
Chapter 1
"I'm sorry, Nora. The echo confirms it. You have early-onset heart failure, and it is progressing rapidly."
The words hung in the sterile, overly air-conditioned office of Dr. Aris. Nora Sterling sat perfectly still, her spine straight, her hands folded neatly in her lap. She didn't cry. She didn’t gasp. She just stared at the anatomical heart model on the doctor's mahogany desk.
"How much time do I have?" Nora asked, her voice as steady and stoic as if she were inquiring about a production timeline for Croft Luxury House.
Dr. Aris sighed, taking off his glasses. "Without a transplant, and given the aggressive nature of this specific cardiomyopathy… maybe a year. Perhaps less if your stress levels remain as high as your cortisol tests suggest. Nora, you need to tell your husband. Julian has the resources to get you on the best transplant lists globally."
"Julian is in Geneva on a business trip," Nora said quietly, her mind already compartmentalizing the catastrophe. "He's unreachable."
"He needs to become reachable," the doctor insisted, leaning forward. "This isn't a minor diagnosis. Your heart is failing to pump enough blood. You could experience a severe cardiac episode at any moment if you aren't careful. I’m prescribing a heavy regimen of beta-blockers and diuretics, but you need immediate lifestyle changes. No more seventy-hour work weeks ghost-designing jewelry. No more stress."
"I understand," Nora replied, standing up. "Thank you, Doctor. I'll pick up the medication downstairs."
"Nora," Dr. Aris warned softly. "Do not face this alone."
Ten minutes later, Nora was sitting in the driver’s seat of her Mercedes, the engine off, staring blindly at the steering wheel. A year. She was twenty-six years old, and she had a year left to live.
Her fingers trembled as she pulled out her phone. She needed Julian. For all his controlling tendencies, for all his demanding perfectionism, he was her husband. He was the CEO of the empire she had quietly built from the shadows, the man who kissed her forehead every morning and told her she was his saving grace.
She dialed his private number. It rang straight to voicemail.
"Julian, it’s me," Nora said, forcing the tremor out of her voice. "I need you to call me the second you get this. I’m at the clinic. It’s… it's bad news."
She hung up and stared at the screen. A sudden, desperate need to know where he was overcame her. Julian insisted they share their GPS locations at all times—a 'safety measure' he implemented early in their marriage. She opened the tracking app.
A blue dot blinked on the map. He wasn't in Geneva. He was at a private helipad just twenty miles outside the city limits.
Frowning, Nora tapped the screen. *Why would he lie about being in Switzerland?*
Her phone buzzed in her hand, startling her. It was Chloe Mercer, her best friend and the volcanic PR executive who handled Croft House's external affairs.
"Tell me you didn't go to the cardiologist alone," Chloe demanded the second Nora answered.
"I went alone," Nora said, putting the car in drive. "Chloe, Julian is back in the city. His location says he's at the Hawthorne Helipad."
"What? No, he's not," Chloe said, her voice crackling over the car's Bluetooth. "I literally just drafted a press release about his expansion meetings in Geneva. He's not due back until tomorrow."
"His phone is off, but his tracker is on. I’m driving there now."
"Nora, wait. What did the doctor say? Why are you ignoring the medical question?"
Nora swallowed the lump in her throat. "I'll tell you when I see you. Stay on the phone with me."
"You're scaring me, Nora. Is it your mitral valve again?"
"It's heart failure, Chloe. Terminal."
A deafening silence filled the car, broken only by the hum of the tires on the asphalt.
"What?" Chloe whispered, her fierce demeanor completely shattered. "No. No, Nora, that’s impossible. You’re twenty-six."
"I have maybe a year," Nora said, her voice eerily calm. "Which is why I need to see my husband. I don't care if he's in a secret meeting. I need him right now."
It took thirty minutes to reach the private airstrip. Nora pulled her car behind a row of tall hedges, keeping the engine idling. She didn't want to interrupt if he was with investors, but she needed to lay eyes on him.
"I see his car," Nora murmured to Chloe, who had stayed on the line in tearful silence. "His driver is waiting by the tarmac."
"Nora, let me come to you. Please."
"Hold on," Nora said, squinting through the windshield.
A sleek black helicopter descended from the overcast sky, the roar of its blades shaking the leaves of the hedges. Julian walked out onto the tarmac, the wind whipping his dark hair. Even from a distance, he looked immaculate, charismatic, entirely in control.
But he wasn't greeting an investor.
The helicopter doors opened, and a woman stepped out. She was petite, with flowing auburn hair and a delicate, almost fragile posture.
Nora’s breath hitched. Her failing heart gave a painful, erratic thud against her ribs.
