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Substitute Bride For The Comatose Billionaire

Substitute Bride For The Comatose Billionaire

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After surviving twenty-one years in a brutal orphanage, I finally returned to my billionaire biological family with the silver pocket watch that proved my identity. But my relatives didn't care about me; they only loved Corie, the fake daughter who had stolen my life after our mothers switched us during a hospital fire. On my very first day home, the family faced total ruin over a thirty billion dollar debt. The creditors demanded a Dunlap daughter marry their comatose, vegetative heir to settle the score. Without a second thought, my grandmother and uncle pointed their fingers at me. They claimed Corie was too delicate and precious to spend her life nursing a corpse with a heartbeat. "You're used to hardship and deprivation," my grandmother sneered, demanding I fulfill my so-called family obligation to save them all. I looked at these strangers who had ignored my existence for two decades, expecting me to sacrifice my future just so a thief could keep enjoying my stolen wealth. They thought they were tossing an unwanted orphan into a living hell. But when I saw the medical file of the comatose heir, a cold thrill ran through my veins. It was Andres Gillespie. The man who had taken my innocence during a mountain storm four years ago, and the secret father of my hidden twins. I calmly set down my coffee cup and smiled at my arrogant family. "I'll do it. I'll marry him."

Contents

Substitute Bride For The Comatose Billionaire Chapter 1 1

The taxi door clicked shut behind her.

Emilie Dunlap's worn canvas sneakers hit the pristine asphalt of Beverly Hills with a soft thud. She didn't look back at the yellow cab as it pulled away. Her eyes lifted, tracking past the black wrought-iron gates to the mansion beyond-a medieval castle dropped into the California hills, all stone turrets and manicured excess.

Twenty-one years.

She'd been gone twenty-one years, and this place still looked exactly like the photographs she'd found in the orphanage files. The same arrogant sprawl. The same message, carved into every inch of the facade: You don't belong here.

Two security guards detached themselves from the gatehouse. They moved with the lazy confidence of men who'd never been told no. The taller one, blond with a neck like a tree trunk, looked her up and down-taking in the unbranded cotton t-shirt, the faded jeans, the lack of any designer logo that would signal human worth to his limited imagination.

"Private property," he said. His arm shot out, blocking her path. "Turn around. No tourists."

Emilie didn't lift her eyelids. Her voice came out low, bored, carrying the flat vowels of someone who'd spent years in places where English wasn't the first language.

"Burnett Dunlap."

The blond guard blinked. Then he laughed, a wet sound that sprayed spittle into the morning air. "Oh, that's rich. Another one thinks she's Daddy's long-lost girl." He reached for her shoulder, fingers curling to grip and shove. "Beat it, sweetheart. Before I call the cops and-"

His words cut off into a strangled gasp.

Emilie's right hand had moved without her conscious thought-a blur of motion that ended with her fingers locked around his wrist, her thumb pressing into the radial nerve with surgical precision. She applied exactly three pounds of pressure.

The guard's knees buckled. He dropped to the asphalt, mouth opening and closing like a landed fish, a high-pitched whine escaping his throat.

The second guard fumbled for his taser. His hand shook so badly he couldn't get a proper grip on the weapon.

Emilie released the blond guard's wrist with a flick of disgust, as if dropping something rotted. She stepped over his crumpled form and walked to the side entrance-a steel door with a biometric panel that gleamed in the sunlight.

She didn't touch the fingerprint scanner.

Instead, she raised her hand and tapped three times against the metal casing. A strange, resonant rhythm. A moment of silence, and then, with a soft click, the lock disengaged. Green light.

Emilie pushed through, leaving both guards frozen in her wake.

---

The oak double doors swung open without hesitation.

Sunlight flooded the grand hall, illuminating dust motes dancing above marble floors that probably cost more than most people's homes. Emilie stood in the doorway, letting her eyes adjust, letting them see her-backlit, anonymous, utterly out of place.

Hettie William Dunlap was sipping tea on a cream-colored sofa when the light shifted.

She turned, irritation already forming on her carefully maintained face. The words died in her throat. The bone china cup slipped from her fingers, hitting the Persian rug with a muffled thud. Darjeeling tea spread across silk fibers in a spreading stain.

Hettie didn't notice.

She was staring at the doorway. At the silhouette. At the shape of the jaw, the angle of the cheekbones, the way the girl stood with her weight distributed evenly-ready to move in any direction, just like-

"Burnett."

The name came out strangled. Hettie didn't look away from the door.

Burnett Dunlap lowered his Wall Street Journal with the controlled precision of a man who'd built an empire on never showing surprise. He rose, stepping automatically in front of his wife, his body forming a barrier even as his mind processed what his eyes were seeing.

The girl in the doorway looked nothing like the private investigators' reports had suggested. No desperation. No eagerness. Just a flat, assessing calm that made the hair on Burnett's neck prickle with ancestral warning.

Emilie let them look. She felt nothing-no recognition, no longing, no anger. These were strangers who happened to share her blood. DNA was chemistry, not connection.

Her hand dipped into her pocket and emerged with the silver pocket watch.

She didn't walk closer. She simply opened her fingers and let it fly-a casual underhand toss that sent the watch sliding across the marble-topped coffee table. It traveled in a perfect straight line, slowing precisely at Hettie's knee. The catch released. The lid sprang open.

