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To save her family's failing empire, Melissa Hartwood agrees to marry the heir of Kingsley Holdings, Liam Kingsley. It was supposed to be a strategic alliance. She didn't expect to fall for her cold, calculating husband. Until he turns up dead. The only evidence left behind a bloodstained note that reads: Please forgive me. Framed for his murder and betrayed by the family she married into, Melissa loses everything. Convicted after a corrupt trial and shot during her appeal, her story should have ended there. Instead, she wakes up the morning after her wedding. Liam is alive. Fate has given her one impossible gift: a second chance to save the man she loves. She has one year to save her husband. One year to uncover who framed her. One year to stop the man who destroys them both. Because someone inside the Kingsley family is going to kill Liam. But as Melissa races against time, she begins to see the cracks in the Kingsley dynasty - buried secrets, shifting loyalties, and a rival waiting in the shadows. And this time, the man who protects her might be the very one who kills him. Because some love stories don't end once. They end twice.
"Guilty."
The word did not echo. It landed. The judge's gavel struck once-sharp and final. The thud cracked through the courtroom like something that was breaking.
For a second, no one moved.
But before the sound died, something else reached my ears.
A soft laugh. It came from a man in a charcoal suit. As I turned, he lowered his head quickly as if he hadn't meant to be heard. I did not see his face because of the lighting. But the moment our eyes met... he stopped smiling.
My fingers pressed hard against the wooden dock. I held it so tightly that my nails chipped off part of the paint.
"I can't believe this-" I turned to my lawyer, "You said the evidence would fall apart."
Mr. Wright kept his eyes on the table. "It should have." He rubbed his forehead, exhausted. "The fingerprints didn't match. The timeline didn't hold. We had three forensic experts ready to testify-"
"Ready," I repeated. "Then why didn't they take the stand?"
His fingers drummed once against the table before going still. "They withdrew this morning."
"They just... withdrew?" I asked. "Three professionals suddenly changed their minds on the same day?"
Mr. Wright finally lifted his eyes to mine. "No," he said. "They didn't change their minds. They were...", his eyes scanned the table as he was deciding how much truth I could handle. "They were persuaded."
"Let's just say, someone paid them a visit last night." he murmured, lowering his voice.
"A visit?"
"The kind that makes people forget their professional integrity and remember their families and reputations."
"You're saying they were threatened." my hands visibly shaking.
"I'm saying," he replied carefully, "they were given a very strong reason to stay out of court." Then the thought hit me.
"They were bribed?"
Mr. Wright let out a short laugh, but there was no humor in it. "If it were just bribery," he said, "this case would be a lot simpler."
"Then what are you saying?" my brows knitted together.
He glanced around the courtroom first, at the scattered reporters, the clerks stacking files... Only then did he lean slightly toward me.
"I mean something worse." His voice is barely audible now. "Someone extremely powerful wants you convicted."
My pulse stumbled.
"Who?"
The bailiff interrupted before he could answer. "Ma'am." He stood behind me, cuffing my hand. That was when it felt real. Not when the verdict was read. But when the metal clicked.
I was silently hoping that someone would stand up at that moment. Maybe someone would say they made a mistake. That someone would remember who I was before I became the woman who murdered her husband.
But no one moved.
The doors opened, and light flooded in.
The camera flashes burst like tiny explosions. Microphones pushed forward. Then the noise hit.
"Mrs. Kingsley!"
"Did you kill your husband?"
"Why did you do it?"
"Who's responsible for Hartwood Global's collapse?"
"Is the government going to step in?"
I kept walking. If I answered, it wouldn't matter. If I screamed, it wouldn't matter. Someone had to pay for Liam Kingsley's death. And I was the bait.
My head hung low in shame. Whispers surrounded me. I was more confused than ever. I walked straight ahead into the police car.
Before the door shut, Mr. Wright caught my arm. For a moment, his eyes softened. "I'm sorry," he said quietly. "I'll find another way."
I wanted to believe him. But when the door slammed and the car drove away, I saw his reflection through the glass. His face had already gone cold.
The ride to the station was quiet. It was not peaceful just empty. The kind of silence that lingers.
The car moved with speed. And I stared blankly as the city slid past the tinted windows in blurs of grey and heat. My reflection stared back at me from the glass-smudged mascara, swollen eyes, a woman I could barely recognize.
The volume of the radio roared "...and in other news, the face of Hartwood Global's luxury line has been sentenced..."
My own voice followed. Bright. Polished. Smiling.
"Experience purity. Experience promise."
The vanilla commercial. My first contract after the wedding. I remember the champagne in crystal glasses. Liam's hand resting proudly at the small of my back. The board members clapping when the partnership deal was sealed. I laughed that night.
