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The Bride They Replaced Became Heir Novel Cover

The Bride They Replaced Became Heir

A night before her wedding, Daisy White walks into a room filled with white orchids, soft music, and the people she trusts most… only to hear the words that shatter her world. “Your stepsister is pregnant with your fiancé’s child. The wedding will still happen tomorrow, but Samantha will be the bride.” Seven months. That’s how long they laughed behind her back while she planned her future. Seven months of lies, betrayal and watching her build a life they were already stealing from her. By midnight, Daisy loses her fiancé, her family, and the future she thought belonged to her. Then at 1AM on her twenty-fifth birthday, a stranger sends her a message that changes everything: Your mother never left your father her company. She left it to you. Suddenly, the unwanted daughter they cast aside becomes the hidden owner of the billion-dollar empire her father took after her mother’s mysterious death. But as Daisy starts tearing her family’s perfect world apart, she uncovers a horrifying truth: Her mother was never supposed to die. The bride was replaced. The heir was erased. Now Daisy is coming back for everything they stole.
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Chapter 1

"Samantha is three months pregnant with Arthur's child."

My father's voice filled the sitting room like smoke.

"They are in love. The wedding will go ahead tomorrow." Felix paused. "But Samantha will be the bride."

I was still standing in the doorway.

I hadn't even made it to my seat.

I was wearing my cream satin robe, hair still pinned from the stylist's trial run that afternoon, one hand barely touching the door frame. I had walked down that corridor thinking this was a pre-wedding toast. Something stiff and brief and Felix-shaped instead I walked into a room that had already decided everything without me.

Felix stood at the fireplace, one hand on the mantel, silver cufflinks catching the light. Composed, while Selena sat on the settee, legs crossed, wine glass balanced in her fingers. She glanced at me when I entered, then looked away.

Arthur was in the armchair by the window.

He wouldn't look at me.

And Samantha... my stepsister, Samantha Jones was sitting in my chair. The high-backed one near the left side of the fireplace, the one I always took at family dinners because it faced the whole room and I liked to see everything. She was sitting in it with her fingers laced together over her stomach, red lips slightly curved.

I looked at my father.

"Say that again," I said.

My voice came out quiet. Level. Even I was surprised.

Felix didn't blink. "You heard me, Daisy."

"I heard you. Say it again."

He set his glass down on the mantel, slow and deliberate. "Samantha is pregnant. The child is Arthur's. The wedding proceeds tomorrow. Samantha will be the bride."

Silence.

They were all watching me, waiting for the moment I broke. Waiting for tears, for screaming, for something that would let them label me hysterical and move forward without guilt.

I didn't give them that.

Arthur cleared his throat.

He sat forward in the armchair, rubbed the back of his neck, and finally, finally looked at me.

"Daisy." His voice was soft. Careful. Like he had rehearsed this exact tone in the mirror. "I'm sorry. I mean that. I know this isn't easy to hear and I know the timing is awful but feelings change. People change. I just..." He exhaled. "I hope you'll find a way to understand."

I looked at him.

Five years. Five years of his coffee orders and his mother's birthdays and four years of dull work dinners where I smiled at people whose names I had already forgotten. Five years of being the steady one, the quiet one, the one who never made things difficult.

"Feelings change," I said.

"Yes."

"And when did yours change, Arthur? Before or after you started sleeping with my sister?"

Samantha's smile didn't move but something behind her eyes flickered.

"Stepsister," she said, sounding bored.

I looked at her then.

Samantha was twenty-three and beautiful in the way that filled every room it walked into and knew it. She had her mother's cheekbones and her father's ease with power. She had spent her whole life standing one step behind me, comparing, calculating, resenting. Not because I had ever done anything to her. But because people still said my mother's name when they looked at me, and my mother's name meant something, and no amount of Felix's favoritism had ever been enough to fix what that did to Samantha inside.

Now she was sitting in my chair with my fiancé's child in her stomach and the faintest trace of satisfaction on her face.

"How long?" I asked.

She tilted her head. "Does it matter?"

"How long, Samantha."

She glanced at Arthur. He looked at the floor. She looked back at me.

"Seven months," she said.

Seven months.

I stood with that number sitting in my chest like something on fire.

Seven months ago I had been picking flowers for the ceremony. Writing vows in a notebook on my nightstand. Arguing with the venue over centerpiece heights. Seven months ago I had been genuinely, quietly happy, while they’ve been betraying me.

