel Cover

Sinful Ties: My Ex Husband, My Stepbrother

I married Damien Pierce for love. I divorced him for my sanity. He was a billionaire heir with ice in his veins and obsession in his heart. I was the waitress who accidentally spilled coffee on his suit and somehow ended up in his penthouse, in his bed, in his world. For two years, I was his wife-and his prisoner. He didn't hit me. He didn't have to. He simply watched. Every move I made. Every friend I spoke to. Every breath I took outside his permission was met with silence so cold it burned. When I finally found the courage to leave, I left everything behind. The money. The name. Even my dignity. I told myself I'd rather be alone forever than belong to Damien Pierce for one more day. That was three years ago. Now, I'm standing in my mother's living room, champagne in hand, smiling at her new fiancé-a kind, gentle widower who looks at her like she hung the moon. Then the front door opens. And Damien walks in. Because the kind, gentle widower? Is his father. My ex-husband is about to become my stepbrother. The first words out of his mouth, in front of our beaming parents, are not hello. They are: "Did you really think divorce papers would make me stop owning you, Ayra?" Now we share holidays. We share family dinners. We share a hallway in our parents' mansion. And Damien Pierce has made one thing very clear: He doesn't want to be my ex-husband. He doesn't want to be my stepbrother. He wants to be my sin.
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Chapter 3

The dance floor was a trap.

Ayra knew it the moment her mother pulled her into the light. Margaret's hands were warm, her laughter infectious, and for a few stolen seconds, Ayra let herself forget. Let herself be just a daughter at her mother's engagement party, swaying to music she barely heard, smiling a smile that almost felt real.

Then Harold cut in.

His hand found her waist with practiced ease, his smile never wavering. He guided her into a waltz like he had been dancing with her for years. He told her how happy she made her mother. How Margaret talked about her constantly. He said he was glad the dark years after the divorce were behind them. They were all family now, and family took care of each other.

His hand tightened on her waist.

Just a fraction. Just enough for Ayra to notice. His smile never changed, but his fingers pressed into the fabric of her dress like a warning.

He asked if she had seen Damien tonight. He said his son had been different since the divorce. Quieter. More focused. He said Damien had never looked at another woman the way he looked at her.

Ayra kept her voice light. She said Damien had made his choices and she had made hers. She was only here for her mother.

Harold nodded. He said he understood. He said fate had a way of correcting its own mistakes.

The song ended. Harold released her with a smile that never reached his eyes, and Ayra excused herself before he could pull her into another dance. She needed air. She needed to be anywhere but here.

She made it three steps before a woman stepped into her path.

Blonde hair swept into an elegant twist, diamonds at her ears and throat, a gown that cost more than Ayra's entire wardrobe. Her smile was sharp. She asked if Ayra was Margaret's daughter. She said she was Celeste, Harold's niece, and she was so excited to welcome Ayra into the family.

Ayra thanked her and tried to step around. Celeste moved with her, blocking her path.

Celeste asked if Ayra had seen Damien tonight. She said everyone had noticed the way he looked at her. It was sweet, really, the way he still pined after his ex-wife. Pathetic, but sweet.

She leaned in, her voice dropping to a whisper. She said Ayra should be careful. Damien had been seeing someone. Someone serious. A lovely girl from a very good family. She would hate for Ayra to get the wrong idea and embarrass herself.

Ayra kept her face neutral. She thanked Celeste for the warning. She said she had no interest in Damien or his love life.

Celeste's smile widened. She said it would be awkward if Ayra got her hopes up, only to find out she had been replaced.

Then she was gone, melting back into the crowd.

Ayra stood alone with her hands clenched at her sides. She told herself she did not care. She had divorced Damien, had spent three years rebuilding, had sworn she would never let him touch her heart again. Who he dated did not matter.

She told herself that all the way to the bar.

When she turned back to the room, the party had shifted. People were gathering around a raised platform where a microphone stood waiting. Harold appeared at the microphone, her mother at his side. The room fell silent with the ease of people trained to listen when a Pierce spoke.

Harold welcomed everyone. He talked about finding love late in life, about second chances, about the beautiful woman beside him who had changed everything. The crowd murmured appreciatively.

Then Harold's voice changed. Became more deliberate. More weighted.

