
Victor Sterling drank too much last night. In his drunken stupor, he slipped his family’s vintage heirloom bracelet onto my wrist. His eyes were rimmed red as he held me in a suffocating grip, murmuring her name over and over: "Serena, please don't go..." I let him hold me. I even patted his back gently, coaxing him to sleep. The next morning, when Victor woke up and sobered, he stared at the bracelet on my wrist with visible annoyance. His voice was ice-cold. "Take it off. That doesn't belong to you." I obediently slipped it off and carefully placed it on the nightstand. "Don't worry, Mr. Sterling. I know my place." Of course I knew my place. After all, if I just endured this for one more month, my contract would expire. That five-million-dollar payout at the end of the term was exactly what I needed to save my fiancé, who was currently lying in an ICU bed. Victor was the kind of man whose deep-seated, aristocratic superiority bled through even when he was annoyed. He sat on the edge of the bed, massaging his temples. He didn't even spare me a glance, his eyes locked solely on the bracelet I had just taken off. That bracelet was a ten-million-dollar antique, the engagement gift he had prepared for his first love, Serena. "Forget everything that happened last night." His voice was hoarse, carrying an undeniable tone of command. I was half-kneeling on the rug, picking up his discarded suit jacket. Hearing this, I looked up and flashed the gentle, graceful smile I had practiced in the mirror a thousand times. "Don't worry, Mr. Sterling. You went straight to sleep the moment you got back. Nothing happened, and you didn't say a word." This was exactly why he was so satisfied with me. I was sensible, obedient. I didn't listen to things I shouldn't hear, and I didn't remember things I shouldn't remember. Victor's expression softened slightly. He stood up and walked into the master bathroom. I let out a sigh of relief. I quickly stood up, placed the burning-hot, ten-million-dollar bracelet into its velvet box, and set it dead center on the nightstand where he would see it the second he walked out. Once that was done, I went downstairs to the kitchen to prep a hangover remedy. Just as I set the glass on the dining table, Victor's executive assistant arrived with fresh clothes—and a piece of news. "Mr. Sterling, Ms. Serena's flight back to New York is booked. She lands on the 5th of next month." Victor, who was in the middle of buttoning his cuffs, froze. The usual cold, hard lines of his face instantly melted, replaced by a fleeting, barely detectable panic. "The 5th... That's less than a month away." He muttered to himself, then turned to look at me. His gaze suddenly became complex and critical. I knew exactly what he was thinking. The real deal was coming back. It was time for the cheap knockoff to exit the stage. For the past five years, I had followed his instructions to the letter. I wore the plain, pastel dresses Serena liked. I kept my hair long, straight, and black just like hers. I even practiced curving my lips to match the exact angle of her smile. You could say I was Serena's most flawless shadow. But shadows can never survive in the light. "Harper," Victor began, his tone dripping with a charitable, condescending chill. "Move out to the condo in Jersey this month. Don't hover around me unless absolutely necessary." "Yes, Mr. Sterling." I agreed without a second of hesitation. My response was so fast and painless that it actually made him frown. "Also. When the contract ends, I never want to see your face in New York again." "Understood. I will disappear without a trace. I absolutely won't cause any trouble for you or Ms. Serena." I pushed the hangover drink toward him, thoughtfully checking the temperature against the glass. "It's the perfect temperature. Drink this before you head to the office; it'll settle your stomach." Victor stared at my submissive demeanor, looking almost uncomfortable. In his mind, I was supposed to cry. I was supposed to throw a fit, demand answers, and beg him not to throw me away. But I didn't. Not only did I not cry, but I was practically doing mental cartwheels. The 5th of next month. That was the exact day my five-year contract with Victor expired. Once that five-million-dollar final payment hit my bank account, I’d never have to wait on this moody, arrogant billionaire ever again. Victor drank the remedy. Before walking out the door, he tossed a sleek credit card onto the table. "Go buy yourself some decent clothes over the next few days. I'm taking you to a party this weekend. It'll be your last one." He paused, his eyes sweeping over me with a hint of mockery. "Don't embarrass me, and wipe that pathetic, subservient look off your face. Serena never acted like a servant." I picked up the card with both hands, my eyes curving into a bright smile. "Thank you, Mr. Sterling. I'll do my best to learn." As long as the money cleared, forget acting like Serena—I’d put on a Batman suit and fight crime if he paid me enough. The "party" Victor mentioned was a gathering of his elite, trust-fund buddies. The venue was The Apex, Manhattan's most exclusive, money-burning VIP lounge. When I pushed open the private room doors, arm-in-arm with Victor and wearing my brand-new designer white gown, the room went