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Her Perfect Lie: The Empire Heiress Novel Cover

Her Perfect Lie: The Empire Heiress

When heiress Georgia Laurent vanishes amid scandal, struggling actress Sharon Beckley is hired by fixer James Barnett to impersonate her. Sharon accepts for the money, but she soon uncovers a web of embezzlement and potential murder. As the real Georgia remains missing, Sharon realizes she was chosen to be a permanent replacement, not a temp. Trapped in a gilded cage, she must decide to fully become Georgia or expose a deadly corporate conspiracy.
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Chapter 71

Chapter 71 – A Call He Doesn't Recall

James did not sleep.

He told himself he didn't need to. He had survived mergers that gutted industries. Lawsuits designed to break him. Assassination attempts disguised as corporate accidents.

But this-

This was different.

You can fight enemies.

You cannot fight yourself.

By 3:17 a.m., the voicemail had been replayed thirty-two times.

Each time he listened for imperfection.

A splice. A distortion. A digital seam.

Nothing.

It was him.

Even the way the breath hit slightly heavier before the word "did."

No voice synthesizer was that precise.

Unless someone had years of data.

Unless someone had studied him.

The thought made his skin prickle.

He opened his laptop and logged into the Hastings Foundation server. He bypassed the public archive and accessed the raw footage from the gala.

If someone had impersonated him, they would slip eventually.

They always did.

He scrubbed frame by frame.

There.

At 7:42 p.m.

He-no.

The man.

The man who looked like him entered through the west corridor instead of the main entrance. James never used side entrances at public events. Too vulnerable.

The angle was slightly obscured by floral arrangements, but the jawline was unmistakable.

Same scar beneath the chin from a childhood fall.

James leaned closer to the screen.

Only-

He didn't have a scar under his chin.

His hand moved instinctively to his face.

Smooth.

Unmarked.

His pulse slowed dangerously.

He replayed the clip.

The man turned slightly, speaking to a donor. The camera caught the underside of his jaw again.

Scar.

Thin. Faded. Precise.

James felt something inside him shift.

Memory?

No.

Something worse.

Uncertainty.

He closed the laptop slowly.

His penthouse felt too large now. Too exposed.

He walked toward the window, drawn by something he couldn't explain.

Across the street, fifty floors down and one building over, lights flickered in a darkened office tower.

Most floors were black.

Except one.

Directly aligned with his penthouse.

A single desk lamp.

On.

James narrowed his eyes.

And then-

Movement.

A figure stepped into view near the glass.

Tall.

Broad shoulders.

Still.

Watching.

The city lights behind James reflected faintly against his own window, but he could see the silhouette clearly.

The man lifted a hand.

Mirrored his stance.

Tilted his head at the exact same angle.

James did not move.

The man across the street did.

He adjusted his cuff.

James hadn't adjusted his cuff.

The man stopped.

Smiled.

Even from that distance, James could feel it.

The confidence.

The familiarity.

The ownership.

James stepped back from the window.

The man stepped forward.

Closer to the glass.

James' breath shortened.

Slowly - experimentally - he raised his right hand.

The man across the street raised his left.

Perfect symmetry.

Not a reflection.

A reversal.

James lowered his hand immediately.

The man didn't.

He kept his raised.

Then formed a fist.

And tapped twice against the glass.

Even through fifty floors of air and steel, James felt it like a knock on his own skull.

Tap.

Tap.

His phone vibrated again.

Unknown number.

He didn't look away from the window when he answered.

"What do you want?"

A pause.

"You're asking the wrong question."

Same voice.

But this time-warmer.

Almost amused.

James swallowed.

"Who are you?"

Across the street, the man leaned closer to the glass.

The voice on the phone said quietly-

"Look closer."

James' vision sharpened involuntarily.

The man stepped into brighter light.

And for the first time-

James saw the difference.

The scar.

Under the chin.

Faint.

Intentional.

Almost surgical.

The man touched it deliberately.

