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DOUBLE HEIR : A LOVE IN DISGUISE

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Summary

Elena Sinclair was sixteen when her billionaire father was murdered by his own brothers, who then tried to kill her to claim his empire. Smuggled to safety and declared dead in a staged accident, she vanished into a new life as a struggling bartender—until one reckless, drunken night, on the evening she had turned 20, erased everything she’d fought to forget. She woke in the bed of Alexander Grey, the ruthless CEO of Grey enterprise and the city’s most powerful man. Panicked, she fled before he could see her face, leaving only a single trace of her innocence behind. Five years later, Elena is raising their secret twins alone when fate forces her back into Alexander's world. Hired as his personal assistant, she must hide her identity, her children, and the truth of that unforgettable night. But Alex is no longer the stranger she escaped; he’s obsessed with the mysterious woman who vanished from his bed, and the closer he gets, the more the pieces of her past begin to unravel. As old enemies resurface to finish what they started, Elena's carefully guarded life explodes. With billion-dollar empires and two innocent heirs caught in the crossfire, she must decide whether to keep running—or trust the one man who could destroy her… or finally set her free.

EmotionRomancelove-triangleFemale leadBillionaireIndependentcontract marriageheirFamily AffairEnemies To Lovers

CHAPTER 1 - A NIGHT TO FORGET

ELENA'S POV

I stumbled out of the bar, the dimly lit hallway spinning around me like a broken carousel that refused to slow down. The music from the party still echoed in my ears, a wild cacophony of cheers, laughter, and the thump of bass that seemed to reverberate through every cell of my body.

My coworkers had thrown me a birthday party right there in the hotel bar where I worked five nights a week, slinging drinks and smiling through the chaos for tips that barely covered my rent.

Twenty-two years old today, and what a way to mark it—cheap champagne flowing like water, shots of tequila that burned all the way down, and a cake with my name misspelled in wobbly icing that everyone thought was hilarious.

The night had started innocently enough. Sarah from housekeeping had hugged me too tight, whispering that I deserved better than this dead-end job. Jake, the bartender with the perpetual five-o’clock shadow, had kept my glass full, winking every time he slid another flute across the sticky counter.

“To Elena, the girl who keeps this place from falling apart!” he’d toasted, and the whole crew—cooks, front desk staff, even the maintenance guy who smelled like cigarette smoke and motor oil—had raised their glasses.

I’d laughed along, feeling the warmth spread through my chest, but underneath it all was that familiar ache. Another year gone, still stuck in this mid-tier hotel in a city that felt too small for my dreams of something bigger. I’d had one too many drinks. Actually, if I was honest with the spinning room, it was more like four too many.

The champagne had gone straight to my head, leaving me feeling giddy and carefree in a way I hadn’t in months—maybe years. No responsibilities tonight. No early shift tomorrow. Just the buzz and the blur.

As I made my way toward the stairs, clutching the railing for support, Mike, my boss, caught my eye from behind the counter. He was a gruff, no-nonsense kind of guy in his late fifties, with a belly that strained against his black polo shirt and a voice like gravel after too many late nights. But he had a soft spot for me, ever since I’d covered his shift last Christmas when his wife was in the hospital.

“Elena, one last thing,” he called out, his voice carrying over the dying din of the bar like a command I couldn’t ignore.

I groaned inwardly, the sound lost in the throb of my temples, but I nodded anyway. I was supposed to be off the clock an hour ago, my apron already untied and stuffed in my bag, but refusing him felt impossible.

He slid a tray across the counter: a single glass of whiskey and soda, the ice cubes clinking softly, condensation already beading on the outside like tiny diamonds in the low light. “Room 314 needs a drink. VIP guest. Can you drop it off before you head out? I’d do it myself, but the register’s backed up.”

His eyes were kind, almost apologetic, but there was no real choice. I grabbed the tray, the weight of it surprisingly heavy in my unsteady hands, and muttered, “Yeah, sure, Mike. Happy birthday to me, right?” He chuckled, clapping me on the shoulder a little too hard. “You’re a lifesaver, kid. Get some rest after.”

The ride up in the elevator was a blur, the numbers on the display blurring together as I swayed gently to the faint music still playing in my head—a remix of some pop song from the party that refused to let go. I stared at my reflection in the mirrored walls: hair tousled from dancing, cheeks flushed a deep pink, mascara slightly smudged under one eye. I looked like a mess, but a living mess.

The elevator dinged on the third floor, and I stepped out into the quiet hallway, the soft carpet muffling my footsteps like a secret I was trying to keep from the world. My heels clicked faintly despite the carpet, each step sending a little jolt through my already unsteady balance. I focused on not spilling the drink, the tray wobbling just enough to make me curse under my breath.