dead silent for a split second. Then, the raucous cheering erupted. "Whoa, Vic brought the missus?" "What missus? That's Harper. Our little Harper." "Gotta admit, dressed up like that, she’s a dead ringer for Serena. A solid nine out of ten. No wonder Vic couldn't control himself and kept her around for five years." The one running his mouth was Carter, Victor's childhood best friend, and the guy who despised me the most. In his eyes, I was a gold digger who sold her dignity for a paycheck. I was just a toy to fill the gap while Victor waited for his true love. Victor didn't defend me. He just led me to the center booth. I expertly picked up a bottle of vintage liquor and began pouring drinks for the wealthy heirs around the table, keeping my posture as low and submissive as possible. "So, Harper, word on the street is Serena is coming back. What are your plans?" Carter swirled his glass of bourbon, staring at me like he was watching a circus act. All eyes in the VIP room zeroed in on me. These guys lived for this kind of drama—the pathetic stand-in getting forced out by the true love, weeping and begging for scraps. My hand was perfectly steady. The amber liquid flowed into the glass without a single drop spilling. "That is entirely up to Mr. Sterling. I will follow his arrangements." Carter let out a sharp scoff. "Stop pretending. You're probably cursing us all out in your head, aren't you? Five years with Vic, enjoying all this wealth and luxury... you really willing to just walk away?" He suddenly reached out, twirling a lock of my hair around his finger, his tone sleazy. "How about this? When Vic tosses you out, come be with me. I might not be as loaded as him, but I can easily throw you a hundred grand a month for pocket money." The room erupted in mocking laughter. Victor leaned back against the leather sofa, a cigarette pinched between his fingers. His face was obscured by the smoke, but he made no move to stop Carter. He was enjoying this. He loved the intoxicating feeling of having someone entirely dependent on him, entirely under his control. I sneered internally, but on the outside, I put on a look of sheer panic. I instinctively shrank back, pressing myself closer to Victor's side. "Please don't joke like that, Carter." Victor seemed immensely pleased by my display of dependency. Finally showing some mercy, he swatted Carter's hand away. "Alright, knock it off. Don't scare her." He tapped his cigarette ash into the tray, his voice flat. "She's been with me for five years, and she's done her job well. We'll part on good terms. Let's not make it ugly." Carter shrugged. "Whatever you say, man. You're always too soft on your old flings. But hey, Harper, a little self-awareness goes a long way. Take your payout and disappear. Don't get any delusional ideas about clinging to him." I nodded obediently. "I understand perfectly." Halfway through the night, Victor stepped out to take a phone call. I didn't even have to guess. It was definitely about Serena. The moment he left, the vibe in the room shifted. Carter ordered me around, making me peel grapes for him, and even purposely ashed his cigar onto the hem of my pristine white dress. I didn't say a word. I just sat there and took it. It wasn't that I didn't have a backbone. It was that Victor bought this dress with his card. If it got ruined, I didn't have to pay for it. More importantly, every single ounce of humiliation I swallowed right now was fueling my sprint toward that five-million-dollar finish line. Just then, my phone buzzed in my clutch. It was a text from the hospital. [Ms. Harper, Ethan's condition has become highly unstable. His vitals are dropping. We need to prepare the funds for his second surgery immediately, along with the imported anti-rejection medications. The current deficit is roughly $500,000.] Five hundred thousand dollars. And that was just the current gap. Combine that with the medical debt I already owed, plus the astronomical rehabilitation costs required to guarantee he woke up safely... That five million dollars—I couldn't afford to lose a single cent. I stared at my phone screen, my fingers tightening their grip. "What are you looking at? Vic's not even here, and you're not even trying to entertain us?" Carter kicked me lightly in the calf, looking annoyed. I put my phone away and looked up at Carter. For a split second, I didn't manage to mask the icy hostility in my eyes. Carter froze. "What the hell is that look for?" But in the blink of an eye, I morphed back into the timid, submissive girl. "It's nothing. I was just wondering when Mr. Sterling would be back." Right on cue, the heavy doors pushed open. Victor strode in. His face was dark, carrying an aura of aggressive irritation. "We're leaving." He grabbed me by the arm and yanked me up. His grip was so harsh it made my wrist ache. "Mr. Sterling, what's wrong?" The moment we got into his sports car, Victor slammed the gas pedal to the floor. The car shot down the Manhattan streets like a bullet. "Serena's flight got moved up. She lands tomorrow." He gritted his teeth, his voice tight. "You are moving out tonight." When Victor was in a rush, he had zero patience for anything. He sped all the way back to his Upper East Side penthouse. He didn't even step inside. He just sat in the driver's