
The Billionaire Mistook Me for His Dead Fiancée
Chapter 4
The forty-second floor of Ashbourne Tower is a monument to cold, hard power.
No art on the walls. No plants. Just glass, steel, and a view of Manhattan so vast it makes you feel entirely insignificant.
I step out of the elevator. 8:58 a.m.
My pulse flutters in the hollow of my throat. I smooth my damp palms over the skirt of my black dress. I tell myself it’s just a meeting. I can walk out of here the same way I walked in.
I know it is a lie.
The executive assistant leads me into the boardroom. It’s empty, except for him.
Thorne Ashbourne sits at the far end of a massive marble table. His back is to the floor-to-ceiling windows. The morning light pours in behind him, turning his broad shoulders and sharp jaw into a devastating silhouette. The entire city sprawls behind him like something he owns.
He doesn't stand. He doesn't offer his hand.
He just watches me cross the room. The sheer, suffocating weight of his storm-grey eyes tracks my every step.
I don't sit down. If I sit, I will be looking up at him. I refuse to give him that.
He lets the silence stretch. Testing it. Testing me.
Then, he slides a document across the polished marble. Thirty pages, bound with a single black clip. The paper is heavy, cream-colored.
"Six months," he says.
His voice is the same as yesterday. Flat. Controlled. A low, deadly vibration that settles directly between my thighs.
"You move into the Ashbourne estate," he commands, his tone leaving no room for negotiation. "You dress the way she dressed. Speak the way she spoke. You attend every family event, every social function that requires her presence."
He leans back in his leather chair. "Her name. Her mannerisms. Her history. You will memorize them."
I stare at the heavy document. I don't touch it. "And in exchange?"
"Five million dollars." He drops the number like it's loose change. "Deposited in three installments. Plus the full liquidation of your existing debts. All of it."
The number hits me like a physical blow. Five million. It’s enough to vanish forever.
I reach out. My fingers brush the thick paper. I open the contract.
Page one is standard. Term of agreement. Jurisdiction. I flip forward. Page nine outlines the performance expectations. Page twelve covers media appearances.
Page seventeen stops my breath.
Clause 17: The First Party (Celeste Marlowe) shall not initiate or permit any physical contact with the Second Party (Thorne Ashbourne). Violation carries a penalty of ten million dollars, payable immediately upon breach.
I read it twice.
My core clenches. The clause is brutally clinical. It anticipates closeness and preemptively punishes it. The very fact that he put it in writing—that he felt the need to legally enforce a physical distance between us—makes the air in the room suddenly too hot.
I flip to page twenty-three. The First Party shall not meet privately with any male individual outside of professionally supervised contexts.
I set the contract down.
"Why me?" It isn't really a question. I just want to hear him say it.
Thorne’s gaze doesn't waver. "You know why."
"There are plastic surgeons in this city who could give any woman Ondine's face. Better, probably. More controllable."
Something dark shifts behind his eyes. Not warmth. The precise, cold recognition of a predator calculating a flaw.
"Those faces are constructed," he says, his voice dropping an octave. "Yours isn't. Anyone who knew her will see the difference." He pauses. His eyes drop to my jawline. To the small mole beneath my left ear. "I need something real."
Real. The word hangs in the electric air between us.
I think about the wooden box under my bed. Ten years of watching this man from the shadows. Ten years of playing piano in candlelit halls in Zurich, pretending I wasn't waiting for a ghost.
A sane woman would set this contract back on the table, take the elevator down to the street, and never look back.
But I am not sane. I am exactly that girl. The pathetic, obsessed girl who will sign away her own identity just to breathe the same air as him. Just to sleep under his roof. Even under thirty pages of clauses designed to ensure he never touches me.
I pick up the heavy black Montblanc pen from the table.
My hand is completely steady.
I sign my name at the bottom of page thirty. Celeste Marlowe. The letters are clean. Composed. They betray absolutely nothing of the chaotic, shameful hunger clawing at my chest.
I set the pen down.
Thorne stares at my signature. His jaw tightens. For a microsecond, something complicated and violent flashes across his face. Like a man watching a cage door lock, unsure if he’s the warden or the prisoner.
He stands up. The sheer size of him dominates the room. He gathers the contract and walks toward the frosted glass door.
I exhale slowly, my pulse still hammering against my ribs. It's done.
He stops.
His hand rests on the silver door handle. He doesn't look back at me. His broad back is a wall of impenetrable Italian wool.
"One more thing," he says quietly.
I freeze.
"Ondine hated the piano," he states. The words are precise. Deliberate. "She found it pretentious. She never played. She had no interest in it."
He turns his head just enough to catch my reflection in the glass.
"So starting today, you don't touch any instrument. That is non-negotiable."
The boardroom goes dead silent.
My lungs stop working. The blood drains entirely from my face.
I look down at my hands. The hands that an insurance company in London valued at twenty million dollars. The hands that spent thirty years mastering Chopin, Ravel, and Scriabin. The hands of La Veilée.
He is asking me to cut out my own tongue. He is banning my soul.
And I have already signed the paper.
Thorne waits in the doorway. He doesn't know about Zurich. He doesn't know who I really am. But he knows exactly what this costs me.
I force the words past the razor blades in my throat.
"Okay."
My voice comes out small. Broken. I hate how weak I sound.
Thorne’s jaw ticks. He walks out without another word. The heavy door clicks shut behind him.
I stand completely alone in the glass-and-steel room. I press my fingertips against the cold marble table, my nails biting into the stone. I am no longer Celeste Marlowe. I am no longer a pianist.
I belong to Thorne Ashbourne now.
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