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When My Fiancé Colluded with My Sister Novel Cover

When My Fiancé Colluded with My Sister

The silk sheets beneath me felt like liquid fire against my skin as consciousness crashed over me in waves. My chest burned with a phantom pain that shouldn't exist—the memory of Alex's bullet tearing through my ribs in that sterile villa, the taste of copper flooding my mouth as I died on his marble floor. But I was alive. Nineteen again. I pressed my palm against my chest, feeling the steady rhythm of my heart beneath the thin fabric of my nightgown. The scent of expensive jasmine perfume lingered in the air, the same fragrance Eleanor insisted I wear to every family function. The crystal chandelier above cast familiar shadows across the cream-colored walls of my bedroom in the Sterling mansion. The calendar on my nightstand confirmed my worst fear and greatest hope: March 15th. The exact date when my previous life had begun its descent into hell. I sat up slowly, my body trembling with the weight of knowledge that felt too heavy for my nineteen-year-old frame. In twelve hours, Alex Carter would walk through those mahogany doors downstairs. In my previous life, I had thrown myself at his feet like a lovesick fool, begging to take Ruby's place in the arranged marriage. I had believed his cold smiles were affection, his control was protection. Never again.
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Chapter 2

Evening in the Sterling mansion brought a different kind of chill—one that seeped through the silk and gold, settling in my bones. I barely heard the clock strike eight before Eleanor’s summons reached me: a terse knock at my bedroom door, followed by the housekeeper’s careful, practiced whisper. The message was clear. My presence was required in the study.

Walking the shadowed corridor, I passed ancestral portraits whose eyes seemed to follow my every step, judging, accusing, as if they already knew the verdict. The heavy oak door to Eleanor’s study loomed ahead, the polished brass handle icy against my palm. I steeled myself, willing my heart to slow as I slipped inside.

The room was swathed in lamplight, dark wood walls lined with legal tomes and photos of a family that had never truly included me. Eleanor sat behind her desk, posture rigid, pearl necklace glinting in the glow. Her fingers drummed a slow, deliberate rhythm on a folder embossed with the Sterling crest. Power radiated from her in cold, precise waves.

“Mimi.” She didn’t offer me a seat. “I trust you understand why you’re here.”

I nodded, my voice even. “You want to discuss the marriage contract.”

Her lips curved into something that might have been a smile, if not for the steel in her eyes. “Alex Carter may claim to prefer Ruby, but the board’s decision is final. Ruby’s inheritance rights must be protected. The family cannot risk the instability that would come from sending her away. You will represent Sterling in this union, as originally intended.”

I kept my gaze steady, hands folded at my waist. “Even if Mr. Carter objects?”

She leaned forward, shadows deepening the lines of her face. “Alex Carter is a pragmatic man. He’ll accept what the Sterling family offers. As for you, I expect absolute obedience. No scenes. No protests. You will sign the marriage agreement at tonight’s meeting, after the banquet, without hesitation or complaint. Is that clear?”

The words felt like shackles. But I only inclined my head, masking my revulsion with practiced docility. “Yes, Mrs. Sterling.”

“Good.” She closed the folder with a soft snap. “Remember, your duty is to the family. Don’t confuse yourself with fantasies.”

I left the study with my pulse thrumming in my ears—part fury, part a cold, calculating anticipation. The trap was closing, just as before. But this time, I knew where the teeth lay.

The Sterling ballroom glittered with dangerous beauty that night. Crystal chandeliers cast fractured rainbows across marble floors; champagne flowed, laughter sparkled, and the air vibrated with the scent of roses and expensive perfume. Beneath the surface, tension coiled like a serpent.

I moved through the crowd in the blue dress Eleanor had chosen, every pearl at my throat a reminder of the leash I wore. Whispers followed me—some curious, some pitying, most dismissive. The city’s most powerful families had gathered not to celebrate, but to appraise.

Ruby shone in a column of emerald silk, her smile dazzling as she circulated among the guests. She held court at the center of a knot of young socialites and junior executives, her laughter ringing a touch too loud. I watched her sidelong, noting the way her gaze flicked from me to Alex, then back again—measuring, calculating, just as her mother had.