As if presenting evidence.

James' knees weakened.

"That's not possible," he whispered.

Across the street, the man's lips moved.

Slowly.

Clearly.

Even without hearing it, James knew what he was saying.

You should remember me.

The phone voice continued.

"They told you I was dead."

The air left James' lungs.

Dead.

No.

That wasn't-

He had no dead brother.

No lost twin.

No story like that.

"I don't have-" he began.

The man across the street shook his head slowly.

Disappointed.

"You have everything," the voice said softly.

"And you don't even know why."

James' mind raced.

Fragments.

Hospital lights.

A woman crying.

Two bassinets.

No.

No, that wasn't a memory.

That was imagination.

It had to be.

"You're sick," James said, forcing steadiness into his voice. "This ends now."

Across the street, the man laughed silently.

Then stepped back into shadow.

The desk lamp clicked off.

Darkness swallowed the floor.

The call ended.

James stood alone again.

But something had changed.

This was not an impersonator trying to steal his life.

This was someone who believed-

The life was already his.

James' phone vibrated one final time.

A text message.

Unknown sender.

One image attached.

He hesitated.

Then opened it.

A scanned hospital document.

Date: Twenty-nine years ago.

Mother: Eleanor Barnett.

Delivery: Twin males.

Status: One transferred.

Transferred.

Not deceased.

Not stillborn.

Transferred.

James' hand trembled.

Another message followed.

You weren't supposed to be the one who stayed.

The screen dimmed.

And for the first time in his life-

James Barnett wondered if he had been living someone else's survival.

James didn't call security.

He didn't call his legal team.

He didn't call Daniel.

He did something far more dangerous.

He called his mother.

It rang six times before she answered.

"James?" Her voice was soft, cautious. "It's past three."

"Were we twins?"

Silence.

Not confusion.

Not disbelief.

Silence.

James felt the answer in it.

"Mom," he said quietly, "were we twins?"

A shaky inhale on the other end.

"Who told you that?"

That was enough.

"Yes or no."

Another pause.

Then-

"Yes."

The word didn't explode.

It sank.

Like something heavy dropped into deep water.

James closed his eyes.

"And?"

"And what?" she whispered.

"And what happened to him?"

A fragile sound escaped her. Not quite a sob. Not quite breath.

"They said he didn't survive."

"They?" James' tone sharpened. "Doctors?"

"Yes."

"Or Dad?"

Her silence changed this time.

It shifted from grief to guilt.

James' chest tightened.

"Mom."

"He was sick," she said quickly. "That's what they told us. Underdeveloped lungs. They took him to another unit."

"Transferred," James murmured.

"What?"

"I have the document."

The line went completely still.

He could hear her breathing.

Uneven now.

"Where did you get that?" she asked.

"Where was he transferred?"

"I don't know."

"Did you see the body?"

A strangled sound.

"No."

"Did Dad?"

Silence again.

That terrible, confirming silence.

James felt something inside him harden.

"You lied to me," he said quietly.

"We were protecting you."

"From what?"

The answer came broken.

"From the truth."

James walked back to the window.

The opposite building was dark now.

Empty.

But it no longer felt empty.

"Which one of us was supposed to die?" he asked.

"Don't say that."

"Which one of us was the mistake?"

"Neither!" she cried. "You were both-"

Her voice cracked.

"Both what?"

Another long breath.

Then finally-

"They only wanted one."

James didn't understand the sentence at first.

Then he did.

And wished he hadn't.

"Who is they?"

No answer.

"Mom."

"Your father handled it," she whispered.

The words were barely audible.

James felt heat rise behind his eyes.

"Handled what?"

"He said it was necessary."

"For what?"

"For our future."

The room felt smaller.

Compressed.

"Did you sell him?"

The question came out flat.

She didn't answer.

He didn't need her to.

"You sold one of us."

"We didn't know what they were going to do!"

The panic in her voice was real now.

"They promised medical care. Education. Protection. They said he'd have opportunities."

