I Slept with my My Fiance's Best friend when He Slept with my Sister
When my fianc, Evans, cheated on me with my sister, Colleen, I didnt cry or beg him to stay. Instead, I turned around and slept with his two best friends.
When he found out, he didn't apologize for his own betrayal. He accused me of being clinically insane and had me locked away in a psychiatric hospital.
It took me a long time to realize he hadn't committed me for my health. He did it so he could spend the last two years playing house with Colleen without me getting in the way.
Now, two years later, he had suddenly remembered to fetch me, acting as if nothing had ever happened.
A nurse handed me my small bag of belongings at the front desk. She eyed me up and down, her expression a mix of pity and disgust.
"Are you sure you're gonna come back to him?" she asked, lowering her voice. "He's the reason you went crazy in the first place. Are you really doing it all for his money? You actually are insane."
I didn't answer her. Two years ago, I would have desperately tried to defend myself, to explain the suffocating injustice of it all. Today, I just took my bag and walked out the sliding glass doors.
Evans was waiting by his car. When he saw me, he pushed himself off the hood and held out a massive bouquet of pink peonies.
Colleen's favorite flowers. Not mine.
I didn't even break my stride. I dismissed the bouquet entirely, walking right past him toward the passenger side door.
"Hey!" Evans snapped. He dropped the flowers, grabbing my arm and pulling me back around to face him. "What is wrong with you?"
I looked down at his hand gripping my arm, feeling absolutely nothing. "What else?" I asked, my voice flat. "Why are you here?"
Evans scoffed, his face twisting with arrogant disbelief. "Come on, Louisa. Are you still mad because I slept with your sister? You slept with my friends and completely ruined our friendship! If anything, you owe me."
"You locked me in a psychiatric ward for two years, Evans," I said, my tone eerily steady. I didn't yell. I didn't try to pull my arm away. "You put me in a facility with barred windows so you could sleep with Colleen without sneaking around."
"You were hysterical!" he shot back, his grip tightening. "You smashed my office windows. You seduced Marcus and Julian just to spite me! Do you know how humiliating it was to have my own groomsmen look at me like that? I had to cut them out of my life because of you. You were out of control, Louisa. You needed help, and I paid a fortune to get it for you."
"You got me out of the way," I corrected simply.
"Besides, where would you even go? You have nothing. You have no work, no money. Your own mother doesn't even want you."
He wasn't lying. My mother had always favored Colleen, her wealthy new husband's daughter, over me. When Evans committed me, my mother hadn't visited a single time. She had just sent a text saying I was an embarrassment to the family.
Over the years, Evans had systematically stripped away my career, my independence, and my support system until he was the only thing left in my world.
Once upon a time, those words would have shattered me. They would have sent me spiraling into a panic attack, begging him not to leave me. Now, they just sounded exhausting.
I let out a quiet sigh. "What do you want, Evans?"
"I want to take you home," he said, his voice dropping to that soft, persuasive register he used in boardrooms. "We have a wedding to plan. The invitations need to go out next month."
"We should cancel it," I said calmly. "I don't want to get married."
"That's not gonna happen, babe. Stop being mad. We're getting married, and everything is going back to normal."
I didn't argue. There was no point in fighting a man who only heard his own voice. I just got in the car.
The drive back to the villa was silent. When we finally walked through the front doors, the house looked exactly the same as the day the orderlies had dragged me out of it.
"I'll have the chef make your favorite for dinner," Evans called out, already loosening his tie and heading toward his study to take a phone call.
I ignored him and dragged my bag up the sweeping staircase, heading straight for my bedroom. All I wanted was to lie down, stare at the ceiling, and finalize my plans to leave this city for good.
But the moment I pushed open my bedroom door, I froze.
It wasn't the furniture or the lighting. It was the smell.
A thick, suffocating wave of sweet vanilla and rose hit my face. It was Colleens custom perfume.
My eyes slowly scanned the space. The silk bedsheets were a different color. My favorite books had been replaced by glossy fashion magazines stacked carelessly on the nightstand.
And then, my gaze landed on the center of my vanity.