Now my wrists ached against cold metal. The air inside the patrol car felt thick. I have been suffocating in my mind, now my lungs could not hold in much breath.
The windows were rolled up tight. I pulled in a breath but stopped halfway. "Officer, I can't breathe." I waited for a minute.
Then I held the door handle. I don't remember deciding. All I remember is the click. I jumped out of the moving car.
For one suspended second, I was flying. Relieved. Then the ground rose. The impact stole the air from me completely. The car stopped. Voices shouted. I tried to move but my body refused. Warm blood slid down the side of my face.
So this is how it ends, I thought.
Until a shadow blocked the sun from my face. Then a scent. I could recognize it anywhere. Blue Jade. My lungs froze. I had given Liam a bottle of that fragrance on our first anniversary. For a reckless heartbeat, my hope flared.
But Liam was dead.
The world tilted as I was carried. My head lolled against a firm chest. The traffic roared back into focus. Horns. Engines. Distant shouting.
My skull throbbed with each sound. I was placed gently in the back of the patrol car again. When I forced my eyes open, the tall figure was already walking away.
I tried to see his face. I couldn't.
When we arrived at the prison cell, it reeked of rust and disinfectant. I sat on the narrow bench with dried blood stiff against my skin.
I waited. I searched with the impatience of a child. No one waited for me. No loyal friend. No family. Not even the legal team rushing in with promises. Just silence.
Perhaps they had given up or believed that I did kill my husband.
Soon, a thin officer with a striped undershirt came to dress my wounds. "You shouldn't have jumped," He said, crossing his head in pity. On his exit, polished black shoes appeared. The prosecutor stopped just outside the cell, studying me with the detached curiosity of someone inspecting damaged merchandise.
His lips pressed together slightly. Was it disapproval or satisfaction? It was hard to tell.
I looked away first.
"You should prepare yourself," he said.
"For what?"
Before I could press him further, the corridor suddenly erupted with raised voices. A woman shouting. Guards arguing.Then footsteps rushed toward the cell. And she appeared.
For a moment I could barely recognize my mother in law. Her grief had hollowed her cheeks, it sharpened her features. But her eyes-her eyes burned.
"Let me through!" she cried.
"Ma'am, you can't-"
She shoved past the guard before he finished.
Before I could say a word-
Her hand struck my face. The pain pulsed through my body.
"How could you?" she wailed.
The guards rushed forward and grabbed her arms, pulling her back. She didn't fight them. She just stared at me like I had extinguished the sun.
The weight of it crushed something inside my chest. "I didn't do it," I said louder this time.
But the verdict had already spread all over the country. Across every screen. Every paper. Every headline.
Billionaire's Wife Sentenced for Murder.
My name no longer belonged to me. I had become the villain in my love story.
I closed my eyes. Liam was dead and I had been convicted. But the memory from the courtroom kept replaying. The man in the charcoal suit. The one who laughed when the verdict was read. And the scent of Blue Jade when someone lifted me from the road.
My stomach turned cold. Because suddenly, I realized something. They were the same man.
The Man I Married Twice
Lumie.
Billionaires
Chapter 1 GUILTY
25/03/2026
Chapter 2 THE MERGER
25/03/2026
Chapter 3 THE WRONG GROOM
25/03/2026
Chapter 4 AN INVESTMENT FOR DELIVERY
25/03/2026
Chapter 5 THE MAN I'M SUPPOSED TO MARRY
25/03/2026
Chapter 6 HEARTACHE
25/03/2026
Chapter 7 HEARTBREAK
25/03/2026
Chapter 8 PUBLIC ENEMY
25/03/2026
Chapter 9 WELCOME TO THE KINGSLEYS
25/03/2026
Chapter 10 THE DINNER TABLE
25/03/2026
Chapter 11 THE OTHER WOMAN WHO WAS FIRST
25/03/2026
Chapter 12 Lines You Don't Cross
25/03/2026
Chapter 13 WHAT YOU DIDN'T SEE COMING
28/03/2026
Chapter 14 THE DATE
31/03/2026
Chapter 15 A LONG DRIVE
08/04/2026
Chapter 16 THE CONTRACT
10/04/2026
Chapter 17 SIGNED AND SEALED
14/04/2026
Chapter 18 THE FILE
15/04/2026
Chapter 19 THEY'VE BEEN WATCHING ME
17/04/2026
Chapter 20 TERMS OF CONTROL
17/04/2026
Chapter 21 ALL EYES ON ME
27/04/2026
Chapter 22 PRE-WEDDING: DAMAGE CONTROL
27/04/2026
Chapter 23 BLURRED LINES
28/04/2026
Chapter 24 THE FAMILY FRACTURE
29/04/2026
Chapter 25 THE SECOND FILE
12/05/2026