He said this night was about new beginnings. About family. About the ties that bound people together. He said he had always believed that marriage was not just between two people, but between two families. And tonight, he wanted to announce that their families would not just be joined by his marriage to Margaret.

He looked directly at Ayra.

The room turned with him. A hundred faces, a hundred eyes, all fixed on her. She felt the weight of them pressing down on her chest, stealing her breath.

Harold said that when two people loved each other, they found a way. They gave each other second chances. He had watched his son spend three years waiting for the woman he loved to come back. He had watched him refuse to move on, because Damien had known that what was meant to be would find its way home.

He said his son and his future stepdaughter had been given a second chance. A chance to be a family. A chance to heal old wounds.

He raised his glass. He asked everyone to join him in toasting to the happy couple-his son and his future stepdaughter, Damien and Ayra.

The room erupted.

Glasses lifted. Voices cheered. People who did not know her, did not know Damien, did not know anything about the years of silence and fear, raised their champagne to the sky and celebrated a reunion that was never supposed to happen.

Ayra could not move. Could not breathe. The ballroom was spinning, the faces blurring, the cheers turning to static in her ears.

Then Damien was beside her.

She had not seen him approach. But he was there, his hand finding the small of her back, his body blocking her from the worst of the stares. He leaned down, his lips close to her ear, and his voice was soft. Gentle.

He said to smile. The whole room was watching. She could hate him later, but right now, she needed to smile.

Ayra smiled.

It was the hardest thing she had ever done. Harder than leaving. Harder than rebuilding. She smiled, and she lifted her glass, and she let Damien's hand stay on her back because if she moved, if she ran, if she let them see how much this was destroying her, then Harold would know. The game would be over before it began.

Damien raised his glass to the crowd. The room cheered again. Then he turned to her, his gray eyes catching the light.

He said they should dance. Everyone was expecting it.

She let him lead her to the floor.

His hand found her waist. Her hand found his shoulder. The music started, slow and sweeping, and they moved together like they had never stopped.

He asked if she was okay.

She told him he had no right to ask her that. She told him he had planned this, he and his father, had orchestrated this whole night to trap her. She told him she would never forgive him.

Damien's hand tightened on her waist. He pulled her closer. His voice was low and rough.

He said she was wrong. He had not planned this. The announcement had been his father. Harold was moving pieces on a board Damien did not control. He was trying to protect her.

Ayra stopped dancing.

She stared at his face, looking for the lie. He met her eyes. His hand slid from her waist to her hand, and he lifted it to his chest, pressing her palm against his heart.

His heart was pounding. Fast. Unsteady. Nothing like the cold, controlled man she had married.

He said his father was not the man she thought he was. The kindness, the warmth, the gentle smile-it was all a mask. Harold had been waiting for this moment. Waiting for a way to bring her back. Waiting to use her the way he had used Damien, and Damien's mother, and everyone else who had ever been foolish enough to love a Pierce.

He said he had not wanted her to come tonight. He had wanted her to stay away, to keep running, to never look back. But she was here now, and the announcement had been made, and there was no undoing it.

He leaned in. His forehead touched hers. His voice was barely a whisper.

He said he was going to get her out. He had a plan. But she had to trust him. She had to pretend, for now, that this was real.

Ayra looked into his eyes. Gray and steady and something she had never seen there before.

Fear.

Damien Pierce was afraid.

The music swelled. The crowd applauded. Across the ballroom, Harold Pierce raised his glass in a toast to the happy couple, his smile wide, his mask perfectly in place.

Ayra pressed her hand harder against Damien's chest.

She said one word.

How?

Damien's arms tightened around her. His voice was a thread of sound against her ear.

He said to meet him tonight. Midnight. The terrace where they had first spoken. To come alone, to tell no one, to trust him just this once.

He said her mother was in danger. She was in danger. And the only way out was through the man who had put them there.

He did not say Harold's name.

He did not have to.

The song ended. Damien stepped back, his face the mask again, cold and controlled and utterly unreadable. He bowed, formal, distant. Then he turned and walked away, disappearing into the crowd.

Ayra stood alone on the dance floor.

The room was still watching. Her mother was watching. Harold was watching, his glass still raised, his smile still wide, his eyes fixed on her with an intensity that made her skin crawl.

She smiled. She raised her glass. She played her part.

And somewhere deep in her chest, something stirred.

Something that might have been hope.

Or something that might have been fear.

She would find out at midnight.

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