There, sitting right next to my framed photo of my late father, resting casually on the polished wood as if it belonged there, was a positive pregnancy test.
I stared at the small white plastic stick resting on the polished wood of my vanity. Two stark, undeniable pink lines glared back at me.
I didn't need to ask whose it was. I had been locked in a sterile psychiatric ward for the last twenty-four months, fed pills that made my tongue heavy and my mind blank. I certainly hadn't been the one taking pregnancy tests.
It was Colleens.
She had left it there on purpose. Placing it right next to the framed photograph of my late father wasn't an accident; it was a calculated, vicious strike. It was her way of marking her territory, of looking me in the eye without even being in the room and saying, This is my house now.
I thought the hospital had burned away every ounce of feeling I had left for Evans. I thought I was completely hollowed out.
But staring at that test, a sudden, sharp ache pierced through my chest, stealing the breath from my lungs.
Before the betrayal, before the hospital, Evans and I had spent a year trying for a baby. I had tracked my temperature, taken vitamins, and cried over countless single pink lines. Evans had held me while I wept, kissing my forehead and promising me that our time would come.
Now, I realized he had given that time to my sister. They had created a life in my bed while I was locked behind barred windows, surrounded by strangers in white coats.
"Louisa, what's taking so long?"
Evanss voice broke through my thoughts. I didn't turn around as his heavy footsteps crossed the threshold of the bedroom.
"The chef is making lobster risotto, and you know how he gets when it sits too"
He stopped abruptly. I could feel his presence just over my shoulder. The silence in the room stretched, thick and suffocating, underneath the heavy stench of Colleen's vanilla and rose perfume.
Slowly, Evans reached past me and snatched the plastic stick off the vanity.
I finally turned to look at him. I expected to see guilt. I expected him to pale, to stammer, to try and invent some ridiculous lie to cover his tracks.
Instead, he just looked profoundly annoyed.
He let out a harsh, irritated breath and tossed the pregnancy test into the small woven trash can by my desk.
"She wasn't supposed to leave that there," he muttered, running a hand through his perfectly styled hair. "I told the maids to clear out all her junk yesterday. They must have missed it."
"Her junk," I repeated, my voice barely a whisper. The sheer audacity of his casual tone made my head spin. "You got my sister pregnant."
Evans frowned, stepping closer to me. He reached out, grabbing my shoulders with a firm, commanding grip. "Listen to me, Louisa. It was an accident. She got careless with her pills. But it doesn't matter, okay? I already handled it."
"Handled it?" I asked, staring blankly at his handsome, ruthless face.
"I gave her a check," he said, as if this were a simple business transaction. "A very large one. I told her to get rid of it and move back to her mother's house. I told you in the car, I cut things off with her completely. I'm marrying you."
He said it with such conviction, as if choosing me over the mother of his unborn child was some grand, romantic gesture I should be grateful for. He truly believed his money could erase a human life and buy my submission all at once.
A wave of nausea washed over me. I stepped back, forcing his hands off my shoulders.
"You're a monster," I whispered.
Evanss jaw clenched. The charming fianc mask slipped, revealing the cold, controlling man beneath. "Don't start this again, Louisa," he warned, his voice dropping to a dangerous octave. "I am fixing things. I am putting our lives back on track. Do not ruin this by acting crazy again. You know exactly where that gets you."
He was threatening to send me back. To the white walls, the locked doors, the pills that made me forget my own name.
Before I could respond, the sound of the front door opening echoed up the grand staircase.
Evans froze.
"Evans? Honey, are you upstairs?"
The voice was sweet, melodic, and entirely too familiar.
My blood ran cold.
Heavy, deliberate footsteps began to ascend the marble stairs. Evans turned pale, his eyes darting toward the bedroom door. He had told me he kicked her out. He had told me he paid her off.
But as the figure appeared in the doorway of my bedroom, the lie shattered into a million pieces.
Colleen stood there, wearing one of Evanss oversized dress shirts that barely concealed the unmistakable, rounded swell of her five-month pregnant belly. She held a spare key in her hand, dangling it with a smug, triumphant smile.