seat, glaring at me coldly. "Go upstairs and pack your things. You are only allowed to take what belongs to you. Do not touch a single thing I bought for you." "You have one hour." This kind of heartless, unreasonable demand would have shattered the heart of any woman who had spent five years with him. But to me? It felt like total liberation. "Understood, Mr. Sterling. I'll be quick." I stepped out of the car, my footsteps so light I had to physically restrain myself from skipping to the elevator. This penthouse was luxurious, but to me, it was nothing but a suffocating prison. Every corner of this place was meticulously designed to echo Serena's preferences, and I was just the live-in maid hired to maintain her ghost. I walked into the bedroom and pulled out a battered, cheap suitcase I had brought with me five years ago. I opened the massive walk-in closet. It was stuffed with designer clothes, diamond jewelry, and luxury handbags that Victor had bought me. I didn't touch a single one of them. I only packed the cheap, faded clothes I had arrived in, a frayed toiletry bag, and from a hidden compartment in the nightstand, a slightly yellowed photograph. In the photo, Ethan was wearing a crisp white button-down. His smile was as warm as a spring breeze, and he was holding two ice cream cones. We had taken it during our college days. Back then, the horrific car crash hadn't happened yet, and I hadn't sold my soul to Victor Sterling to pay for his life support. Looking at the photo, the intense nausea that Victor and Carter had stirred up in my stomach finally began to dissipate. "Just a little longer, Ethan. It's almost over." I whispered softly, carefully tucking the photo into my worn-out wallet. It took me less than thirty minutes to pack. When I got downstairs, Victor was standing in the living room, smoking a cigarette. Several crushed butts were already scattered by his feet. When he saw the pathetic, battered suitcase in my hand, he froze, his brows knitting tightly together. "That's it?" "Yes. Everything else was purchased by you. It wouldn't be appropriate for me to take it." I stood in the entryway and placed the penthouse keys on the console table. My attitude was so flawlessly respectful and professional that he couldn't pick out a single flaw. Victor seemed inexplicably irritated. My clean, unhesitating departure gave him the frustrating sensation of punching a pillow. "There's a hundred thousand dollars on this card. Consider it severance." He tossed another black credit card onto the table. I didn't reach for it. "That won't be necessary, Mr. Sterling. The contract clearly states I only receive the final tail-end payment upon completion. This hundred thousand isn't covered by our agreement. I can't accept it." I don't take risks with small change. I was here for the five million dollars written in black and white on my contract. What if I took this hundred grand, and he used it as an excuse to claim I breached the contract and withheld my final five million? When it came to making money, I was as meticulous as a Wall Street auditor. Victor's face darkened. "I gave it to you, so take it! Stop talking back!" "I really don't need it, Mr. Sterling. I'm not desperate for money." I lied smoothly, pushing the card back toward him. Victor let out a cold, angry laugh. "Not desperate for money? If you weren't desperate for money, would you have sold yourself as a stand-in for five years? Harper, don't act like a saint when you're anything but." I kept my head down, refusing to argue. "Fine. If you want to play the noble martyr, then get the hell out." He pointed at the front door. I felt like I had just received a gubernatorial pardon. I grabbed my suitcase handle and marched toward the exit. Just as I stepped out the door, Victor's dark, brooding voice echoed from behind me. "Harper. Once you walk out that door, there's no turning back. Don't think I'll come crawling after you to coax you back like before." Coax me? When had he ever coaxed me? Oh, right. I remembered. When I first moved in, I was so overwhelmed by his volatile, toxic mood swings that I used to cry secretly in the bathroom. He found my crying annoying. He tossed a designer handbag at me and snapped, "Stop crying. It's giving me a headache." That wasn't coaxing. That was paying for peace and quiet. I stopped walking, but I didn't turn around. I just straightened my spine. "Don't worry, Mr. Sterling. I will absolutely never look back." I dragged my suitcase out of the luxury high-rise, but I didn't head to the condo in Jersey. Instead, I hailed a cab and went straight to the downtown hospital. Outside the ICU in the dead of night, it was so quiet I could only hear the rhythmic beeping of the heart monitors. I pressed my hands against the glass window, staring greedily at the man lying inside. Five years. Ethan had lost so much weight. His face was deathly pale, and his body was hooked up to countless tubes and machines. But he was still alive. As long as he was alive, there was hope. The Head Nurse walked by, saw me, and let out a soft sigh as she approached. "Ms. Harper, you're here this late?" "Yeah. Just wanted to see him." "Mr. Ethan's condition has been deteriorating over the last two days. The doctors said if we don't perform the second surgery immediately, I'm