"Opportunities?" James repeated coldly.

"They said it would help your father's business. That it would secure everything."

James leaned his head back against the glass.

A deal.

A transaction.

An exchange.

One son for leverage.

"Which one was it supposed to be?" he asked again.

Her breath hitched.

"It wasn't random."

The words felt like ice sliding down his spine.

"What do you mean?"

"They examined you both."

The air in the room thickened.

"They chose."

James' stomach twisted violently.

"Chose who?"

"They said one had stronger markers."

"Markers."

"Leadership potential. Stability. Genetic disposition for influence."

James almost laughed.

Almost.

"And which one did they take?"

Her answer came broken.

"The other one."

It took him a second.

"You don't know which one I am."

"I carried you for nine months."

"That doesn't answer the question."

"You are my son."

"That's not what I asked."

Her silence told him everything.

There had been no certainty.

Just paperwork.

A hospital corridor.

Two bassinets.

And men in suits.

James' phone buzzed.

He looked down.

Another message from the unknown number.

Another image.

This time - a photograph.

Old.

Faded.

Two newborns side by side.

One with a faint mark under the chin.

James stared at the screen.

Slowly lifted his hand to his jaw again.

Smooth.

No scar.

The text followed:

They marked the one they kept.

James' pulse roared in his ears.

Kept.

His mother's voice trembled through the phone.

"James? What's happening? Who are you talking to?"

He didn't answer.

His eyes remained on the photo.

Another message arrived.

Look at your medical records.

James' breath shortened.

His childhood medical file.

There had been minor surgeries.

Procedures he barely remembered.

One at age six.

Scar tissue removal under the chin.

He had always believed he'd fallen on concrete.

Hadn't he?

The memory felt suddenly rehearsed.

Planted.

Manufactured.

"Mom," he said slowly, "did I have surgery when I was six?"

A sharp inhale.

"Yes."

"For what?"

"You tripped."

"Where?"

"Outside school."

"Which school?"

Silence.

"Mom."

"I don't remember!"

But she did.

He could hear it.

"You said they marked the one they kept," he whispered.

"What are you talking about?"

"Did they change us?"

"No."

But the denial was weak.

Desperate.

Not convincing.

James opened his laptop again with shaking hands and accessed his private medical archive.

He scrolled to age six.

Procedure: Minor reconstructive dermal correction.

Location: Submandibular region.

Submandibular.

Under the chin.

The scar he never had.

The scar he never remembered.

The scar the man across the street displayed deliberately.

Another message flashed:

You weren't supposed to forget.

James' heart slammed violently.

Another one:

You weren't supposed to stay.

His mother was crying now.

"James, please. Come home. We'll explain everything."

He closed the laptop slowly.

"No," he said.

"Please-"

"You chose," he interrupted quietly. "You let them choose."

"It was survival."

"For who?"

Her silence answered again.

James ended the call.

The penthouse felt colder now.

Larger.

More foreign.

He walked to the mirror once more.

Studied his face.

Touched beneath his chin.

He imagined a faint scar.

Imagined surgeons.

Imagined switching bracelets in a hospital crib.

Imagined paperwork rewritten.

What if-

The thought struck like lightning.

What if Dominic wasn't impersonating him?

What if Dominic had grown up knowing he was the sold one?

And James-

Had grown up wearing the scar of ownership.

His phone vibrated again.

One final message.

Meet me tomorrow.

An address followed.

An abandoned medical facility.

Closed twenty-eight years ago.

The same year the transfer happened.

James stared at it.

His pulse steadying now.

Fear changing shape.

Becoming something else.

Resolve.

He typed back for the first time.

If you're lying, this ends.

The response came immediately.

If I'm not... it begins.

James looked out at the dark skyline.

For decades, he believed he had built his life from ambition.

Now he wasn't sure he had built anything at all.

He might have simply inherited a stolen beginning.

And tomorrow-

He would find out which twin had truly survived.

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