"Oh, good," Colleen purred, her eyes locking onto mine with malicious delight. "You're both here. Evans, darling, didn't you tell my sister the good news? The doctor says it's a boy."
The silence in the room was so thick it felt hard to breathe.
"Colleen," Evans warned, his voice a low, dangerous growl. "I told you to stay at your mother's house today."
"And miss welcoming my big sister home?" Colleen pouted, stepping fully into the room. She walked past him, trailing her fingers along the edge of my vanity. "Besides, this is my house, too. I picked out the new curtains. I picked out the crib for the nursery down the hall."
She turned to me, her eyes gleaming with a toxic mixture of pity and triumph. "He didn't tell you, did he, Louisa?"
"Colleen, shut up," he snapped, stepping toward her.
But Colleen just laughed, a sharp, grating sound. "Oh, let her know, Ev. She's going to find out anyway." She crossed her arms, resting them on her belly. "Did you really think he locked you up in a psych ward just because you slept with Marcus and Julian?"
I froze.
Colleen tilted her head, a cruel smile spreading across her lips. "You really are naive. Evans didn't care that you slept with his friends. In fact, he paid them to do it."
The room started to spin. "What?" I breathed out, the word barely leaving my lips.
"He needed you to look crazy, Louisa," Colleen said, her voice dripping with mock sympathy. "Your father left you fifty-one percent of the company when he died. Evans couldn't touch it as long as you were sane. So, we set you up. I slept with him where I knew you'd catch us. He paid his buddies to sleep with you when you were vulnerable and grieving. And when you finally snapped? He had the perfect excuse to have you declared mentally incompetent."
I stared at her, the words echoing in my ears like a physical blow.
I looked at Evans, desperately searching his face for a denial. But he wasn't looking at me with guilt. He was looking at me with cold, calculating indifference. The mask was completely gone.
"Is it true?" I whispered, my voice cracking.
Evans adjusted his cuffs, his demeanor shifting back to the ruthless CEO he truly was. "It was business, Louisa. Your father's company was failing under your emotional leadership. I saved it. I saved us."
"You destroyed me," I choked out, the first tear in two years finally spilling over my lashes.
"I secured our future," he corrected coldly. "Now, here are the new rules. You will live in this house quietly. You will smile for the press, you will attend the galas, and you will play the role of the recovering, grateful fianc. If you do that, you can live a very comfortable life."
He stepped closer, his shadow falling over me. "But if you try to run, or if you breathe a word of this to anyone, I will call the hospital. I have medical power of attorney. I can have you locked in a padded room for the rest of your natural life, and no one will ever hear from you again. Do we understand each other?"
I didn't scream. I didn't throw anything. The psychiatric ward had taught me one very important lesson: when you are trapped in a cage with a monster, you do not bare your teeth. You play dead.
I looked at Evans, letting my shoulders slump in a portrait of total defeat. I wiped the single tear from my cheek.
"If you already control my shares," I asked, my voice flat and hollow, "why bother marrying me? Why not just keep me locked up in that hospital forever and marry Colleen?"
Colleens smug smile faltered for a fraction of a second, her eyes darting to Evans. Clearly, that was a question she had asked him, too.
Evans straightened his tie, looking entirely too pleased with himself. "Because your father was a paranoid old man. His will stipulates that the final forty percent of his private trustthe liquid assets, the offshore accountsonly transfers to you upon your marriage. If you die, or if you are permanently institutionalized without a spouse, it all gets donated to charity."
He stepped closer, his expensive cologne mixing sickeningly with Colleens perfume. "I need the marriage certificate, Louisa. And the board of directors needs a fairy-tale recovery to keep the stock prices up. So, you are going to put on a white dress, you are going to smile for the cameras, and you are going to say 'I do.' Once the trust clears into my accounts, you can spend the rest of your life quietly in the east wing of this house. Do we understand each other?"
I looked down at the floor, hiding the dangerous spark that was suddenly igniting in my chest.
"I understand," I whispered softly.