Alex Carter stood beside her, tall and perfectly composed in a black tuxedo. His expression was unreadable, lips curved in a polite, enigmatic smile. The room seemed to orbit around him. Where he went, conversations hushed and eyes lingered. He looked at me once, gaze unreadable, then turned away as if I were a piece of fine but unremarkable furniture.

Ruby saw her moment. She raised her glass, voice carrying effortlessly over the music and clinking silverware. “Mimi, darling, remind us—what exactly is your degree in again? I can never keep track. Was it design, or did you drop that as well?”

A few guests tittered. My cheeks burned, but I kept my tone mild. “Design, Ruby. As you know.”

She tilted her head, emerald earrings swinging. “Oh, that’s right. But you never finished at Parsons, did you? Such a shame. I suppose not everyone is cut out for the real responsibilities of a family like ours.”

The laughter sharpened. I felt the eyes—hungry, pitying, gleeful. Alex’s expression didn’t change. He simply sipped his wine, as if I were invisible.

I stood perfectly still, letting the heat of humiliation wash over me, then drain away, leaving only a brittle clarity. In my last life, I’d tried to defend myself. Now, I saw the truth: Ruby needed this spectacle as much as I needed my dignity. And Alex—he was complicit, his silence a private verdict.

The orchestra’s waltz faded to polite applause. I crossed to the refreshment table, hands steady as I picked up a linen napkin. On its underside, I scrawled a message—three lines, small and neat, my handwriting unremarkable: “I have information you’ll want. Meet me in the rose garden. Alone.”

I folded the napkin, waited for Alex to drift near, and pressed it into his hand with a careful smile. He didn’t react, but I saw the flicker of interest in his eyes.

I excused myself from the ballroom, the weight of a hundred eyes sliding off my shoulders as I slipped through the French doors and into the garden. The air outside was brisk, scented with blooming roses and the faint, metallic tang of approaching rain. The moon hung low, casting silver over the trimmed hedges and marble statuary.

My heels crunched softly on gravel as I reached the fountain. Water spilled over cherub wings, the burble soothing and constant—a stark contrast to the roar inside. I let myself breathe, drawing in the cool night, feeling my nerves settle into a coiled anticipation.

Minutes ticked by. Shadows shifted, branches swaying in a gentle breeze. The door creaked. Alex’s footsteps sounded deliberate, predatory, shoes clicking on stone. He emerged from the darkness, the moonlight catching the sharp lines of his jaw, the cold steel in his eyes.

His cologne hit first—citrus and smoke, expensive and calculated. He stopped a few paces away, arms crossed. “So, this is how you operate? Pass me secret notes like a schoolgirl?”

I met his gaze, refusing to flinch. “I thought you’d appreciate discretion.”

He smiled, thin and dangerous. “Let me be clear, Mimi. Whatever fantasies you’re entertaining about our so-called marriage, abandon them now. You are nothing to me but a bargaining chip. There is no place for sentiment in my world.”

His words scraped along old scars, but I kept my face smooth. “You misunderstand me, Mr. Carter. I don’t want your world. I want you to understand the Sterling family’s intentions. Eleanor doesn’t care who you prefer. She wants me to marry you. Ruby’s inheritance depends on it. If you want Ruby, you’ll have to convince her.”

For the first time, his composure slipped. He studied me, something calculating and sharp flickering behind his eyes. “You’re less naive than I expected.”

I held his gaze, letting him see nothing but calm indifference. “You wanted an asset. I’m giving you information. Use it as you see fit.”

The silence stretched, thick as honey. Finally, he gave a single, derisive nod. “Perhaps you’re more useful than I thought.”

He turned, the gravel crunching beneath his shoes as he strode back toward the house, leaving me alone with the roses and the rising wind.

I sank onto the fountain’s edge, heart thudding—not with fear, but with a strange, dangerous hope. The game had changed.

And for the first time since waking in this gilded prison, I felt the faintest pulse of freedom stirring in my veins.

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