The Dunlap family crest gleamed in the morning light. Inside, a photograph: a newborn with a dark curl of hair and a birthmark shaped like a crescent moon on her left shoulder.

Hettie's hand shot out. Her fingers closed around the watch with desperate strength, pulling it to her chest. She looked up at Emilie, and the years fell away-the searching, the private detectives, the false leads, the nights Burnett had held her while she wept.

"Emilie."

The name broke across her lips like a wave. Hettie shoved past her husband-past twenty-one years of proper behavior and controlled emotions-and ran.

She crashed into her daughter with enough force to stagger a smaller woman. Her arms wrapped around Emilie's shoulders, her face pressing into the cotton of that cheap t-shirt, inhaling the scent of plain soap and something else, something wild that no amount of civilization could wash away.

"My baby. My baby. My baby."

The words dissolved into sobs. Hettie's whole body shook with them, twenty-one years of held breath finally released.

Emilie stood rigid.

Her mother's arms were warm. Her mother's tears were wet against her neck. Some part of her brain-the part that had been trained by seven Ascended Masters to survive any environment-screamed that this was a vulnerability, a trap, a hold that could be used against her.

Her hands hung at her sides. She didn't return the embrace. She didn't throw the woman over her shoulder, though her muscles had already calculated the angle.

She simply waited.

Burnett approached with heavier footsteps. His face had gone the color of old ash, the businessman mask cracking to reveal something raw underneath. He stopped three feet away, close enough to see the details his wife was too overwhelmed to notice-the calluses on his daughter's fingers, the way she held her weight on the balls of her feet, the absolute stillness of her breathing.

"Who are you?" His voice emerged rough, defensive. "Where did you get that watch?"

Emilie turned her head just enough to meet his eyes. The movement dislodged a tear from Hettie's cheek; it landed cold on Emilie's collarbone.

"St. Agnes Orphanage." She named the valley, the coordinates, the place that had been her first memory. "Outside Boulder, Colorado. They found me in a basket on the steps during a thunderstorm. This was pinned to my blanket."

Burnett's pupils dilated. She watched him process it-the location matched exactly with the hospital where Hettie had given birth, the storm that had caused the evacuation, the chaos that had allowed the switch.

His jaw tightened. The businessman reasserted control. "We'll need DNA confirmation. Immediately."

Hettie spun away from Emilie, her hand cracking across Burnett's chest with a sound like a gunshot. "No! She's my daughter, I know it, I feel it, I don't need a laboratory to-"

"Mother." Emilie's voice cut through the hysteria like a scalpel.

Hettie froze.

Emilie reached up and plucked a single hair from her own scalp. The motion was economical, precise. She held it out to Burnett, pinched between thumb and forefinger, her arm steady as a surgeon's.

"Rush processing. Four hours." Her eyes held his, flat and unblinking. "You'll have your confirmation."

Burnett took the hair with fingers that weren't quite steady. He called for the house manager without looking away from his daughter's face-this stranger who moved like a predator and spoke like a technician and had appeared in his living room with the family watch that had been missing for two decades.

The manager scurried away with the sample sealed in a plastic bag.

Hettie had recovered enough to reclaim physical contact. She took Emilie's hand-felt the roughness of her palm, the thickened skin at the base of her fingers-and her face crumpled with fresh grief.

"Your hands," she whispered. "You've worked so hard. You've suffered so much."

Emilie didn't correct her. Let her think these were farm calluses, manual labor marks. The truth-that these hands had held surgical instruments steady through twelve-hour procedures, had snapped bones with precise pressure, had killed men who deserved it-would only complicate things.

"Come," Hettie said, tugging her toward the sofa. "Sit. Tell me everything. Tell me-"

The sound of heels on marble interrupted her.

They came from above, measured and deliberate, each strike calculated to announce presence and status. Emilie turned her head to track the sound, her body shifting automatically to put both parents in her peripheral vision while maintaining sight lines to the staircase.

The girl who descended was wearing Chanel.

Emilie recognized the collection-Spring/Summer, the one with the exaggerated bows that only looked good on women who'd never had to run for their lives. The fabric was silk, the color a soft pink that suggested innocence and expense in equal measure.

Corie Decker reached the bottom of the spiral staircase and paused, one hand trailing along the banister in a pose she'd clearly practiced. Her eyes swept the hall, taking in the tableau: her mother disheveled and tear-stained, her father rigid with shock, and the stranger standing between them in clothes that wouldn't have passed muster at a garage sale.

Their gazes met.

Corie's smile-perfect, dimpled, designed to disarm-flickered for just a moment. Her eyes widened fractionally. The hand on the banister tightened, knuckles whitening beneath the manicure.

Then the mask reasserted itself. The smile widened. But Emilie had seen it-that flash of something cold and calculating, the predator recognizing another predator in her territory.

"Mommy?" Corie's voice came out high, sweet, concerned. "Daddy? What's going on? Who's our guest?"

She started across the marble floor, moving with the glide of someone who'd never walked on anything less polished. Her eyes never left Emilie's face, searching for weakness, for entry points, for the proper angle of attack.

Emilie watched her come.

She didn't smile. She didn't speak. She simply stood there in her cheap clothes and her worn sneakers, her mother's hand still clutching hers, and let the fake heiress approach across twenty-one years of stolen time.

The game, she thought, had finally begun.

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