Evans smiled, a chilling, victorious smirk. He reached out and patted my cheek as if I were a well-behaved dog. "Good girl. Dinner is at eight. Wear the blue silk dress I bought you."
He turned and walked out of the room. Colleen lingered for a moment, resting her hand on her pregnant belly. "Don't take too long getting ready, sis," she sneered, before turning on her heel and following him down the hall.
The moment the door clicked shut, the trembling stopped.
The heartbreak was gone. Every memory I had of Evans, every kiss, every promise of a futureit was all a meticulously crafted lie. But instead of breaking me, the truth set me free.
I didn't collapse. I didn't cry. I walked over to the heavy, antique vanity my father had gifted me for my eighteenth birthday. I didn't look at my reflection in the mirror. Instead, I dropped to my knees and reached underneath the thick mahogany base, my fingers blindly tracing the wood until they found a familiar, tiny groove.
I pressed hard.
With a soft click, a hidden compartment dropped open into my palm.
Evans thought he had outsmarted my father. He thought he had scoured this house and stripped me of every asset, every lifeline, and every piece of leverage. But my father had always warned me about the snakes in the grass.
Inside the dusty compartment rested a sleek, untraceable satellite phone and a silver flash drive.
I pulled the phone out. The battery was still fully charged. I turned it on and dialed the only number saved in its encrypted memorythe number of my father's ruthless, exiled fixer. A man Evans had spent millions trying to destroy and run out of the country.
The line rang twice before a deep, gravelly voice answered.
"I was beginning to think you were never going to call, Miss Louisa."
I stood up and finally looked at myself in the mirror. The frightened, broken girl from the psychiatric ward was gone. The woman staring back at me had ice in her veins.
"Evans is planning a wedding," I whispered, my voice dripping with lethal calm. "I need you to help me plan a funeral."
"Whose?" the voice asked.
I smiled, a dark, feral thing. "His."
"I'll send a car to the north gate at midnight," the gruff voice of my fathers old fixer replied, not missing a beat. "Be invisible, Miss Louisa."
"I always am," I whispered, and ended the call.
I slipped the satellite phone and the silver flash drive into the hidden lining of my makeup bag. Then, I turned to the closet. Evans had ordered me to wear the blue silk dress. The old Louisa would have thrown it out the window. The new Louisa knew that revenge required a costume.
I slipped the dress on, brushed my hair until it gleamed, and pinched my cheeks to give my pale, hollowed face a semblance of life. Looking in the mirror, I didn't see a victim anymore. I saw a loaded gun.
When I descended the grand staircase at exactly eight o'clock, Evans and Colleen were already seated at the long mahogany dining table. Colleen was practically draped over Evanss arm, whispering in his ear.
They both stopped and stared as I walked in.
I kept my eyes downcast, my shoulders slightly hunchedthe perfect picture of the broken, medicated girl they had created.
"Louisa," Evans said, his voice dripping with condescending approval. "You look beautiful. Sit."
I took the seat across from them. The private chef served the lobster risotto in suffocating silence. I picked up my fork and took a bite, forcing myself to swallow the rich food even though my stomach churned with disgust.
"We have a lot to do," Evans announced, swirling the red wine in his glass. "The board is expecting a public appearance. We are moving the wedding up. It will be this Saturday."
Four days. He was rushing it. He was desperate to get his hands on the final forty percent of my father's trust.
Colleen smirked, taking a sip of her sparkling water. "I already called the tailors, Louisa. Theyre coming tomorrow to take your measurements. We wouldn't want you looking sickly in the wedding photos, would we?"
I looked up, meeting Evanss cold gaze. I forced my eyes to well up with tears, drawing on every ounce of trauma they had inflicted on me. "Whatever you think is best, Evans," I said, my voice trembling perfectly. "I just... I just want to be good. I don't want to go back to the hospital."
Evanss chest puffed out slightly. The arrogant fool bought it completely. He reached across the table and patted my hand. "As long as you behave, darling, you'll never see those padded walls again."
I smiled weakly. Neither will you, I thought. Because you're going to prison.
The rest of the evening was a masterclass in endurance. I endured Colleens subtle insults. I endured Evanss controlling demands. And at ten o'clock, I excused myself, claiming the new medication made me exhausted.
