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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 6

The mansion swallowed her whole.

Ayra stood at the window of the room Harold had given her, watching her mother's car disappear down the long driveway. Margaret had left with a smile and a wave, believing her daughter was staying the night to bond with her new family. She had no idea she had just driven away from the only person who could keep her safe.

The door behind Ayra clicked. She did not turn around.

Harold's voice came from the threshold, calm and pleased. He said he hoped she found the room comfortable. He had prepared it especially for her, thinking she might need her own space while she settled in.

Ayra asked how long he planned to keep her here.

Harold laughed softly. He said she was not a prisoner. She was family. She was free to leave whenever she wanted. All she needed to do was give him what he asked for. The safe deposit box. The documents. The fortune her father had stolen from him.

She turned to face him. He stood in the doorway, leaning against the frame, his arms crossed, his expression one of grandfatherly patience. It was the most terrifying thing she had ever seen.

She told him her father had not stolen anything. He had discovered what Harold was doing and had tried to expose him. That was why Harold killed him.

Harold's smile never wavered. He said she could believe whatever made her feel better. But the fact remained that her father had taken something that did not belong to him, and she was going to give it back.

He said she had three days.

Then he closed the door. The lock turned. Ayra heard his footsteps retreating down the hallway, slow and measured, like a man who had nowhere else to be.

She stood in the center of the room, her hands shaking, her heart pounding, her mind racing through options that all led to dead ends. She could not call the police. Harold had made that clear. Her mother would pay the price. She could not warn Damien. Harold was watching. She could not run. She did not know where to go.

She was trapped.

The room was beautiful. That was the cruelest part. A four-poster bed with silk sheets. A vanity stocked with expensive toiletries. A closet full of clothes in her size, labels still attached, all of them in colors Harold had seen her wear. He had been planning this for weeks. Maybe months. Maybe since the moment her mother introduced him to the family.

Ayra sat on the edge of the bed and stared at the locked door.

She thought about Damien. About the look on his face when she shook her head at the dinner table. The way the color drained from his skin. The way his hands clenched around his glass. He would be trying to reach her now. Calling her phone, texting, driving to her apartment. He would find nothing. She had left her phone in her clutch, and her clutch was somewhere in this house, probably already confiscated.

She was a ghost. Disappeared without a trace.

The first night passed in fragments. She did not sleep. She paced. She pressed her ear to the door and listened to the house settle around her. Footsteps in the hallway. Voices too low to understand. The distant chime of a clock marking hours she could not see.

Morning came grey and cold. A tray of food appeared outside her door-eggs, fruit, fresh juice. She ate because she needed her strength. She drank because her throat was dry from hours of silent screaming.

She explored the room. Every drawer, every closet, every corner. She found nothing useful. No phone. No window that opened. No vent large enough to crawl through. The room was a beautiful cage, and she was the bird Harold had been waiting to catch.

The second day, she tried the door.

It was unlocked.

She stood in the doorway for a long moment, her heart pounding, her legs trembling. She stepped into the hallway. It was empty. The house was quiet. She made her way toward the stairs, her bare feet silent on the marble floor.

She made it three steps before a voice stopped her.

Harold appeared from the study, a cup of tea in his hand, his expression one of mild surprise. He asked if she was looking for something.

Ayra said she wanted to call her mother.

Harold nodded slowly. He said that was reasonable. A daughter should check on her mother. He pulled a phone from his pocket and held it out to her.

He said she could call. But she would use his phone. And she would say exactly what he told her to say.

Ayra looked at the phone. Then at Harold's face. Then back at the phone.

She asked what would happen if she refused.

Harold smiled. He said her mother had a doctor's appointment that afternoon. A routine checkup. Nothing serious. But doctors could make mistakes, could they not? A wrong prescription. A missed symptom. A tragic accident that no one could have predicted.

He said he would hate for anything to happen to Margaret. She was such a lovely woman. It would be a shame to lose her so soon after finding her.

Ayra took the phone.

She dialed her mother's number. Margaret answered on the second ring, her voice bright, asking how the night had gone, whether Ayra had slept well, whether Harold was treating her like the princess she was.

Ayra smiled. Her voice was steady when she spoke. She said everything was wonderful. Harold was so kind. The house was beautiful. She was having a lovely time and might stay another day or two.

Margaret's relief was palpable. She said she was so happy Ayra was finally giving Harold a chance. She said Damien had called looking for her, asking if she was okay. She said she told him Ayra was fine, just spending time with family.

Ayra's grip tightened on the phone. She asked what Damien had said.

Margaret said he had sounded strange. Worried. But she told him not to be silly. Ayra was safe. She was with Harold.

Harold plucked the phone from Ayra's hand. He said goodbye to Margaret in his warm, kind voice, promising to take good care of her daughter. Then he ended the call.

He looked at Ayra. His smile was soft. Paternal.

He said that was not so hard, was it? She was learning. Soon she would understand that obedience was easier than resistance. That fighting only prolonged the inevitable.

He tucked the phone back into his pocket. He said she should go back to her room. Rest. Think about what she wanted to do. The three days were passing quickly.

Ayra did not move.

She asked what would happen after three days. If she still refused to give him what he wanted.

Harold tilted his head. He considered the question like a man considering which wine to open.

He said he would start with her mother. Small things at first. An accident. An illness. Nothing that could be traced. Then he would move to Damien. His son had always been too rebellious. It would be a kindness to put him out of his misery. And if she still refused-

He smiled.

He said she did not want to know what came after that.

Ayra walked back to her room. She closed the door. She did not lock it. There was no point. The lock was on the outside.

She sat on the edge of the bed and stared at the wall.

Three days. She had three days to find a way out. Three days to protect her mother. Three days to save herself.

She thought about the safe deposit box. The documents her father had hidden. The fortune Harold had been hunting for thirty years.

She did not know where it was. Her father had never told her. But somewhere in the chaos of her memory, in the fragments of childhood she had buried long ago, there was a clue. A place. A name. Something her father had said before he died, words she had not understood at the time.

She closed her eyes and reached back into the dark.

She would find it. And when she did, she would use it to destroy Harold Pierce.

But first, she needed to get out of this room.

She looked at the window. The drop was two stories. The ground below was stone.

She looked at the door. Unlocked, but Harold was always watching.

She looked at the vent in the ceiling, the one she had dismissed as too small.

She pulled the chair from the vanity, placed it under the vent, and climbed.

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