afraid..." "I know." I turned around and looked at the nurse. My eyes had never been more resolute. "I have the money ready. Next month, on the 5th. We operate exactly on schedule." Life after leaving Victor was incredibly fulfilling. I rented a cheap motel room. Every day, besides visiting Ethan at the hospital, I stared at the calendar, counting down the hours. Just three days left until the contract expired. As long as I survived these three days, and Victor wired the money as agreed, I would be completely, totally free. However, life never goes exactly as planned. On the night before the deadline, I got a call from Victor. "Where are you?" His voice sounded slightly drunk. The background noise was chaotic, like he was at a club. "Mr. Sterling, I've already moved out," I reminded him calmly. "I asked where the hell you are!" he roared. "Serena wants to see you." My heart plummeted. Serena wanted to see me? The original first love wanting to meet the cheap stand-in? What good could possibly come of that? "Mr. Sterling, this violates our agreement..." "Shut up! Get your ass to The Apex in thirty minutes, or you can kiss your final payout goodbye!" The line went dead. I gripped my phone, my knuckles turning white. He was using my five million dollars to threaten me. That money was Ethan's life. I took a deep breath, changed into the pale blue dress that Serena supposedly loved most, and took a cab to The Apex. The moment I pushed the VIP room doors open, my eyes landed on the woman sitting next to Victor. She was stunning. She possessed a natural, effortless elegance and confidence that I could never replicate, even after five years of trying. However, she was wearing a fiery, bold red dress. It was completely different from the plain, demure, "pure" aesthetic I had been forced to adopt. It seemed Victor had only forced me into pale colors because that was how he remembered her from their youth. The real Serena had long since outgrown that phase. "So you're Harper?" Serena looked me up and down, her eyes carrying three parts curiosity and seven parts absolute disdain. "You do look a little bit like the old me." I stood by the door, neither haughty nor humble. "Good evening, Ms. Serena." Victor held a glass of whiskey, his gaze shifting back and forth between me and Serena, clearly anticipating a good show. "Vic, I heard she's been with you for five years?" Serena looped her arm through Victor's, laughing flirtatiously. "How much did you spend to keep such an obedient little pet?" Victor glanced at me dismissively. "Not much. She was just a plaything to pass the time." Plaything. The word pierced my ears like a needle. But my face maintained a perfect, polite smile, not showing a single trace of humiliation. "I heard you're willing to do absolutely anything for money?" Serena suddenly stood up and walked over to me, holding a glass of red wine. "So, if I told you to get on your knees, apologize to me, and admit you're just a shameless, pathetic knockoff... would you do it?" The VIP room went dead silent. Everyone was staring at me, waiting to see what I would do. Victor frowned. He seemed to think Serena was crossing a line, but he didn't say a word to stop her. He was waiting. He was waiting for me to beg him for help. I looked at Victor, then down at the glass of red wine teetering dangerously in Serena's hand. For five million dollars. For Ethan's life. What was my dignity worth? What were my knees worth? I slowly bent my legs, letting my knees sink toward the carpet, inch by inch. Victor's pupils contracted violently. He abruptly stood up, looking like he wanted to yell something. Thud. My knees hit the floor with a muffled sound. "I am so sorry, Ms. Serena." I looked up, meeting Serena's eyes directly. My tone was as calm as if I were discussing the weather. "I am just a cheap knockoff. I shouldn't have tried to imitate you and cause you discomfort." Serena froze. She clearly hadn't expected me to kneel so effortlessly, without a single shred of psychological resistance. The twisted thrill of humiliating me hadn't even peaked before it was completely suffocated by my robotic, business-like attitude. "You..." Serena was furious. She raised her hand, ready to splash the entire glass of red wine directly into my face. "Enough!" Victor suddenly lunged forward and grabbed Serena's wrist. The wine sloshed out of the glass, splashing onto the floor and staining the hem of my dress. "Vic?" Serena looked at him in total disbelief. Victor's face was livid. He stared down at me, his chest heaving with explosive breaths. "Harper, you..." He looked like he wanted to scream at me, but he didn't even know what to say. Yell at me for having no spine? Yell at me for having no self-respect? "Mr. Sterling, do you have any other instructions?" I remained kneeling, looking up at him. "If not, may I leave now?" "Get out! Get the hell out of here!" Victor roared, violently hurling his whiskey glass against the wall, shattering it into a hundred pieces. I stood up smoothly, brushed the dust off my knees, and gave him and Serena a slight, respectful bow. "I wish Mr. Sterling and Ms. Serena a lifetime of happiness." With that, I turned on my heel and walked out, without a single ounce of hesitation.
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