I waited in my dark bedroom, watching the clock on the wall tick toward midnight.
At 11:50 PM, I grabbed a small duffel bag I had packed with my father's hidden cash, the flash drive, and the burner phone. I slipped out the French doors of my balcony, using the thick ivy trellis to climb down to the gardensa trick I hadn't used since I was a rebellious teenager.
The night air was biting, a light drizzle of rain masking the sound of my footsteps as I sprinted across the sprawling, manicured lawns toward the north gate.
My heart hammered against my ribs. If the estate guards caught me, Evans would have me committed before sunrise.
I reached the heavy iron gates and slipped through the pedestrian side-door, stepping out onto the desolate, winding mountain road.
Headlights cut through the fog.
A sleek, black Maybach rolled to a silent stop right in front of me. The back door popped open.
I didn't hesitate. I threw my bag in and climbed into the plush leather interior, slamming the door shut as the car immediately sped off into the night.
"Thank God," I breathed out, shivering from the rain. "I have the flash drive. We need to get to a secure"
I froze.
The man sitting in the shadows of the opposite seat wasn't my father's gruff, aging fixer.
He was young, devastatingly handsome, and radiated an aura of pure, suffocating power. He wore a bespoke charcoal suit, his long legs crossed casually, a glass of amber liquid resting in his hand. His sharp, piercing gray eyes locked onto mine, stripping away every defense I had just built.
I knew exactly who he was.
Silas Sterling.
The ruthless billionaire CEO of Sterling Enterprises. My fathers greatest rival, and the one man in the city that Evans was absolutely terrified of.
"You're not Arthur," I whispered, my hand inching toward the door handle.
"Arthur works for me now," Silas said, his voice a low, dark velvet that sent a shiver down my spine. He took a slow sip of his drink, his eyes never leaving mine. "He told me the lost heiress finally found her claws and wanted to burn Evans to the ground. I must admit, I'm intrigued."
"Let me out of this car," I demanded, my pulse racing. "I don't make deals with the devil."
Silas chuckled, a dark, dangerous sound. He leaned forward, the streetlights illuminating the sharp, predatory angles of his face.
"You don't have a choice, Louisa. Evans has the judges, the doctors, and the police in his pocket. If you run, he will hunt you down and lock you away forever." Silas tilted his head, his gaze dropping to my lips before meeting my eyes again. "But he can't touch you if you belong to me."
I stared at him, my breath catching in my throat. "What are you talking about?"
Silas reached into his jacket and pulled out a thick, legal document, tossing it onto the seat between us.
"Evans needs to marry you by Saturday to steal your trust fund," Silas said softly, a wicked, ruinous smile spreading across his lips. "So, we are going to ruin his life the only way we can. You're going to marry me tomorrow morning."
I stared at the marriage license resting on the plush leather seat between us. My name was already printed flawlessly next to Silas Sterlings. All it needed was my signature.
"You're insane," I breathed, my eyes darting from the paper to his impossibly calm face. "If you think I escaped one controlling monster just to legally bind myself to another, you don't know me at all."
Silas didn't flinch. He took another slow sip of his drink, the ice clinking softly against the crystal glass.
"I know exactly who you are, Louisa. You are the rightful heir to a billion-dollar empire, currently legally classified as incompetent, with a fianc who plans to stage your suicide by Sunday."
He leaned forward, the faint scent of cedar and expensive scotch wrapping around me. "I am not looking for a subservient wife. I am looking for a weapon. Evans has been a parasite in my industry for three years.
If we marry, your father's trust immediately vests. Evans's medical power of attorney is instantly voided, superseded by your spouse. I get the satisfaction of watching my biggest rival lose everything, and you get your life back."
He reached into his jacket and pulled out a sleek, silver fountain pen, holding it out to me. "I am offering you the match to burn his world to the ground. The question is, are you brave enough to strike it?"
I looked at the pen. I thought of the padded walls. I thought of the forced pills shoved down my throat.
I thought of Colleens hand resting on her pregnant belly, standing in my bedroom, wearing my fiancs shirt.