"You should be grateful," Selena said.

I turned to look at my stepmother.

She set her wine glass down on the side table, and folded her hands in her lap.

"We told you tonight," she said. "We could have said nothing. You could have walked down that aisle tomorrow in front of everyone and found out then." She smiled. "We saved you that. I think that deserves some acknowledgment."

I looked at Selena Amato for a long moment.

Forty-eight years old. Elegant in a way that took constant, invisible work. She had been my mother's personal assistant before she became my father's wife. She had sat at Beverley White's table, and the moment my mother was gone she had walked into our house and quietly rearranged everything.

She met my eyes without flinching and in hers there was nothing. No guilt. Not even the basic discomfort of a woman who knew she had done something wrong.

Just patience. Just get through this part and we can all move on.

"The east wing guest rooms are available," Felix said from the fireplace. He hadn't moved. His voice was already wrapping up. "If you need somewhere to rest before you travel tomorrow."

Travel.

Not stay. Not take your time. Travel. As in leave. As in this house is no longer yours, this wedding is no longer yours, you are no longer the point of any of this.

I looked at my father.

He looked back at me.

This was the man who had carried me on his shoulders when I was small enough to think he was the tallest person in the world. The man I had spent my entire life bending and shrinking and making myself easier for, just trying, just trying to reach him, to be enough for him, to make him look at me the way he looked at Samantha.

He was looking at me now.

And there was nothing there.

No guilt, just impatience.

I started looking at the room.

The flowers on the side table — white orchids, tall and perfect in their glass vases. Beautiful. Samantha's favorite. I had always loved peonies, pink and full and a little excessive. Nobody had ever asked.

The music playing low on the stereo in the corner. I recognized it now that I was paying attention. That soft acoustic playlist. Samantha had played it at her birthday dinner two summers ago and mentioned it for weeks after.

The ribbon on the orchid vases. The throw folded over the settee arm. The candle arrangement on the mantel.

All of it.

Every small, quiet detail of this room had been chosen. Set. Arranged carefully for tonight, for this moment, with the right lighting and the right flowers and the right music playing underneath, soft enough that you wouldn't notice unless you were standing still enough to hear it.

They had designed this.

Not just the conversation. The room. The atmosphere. The whole scene had been prepared like a stage.

And I had walked into it in my wedding robe, with my hair pinned, smiling a little because I thought there would be champagne.

I picked up my purse.

"Daisy," Arthur started. He stood. "Just wait. Please. Can we just..."

I straightened my shoulders and walked out.

"Daisy." Felix's voice behind me, sharp for the first time. "Don't be dramatic about this."

I kept walking.

Down the corridor. Past the white rose bouquet propped against the hall table, chosen by a planner who had been quietly consulting Samantha's preferences for months without me knowing. Past the framed photos that had slowly, subtly shifted over the years to hold less of my mother's face and more of Selena's family. Past every small thing that had once been mine and had been carefully, patiently taken.

I pushed through the front door.

The night air was cold.

I walked to my car was parked under the old oak at the end of the east path.

I got in my car and sat while trying to breathe.

Thirty seconds. My hands in my lap, the dark pressing against every window, the engine not yet running.

Don’t break here, I told myself. Not here. Not in their driveway. Not where it becomes their story.

The clock said ten fifty-nine.

In nine hours I was supposed to be someone’s wife.

I started the engine and backed out slowly then turned toward the gate.

The headlights swept across the front of the estate as I came around the curve, catching the stone facade, the ivy, the upper windows.

And then I saw it.

At Samantha's bedroom window.

My wedding dress was hanging there.

Full and white and perfect. The one I had cried over in the fitting room because it was the most beautiful thing I had ever seen on my own body. It was hanging in her window on a satin hanger, the skirt catching the light from inside her room.

Already moved.

Already claimed.

They hadn't even waited until morning.

I sat there for one long second, looking at it before I drove through the gate.

The pain I felt was starting to turn into anger as I thought about the sitting room. The white orchids on the side table. Samantha’s favorite, not mine. The playlist on the stereo. The ribbon on the chair.

Seven months.

My wedding had been slowly, quietly rebuilt around another woman while I was busy planning it.

And every single person in that room had known.

I pressed the accelerator and drove into the dark.

Whatever came next, I decided, was going to be on my terms.

Not theirs.

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