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The Billionaire Mistook Me for His Dead Fiancée Novel Cover

The Billionaire Mistook Me for His Dead Fiancée

Celeste Marlowe spent ten years secretly loving Thorne Ashbourne from across New York's skyline — collecting his newspaper clippings, dreaming of the boy who once tied a little girl's shoelace at the Plaza Hotel. She never expected to meet him. Not like this. When her best friend drags her to a stranger's funeral, Celeste walks into a room where every eye turns to her in horror. The dead woman in the casket has her face. And the dead woman's grieving fiancé — ruthless billionaire Thorne Ashbourne — has his hand around her throat before she can explain. He offers her a six-month contract: live in his mansion. Wear his dead fiancée's clothes. Become the ghost he can't let go. Celeste signs — because she'd sell her soul for six months beside him. What she doesn't tell him is that she's secretly the masked pianist whose music he's been crying to for three years. What he doesn't know is that the woman in the casket isn't who he thinks she is. And when the real 'dead' fiancée walks back through the mansion door — will he still choose the ghost, or the girl who's been loving him all along?
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Chapter 3

The knock comes at 2:00 a.m.

Not a polite tap. Not a neighbor who locked themselves out. Three hard, deliberate slams. The wood rattles in the frame.

I jolt upright from the couch. My pulse instantly slams against my ribs. I am still wearing the black funeral dress. My throat aches—a deep, sharp throb holding the exact shape of Thorne Ashbourne’s fingers.

I cross the living room, my bare feet silent on the hardwood. I press my eye to the peephole.

Two men. Dark suits. Blank expressions. The taller one has a thick manila envelope tucked under his arm.

I slide the chain on and open the door just an inch.

"Miss Marlowe." The taller man doesn't wait for a response. He shoves the envelope through the narrow gap. It's heavy. I catch it with both hands. "Have a good night."

They turn and walk away. The dim hallway swallows them up, quiet as shadows.

I close the door. Lock the deadbolt. I carry the envelope to the kitchen table and let it drop.

The clasp is already undone.

I pull out the stack of papers.

My own face stares back at me from a Juilliard ID photo I haven't seen in twelve years. Twenty-year-old Celeste Marlowe. Hair pulled back tight. Trying to look serious. Below it is my complete undergraduate transcript. Piano performance. Every grade. Every professor's name. Every recital I ever played.

My stomach tightens. I flip to the next page.

A police report. Date: March 14th, fourteen years ago. Vehicle collision. Route 9, upstate New York. Two fatalities.

My parents' names are printed in cold, bureaucratic type. I haven't looked at this document since the week of their funeral. I didn't even know a civilian could just obtain it.

I keep going.

Every freelance curating contract I’ve signed over the past six years. Tax filings. Bank statements. A receipt from my dentist dated eleven months ago—root canal, lower left molar, $1,400 out of pocket.

My hands stop shaking. Something colder replaces the fear.

Thorne Ashbourne has completely dismantled my life. He laid it flat on paper, organized it by date, and had someone annotate the margins in precise black ink. Whoever assembled this was thorough, efficient, and completely without mercy. I am stripped bare. Exposed.

But then, I notice it.

I flip through to the end, scanning the pages twice.

Nothing.

There is no mention of La Veilée. No Swiss registration. No concert recordings. No royalty payments routed through the account I set up in Geneva eight years ago. That identity is buried under three layers of legal insulation and a name I have never used in English.

Thorne Ashbourne has resources I can't even fathom—and he still hit a wall.

A small, reckless spark of triumph ignites in my chest.

Then I reach the bottom of the stack.

A single sheet of heavy, cream-colored cardstock. Unstapled. Sitting alone like a period at the end of a sentence.

Handwritten. One line.

Tomorrow. 9 a.m. Ashbourne Tower, 42nd floor. One second late, and you will never work in this city again.

No signature. He doesn't need one.

I trace the aggressive, sharp strokes of the black ink. He doesn't ask. He commands. The threat isn't a bluff. He will ruin me if I don't show up.

I should be terrified. Every rational, sane part of me is screaming to pack a bag, drive to the airport, and disappear.

But I don't.

Instead, I take the note into the bedroom. The fluorescent light of the bathroom mirror is unforgiving. I stare at my reflection. The curve of my jaw. The storm-grey eyes. The small mole beneath my left ear.

Ondine Beaumont had the same mole. I saw it in the framed photograph at the church.

I turn away from the mirror. I kneel beside my bed and pull out the wooden box hidden behind a stack of old shoeboxes. Dark walnut. Brass latch.

The lock clicks open.

On top is a newspaper clipping. Yellowed at the edges. Soft from being touched too many times.

Ashbourne Group Names Thorne Ashbourne Interim Director. The photo shows him at a press conference. Younger by a decade. Jaw set. Eyes already carrying that ruthless, heavy weight.

I cut this out of a business section ten years ago. The week after a stranger shoved me out of the path of a speeding car on a rain-slicked street in the West Village. He saved my life, bleeding onto the pavement, and disappeared into the crowd before I could even gasp a thank you.

I have kept this clipping for a decade. Below it are nine years of Ashbourne Group annual reports. A blurry photograph I took of him crossing Fifth Avenue, his back turned to me. A concert program from Zurich, where I played Chopin behind a white Venetian mask, pretending I wasn't thinking about him.

I trace his printed face in the old newspaper.

I am a stalker. I am insane. I am a moth actively flying toward an open furnace.

Heat pools low in my stomach. A dark, shameful thrill twists through my veins. He found me. After ten years of watching him from the shadows, Thorne Ashbourne is demanding I walk into his office.

I close the box. Lock it.

"Thorne," I whisper to the empty room. The name tastes dangerous on my tongue. Familiar and forbidden.

I pick up the heavy cardstock note and place it on my nightstand.

I set my alarm for 7:00 a.m.

I am going to walk right into his cage.

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