My hand stopped trembling. I didn't just want my life back. I wanted Evans to feel the exact, suffocating terror he had drowned me in for two years.
I took the pen from Silass hand. Our fingers brushed, sending a sharp, unexpected jolt of electricity up my arm. I uncapped it and signed my name on the dotted line with vicious, heavy strokes.
"Done," I said, tossing the clipboard back onto the seat. "But we do this my way. I don't want to just interrupt his life. I want to shatter it."
Silass lips curved into a slow, devastating smile. "I wouldn't have it any other way, Mrs. Sterling."
Twelve hours later, I was a ghost watching my own resurrection.
I sat in the back of Silass heavily tinted Maybach, parked discreetly across the street from my fathers corporate headquarters.
The morning rain had cleared, leaving the city slick and gleaming under the overcast sky.
Beside me, Silas was typing an email on his phone, the picture of relaxed indifference. But the air inside the car crackled with lethal anticipation.
Outside, on the grand marble steps of the building that rightfully belonged to me, Evans was preparing for a live, televised press conference.
A crowd of reporters and photographers spilled onto the sidewalk. Colleen stood dutifully off to the side, playing the supportive sister, wearing a designer coat paid for with my inheritance.
Suddenly, my phone vibrated.
"Louisa," Evans's voice came through, sharp, rushed, and patronizing. "I'm stepping up to the podium in two minutes. I trust you're watching the news from your room?"
A cold wave of satisfaction washed over me. He had left for the city before dawn, ordering the estate staff not to disturb my "recovery sleep." He hadn't checked his study to see what was missing.
He hadn't checked my bedroom. He was so arrogant, so absolutely certain that he had broken my spirit, that he didn't even know I wasn't in the house anymore.
He genuinely believed I was still locked in my cage.
"I'm watching, Evans," I replied, keeping my voice perfectly flat.
"Good. I'm announcing the Saturday wedding," he warned, his tone dropping into a vicious sneer. "Don't try anything stupid today, darling. The estate guards have orders not to let you out of the house. If you make a mess of this, or if you try to contact anyone, I'll have the doctors back at the estate to up your dosage before lunch. Do we understand each other?"
"Loud and clear, Evans," I said softly. "I promise, today is going to be unforgettable."
"See that it is," he snapped, and hung up.
Silas tapped a button on the console, and the cars internal speakers crackled to life, feeding us the live audio from the news broadcast as Evans stepped up to the microphones.
"...a difficult two years for our company, and for me personally," Evanss smooth, practiced voice filled the car. "But I am thrilled to announce that my beautiful fianc, Louisa, has made a miraculous recovery."
I stared at him through the tinted glass. He looked so confident. So untouchable.
"She is resting quietly at our estate today," Evans continued, placing a hand over his heart in a sickening display of fake devotion. "But we are so overjoyed by her return to health that we have decided to move our wedding up to this Saturday. Together, we will guide this company into a bright, stable future."
Silas locked his phone and slipped it into his pocket. He turned to me, his eyes gleaming with dark amusement. He checked his platinum watch.
"Ten seconds," Silas murmured.
I leaned closer to the window, my heart pounding a steady, triumphant rhythm against my ribs.
Directly across from Evans, towering over the plaza and the sea of reporters, was the largest digital billboard in the financial district. Usually, it displayed stock tickers or luxury car advertisements.
"Five," Silas counted down softly. "Four. Three."
Evans was smiling for the cameras, answering a reporter's question about the wedding venue.
"Two. One."
The massive digital billboard abruptly went black.
A collective gasp rippled through the crowd of reporters as the sudden darkness cast a shadow over the plaza.
Evans frowned, his sentence trailing off as he noticed the flashing cameras suddenly pivot away from him and aim up at the sky.
Then, the billboard ignited.
It wasn't an ad. But it was the bold, blinding white text plastered across the bottom of the screen that made the world stop spinning.
STERLING ENTERPRISES PROUDLY ANNOUNCES THE MARRIAGE OF CEO SILAS STERLING TO LOUISA STERLING.
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