"Nora? What's happening?" Chloe asked.
Julian reached out, wrapping his arms around the woman, pulling her against his chest as if she were a lifeline. The woman looked up, laughing, and Julian brushed a stray auburn curl behind her ear before kissing her deeply.
"Chloe," Nora whispered, her blood running ice-cold. "It's Vivienne."
"Vivienne?" Chloe yelled through the speakers. "Vivienne Vance? Nora, Vivienne has been dead for five years! She died in a boating accident!"
"She's not dead," Nora breathed, her hands gripping the steering wheel until her knuckles turned white. "She's standing right in front of me. And my husband is kissing her."
Nora didn't confront them. The stoic, fiercely independent survival instinct that had carried her through a loveless childhood kicked in. She put the car in reverse, silently pulling away from the helipad, leaving her husband and his resurrected first love behind.
"I'm going to the penthouse," Nora told Chloe, her voice devoid of all emotion. "I need to look in his vault."
"The heritage vault? The one he keeps locked?" Chloe asked, her panic shifting into protective rage. "Nora, what are you thinking?"
"I don't know yet. But he lied about Geneva. He lied about Vivienne. I need to know what else he's lying about."
By the time Nora reached their sprawling, multi-million-dollar penthouse, her chest was aching. She ignored the pain, walking straight past the sweeping floor-to-ceiling windows and the immaculate white furniture she had never been allowed to choose. She marched down the hallway to the heavy oak door at the end.
Julian's private archive. He claimed it held the original, fragile sketches of his grandfather's jewelry designs, and Nora was strictly forbidden from entering.
There was a digital keypad.
"I'm at the door," Nora said, her phone pressed between her shoulder and ear.
"He'll know if you guess the passcode wrong too many times," Chloe warned. "It sends an alert."
"I only need one guess," Nora said. She typed in Vivienne's birthday. *08-14-1996.*
The light flashed green. The heavy lock clicked open.
Nora pushed the door inward, reaching for the light switch. As the fluorescent bulbs flickered on, her phone slipped from her shoulder, clattering to the hardwood floor.
"Nora? Are you in?" Chloe's voice called out from the floor.
Nora couldn't speak. She couldn't breathe.
It wasn't a heritage archive. The room was a shrine. But worse than a shrine—it was a blueprint room.
Pinned to the corkboards covering the walls were hundreds of photographs of Vivienne. Vivienne in a white silk dress. Vivienne wearing her hair in a specific, loose wave. Vivienne wearing a signature shade of pale pink lipstick.
But right next to every photo of Vivienne was a corresponding photograph of Nora.
Nora stepped forward, her hands trembling as she touched a post-it note attached to a candid photo of herself from three years ago, right after she and Julian had met.
*Hair is too dark. Dye to shade 4G to match V.,* Julian’s familiar, elegant handwriting read.
She moved to the next board. It was a collection of dietary plans and workout regimens.
*Restrict carbs. Nora needs to maintain a 24-inch waist. V. was a size zero.*
"Nora, talk to me!" Chloe yelled from the phone.
Nora dropped to her knees, picking up the device. "Chloe," she choked out, a rare, broken sob escaping her throat. "He didn't marry me. He manufactured me."
"What are you talking about?"
"The vault… it's full of instructions. Sketches. Receipts. Every dress he ever bought me, every time he told me to cut my hair, every time he demanded I wear pearls instead of diamonds… it was to make me look like her. He spent our entire marriage turning me into Vivienne’s ghost."
"Oh my god," Chloe whispered, horrified. "Nora, get out of there. Pack a bag and leave."
"I can't just leave," Nora said, her stoicism violently snapping back into place, freezing her tears before they could fall. "I built Croft House for him. Every successful jewelry line for the last three years was my design, uncredited. I gave him my genius. I gave him my face. I gave him my health."
She stood up, looking around the room of horrors. The meticulous, controlling psychological manipulation was staggering. Julian had molded her like clay, using her to fill the void of his 'dead' muse, all while secretly knowing Vivienne was alive.
"I'm not leaving with nothing," Nora said, her voice dropping to a chilling, deadened whisper. "I'm going to take it all back."
Just as the words left her mouth, her phone buzzed with an urgent notification.
*Dr. Aris - Patient Portal Message.*
Nora opened it, her eyes scanning the brief text.
*Ms. Sterling, the rest of your bloodwork just came back from the lab. We need to discuss your pregnancy immediately. You are eight weeks along. Please call my emergency line.*
Nora stared at the screen, the glowing letters burning into her retinas. A failing heart. A fake marriage. And now, a child growing inside her.
She looked up at the wall of Vivienne's faces, her hand slowly coming to rest on her flat stomach.