I knocked on the door of room 314, waited a beat, and let myself in with the master key card Mike had pressed into my palm. The room was dark, except for the faint glow of the TV casting a bluish hue across the king-sized bed and the heavy drapes. The air smelled faintly of expensive cologne—woody and warm, like sandalwood and something sharper—and a hint of the whiskey the guest had probably been drinking earlier.

A guy lay sprawled on the bed, his chest rising and falling with a gentle snore that was almost rhythmic, peaceful. I could barely see his face, but he looked maybe a few years older than me, early thirties at a guess, with whiskey-brown hair tousled against the white pillow and chiseled features that looked like they belonged on a magazine cover rather than in a hotel room after midnight.

I set the tray on the bedside table, careful not to spill the whiskey and soda, the glass making a soft clink against the wood. My fingers brushed the edge of the table, and I turned to leave, my mind already drifting to the cab ride home and the cold bed waiting for me.

But as I pivoted, he sat up suddenly, his eyes hazy and unfocused from whatever sleep or drink had claimed him. Before I could step back, his hand shot out and grabbed my wrist, firm but not rough, pulling me down beside him onto the edge of the mattress. I felt a jolt of electricity run through my body, sharp and unexpected, like a live wire touching skin. His grip was warm, calloused at the edges, the kind of hand that had known work or maybe just a firm handshake in boardrooms.

For a moment, I hesitated, my heart hammering against my ribs. This was a bad idea. I didn’t do this kind of thing, never had. I was the responsible one, the girl who went home after shifts, scrolled through job listings for something better, and avoided entanglements that could complicate my already messy life.

His lips found mine, and the room spun faster than the hallway ever had. It wasn’t gentle; it was urgent, needy, like we’d both been waiting for this collision without knowing it. His mouth was warm, tasting faintly of the whiskey he must have had earlier, and his hands moved to my waist, pulling me fully onto the bed with him.

I gasped against him, my fingers tangling in that brown hair, softer than it looked. Clothes scattered across the floor in a frantic trail, my black work blouse unbuttoned with trembling hands, his shirt shoved off his shoulders to reveal the hard planes of his chest, the faint ridges of abs that tensed under my touch.

My skirt hiked up around my thighs as he rolled me beneath him, his weight a perfect, grounding pressure that made me arch into him.

We stumbled into the night together, bodies moving with a raw, desperate rhythm that matched the pounding in my veins. It was messy and real and exactly what I needed after months of pretending everything was fine. His hands explored every inch of me—tracing the curve of my hip, cupping my breast, sliding down to grip my thigh and pull me closer.

I felt every touch like fire on my skin, igniting nerves I’d forgotten existed. He kissed down my neck, nipping gently at the pulse point that made me moan, then lower, his tongue teasing until I was breathless and begging without words.

When he finally entered me, slow at first then deeper, harder, the world narrowed down to the two of us. I couldn’t think, couldn’t breathe. All I could do was feel—the stretch, the fullness, the way our bodies fit like they’d been made for this exact moment. We moved in sync, tangled in the sheets that twisted around us like silk restraints, the TV’s blue glow flickering across our sweat-slicked skin.

I wrapped my legs around his waist, nails digging into his back as pleasure built in waves, cresting higher with each thrust. He whispered something low and rough against my ear, but it sent me over the edge, shattering into a release that left me trembling, crying out in a voice I barely recognized as my own.

And when it was finally over, I lay there, spent and sated, listening to his heartbeat slow down beneath my cheek, strong and steady like an anchor in the storm.

He wrapped his arms around me, pulling me close against his chest, his chin resting on the top of my head. I felt a sense of peace wash over me, warm and unfamiliar, like sinking into a bath after a long day. For the first time in a long time, I felt like I was exactly where I was meant to be—no regrets, no what-ifs, just the solid warmth of him and the quiet hum of the air conditioner. The city outside faded away; the party downstairs, the job, the future I was always chasing—all of it dissolved into this single, perfect, drunken night.

The hours ticked by slowly, and I drifted in and out of sleep, lost in a haze of exhaustion and bliss that wrapped around me like the sheets still tangled at our feet.

When I woke, I sat on the bed for a moment, trying to gather my thoughts. My head throbbed faintly with the remnants of last night’s champagne. The room was quiet, the only sound was the gentle hum of the air conditioner and the distant murmur of morning traffic far below. Sunlight filtered stronger now, turning the blue TV glow into soft daylight that highlighted the scattered clothes on the floor.

“What the fuck!” I exclaimed in a low tone, low enough that I didn't wake him.

And then I looked down, and saw his face and I didn’t believe who laid next to me…