I was dragged back to the wealthy Hayes family years after they threw me out like garbage. The matriarch ordered me to take my sister's place and marry Alaric Montgomery, a ruthless CEO rumored to be on his deathbed. "If you refuse, I will have your mother's grave dug up by tomorrow morning." They wanted to use me as a superstitious blood sacrifice so their precious golden child wouldn't have to become a young widow. My stepmother and sister mocked my cheap clothes and sprayed toxic chemicals in my face, treating me like a disposable pawn meant to die quietly in the Montgomery estate. But while they were laughing, I hacked into the top-tier medical network and discovered the truth. Alaric wasn't dying of a terminal illness; he was suffering from a highly lethal neurotoxin. Worse, I found out the Montgomery family was deeply involved in the orchestrated car crash that murdered my mother, and they were currently hunting down her sacred healing pendant. My family thinks I am just a weak, illiterate country bumpkin who will cry and accept her miserable fate. They have no idea that I am actually "The Surgeon," the legendary underground doctor that Alaric is burning billions of dollars to find. Wearing my faded hoodie and worn combat boots, I calmly stepped into the Montgomery family's fleet of Rolls-Royces. They think they are sending a helpless lamb to the slaughter. They don't realize they just invited an apex predator into the lion's den.
The harsh, abrasive blare of a car horn shattered the dead silence of the countryside.
Frank slammed the heel of his hand against the steering wheel of the black SUV again. He stared through the windshield at the rotting wooden porch of the cabin, his upper lip curling in disgust. The humidity was thick, clinging to his expensive chauffeur uniform like a wet rag. He was wasting the Hayes family's precious time in this godforsaken wasteland.
The rusted hinges of the cabin door shrieked.
Seraphina Kensington stepped out onto the sagging wooden planks. She held a faded, washed-out canvas bag in one hand. Her face was a mask of absolute, chilling indifference. She didn't flinch at the horn. She didn't rush. She simply pulled the brim of her worn baseball cap lower over her eyes and walked toward the vehicle.
Frank rolled down the tinted window. The blast of the SUV's air conditioning hit the heavy summer air.
"You're making the Hayes family wait," Frank sneered, his voice dripping with unearned superiority. "Get in. We don't have all day for you to say goodbye to the dirt."
Sera didn't look at him. She kept her gaze fixed on the gravel driveway, her boots crunching rhythmically against the stones.
Before she could reach the door handle, a sharp, rhythmic vibration buzzed against her thigh.
She stopped. Her hand slipped into the pocket of her oversized hoodie, her fingers wrapping around the heavily encrypted burner phone.
Frank let out a loud, exaggerated sigh. He slapped the steering wheel again. "Are you deaf? I said get in the car!"
Sera turned her back to the SUV. The low rumble of the engine masked her voice as she answered the call.
"Speak," she said, her tone flat.
"Boss," Jasper Cole's voice crackled through the encrypted line, tight with panic and urgency. "I know you're off the grid, but I have a black-market medical contract here. Fifty million dollars. Cash. They are begging for The Surgeon. It's a critical case-"
"No." Sera cut him off. Her voice didn't rise a single decibel.
"Sera, it's fifty million," Jasper pleaded. "What is so important in River City?"
"I have personal business to handle," Sera said. Her eyes tracked a crow landing on a dead branch in the distance.
"Personal business?" Jasper's voice spiked in disbelief. "You're going back to the Hayes family? After they threw you out like garbage? Why?"
A cold, humorless smile touched the corners of Sera's mouth. Her stomach tightened, a familiar, dark knot of anticipation pulling at her muscles.
"I have truths to uncover," Sera murmured.
She ended the call. She didn't wait for his response. She shoved the phone back into her pocket, turned around, and yanked open the heavy rear door of the SUV.
She tossed the faded canvas bag inside. It hit the pristine, cream-colored leather seats with a dull thud.
Frank glared at the bag through the rearview mirror. "Watch the leather, you country hick. You have no idea how much-"
Sera slowly lifted her head.
She met Frank's eyes in the rearview mirror. Her gaze was dead. It was the look of an apex predator staring at a piece of meat. The temperature inside the air-conditioned car seemed to plummet instantly.
Frank's throat clicked as he swallowed hard. The insult died on his tongue. The hairs on the back of his neck stood up. He immediately faced forward, his hands gripping the steering wheel so hard his knuckles turned white. He slammed his foot on the gas pedal.
The SUV tore out of the dirt driveway, speeding toward the highway.
The barren, sun-scorched fields outside the window blurred, eventually giving way to the towering glass and steel skyscrapers of River City. Sera watched the transition with empty eyes.
The SUV slowed as it approached the massive wrought-iron gates of the Hayes estate. The gates swung open, revealing a sprawling, manicured lawn and a multi-story mansion that reeked of old money. Frank parked the vehicle in front of a massive stone fountain.
He put the car in park. He didn't get out. He didn't open her door. He just sat there, staring straight ahead.
Sera didn't care. She pushed the door open herself, grabbed the strap of her canvas bag, and slung it over her shoulder. She walked up the wide marble steps with steady, measured strides.
She pushed open the heavy double doors.
The grand living room was a cavern of crystal chandeliers and velvet furniture. Sitting in the center, on a high-backed velvet sofa, was Matilda Hayes. The matriarch of the family looked down her nose, her posture rigid with arrogance.
Sera dropped her canvas bag onto the polished marble floor.
The heavy thud echoed through the massive room. Several maids lingering in the corners jumped, their eyes darting toward the girl in the faded clothes.
Matilda slammed the rubber tip of her cane against the marble floor.
"Look at you," Matilda barked, her voice echoing harshly. "Dressed like a beggar. You bring shame to this family just by standing there."
Sera shoved her hands into the pockets of her hoodie. She looked at the old woman, her expression completely bored.
"If I'm such a disgrace," Sera said, her voice perfectly level, "why did you drag me back here?"
Matilda's face flushed a dark, angry red. Her hands trembled on the head of her cane.
"You are here to do your duty," Matilda snapped. "You will take Blythe's place. You are going to marry into the Montgomery family."
Sera tilted her head slightly. A sharp breath filled her lungs. "You mean I'm going to marry a dying man so your precious Blythe doesn't have to be a widow."
Matilda's eyes widened in outrage. She struck the floor with her cane again, the sound cracking like a gunshot.
"You insolent brat!" Matilda hissed. "You will do as you are told. If you refuse this marriage, I will have your mother's grave dug up and her bones thrown out of the family cemetery by tomorrow morning."
The air in the room stopped moving.
Sera's hands clenched into tight fists inside her pockets. Her fingernails bit so deeply into her palms that the skin nearly broke. A violent, freezing rush of adrenaline pumped through her veins. Her chest tightened, her heart hammering a brutal rhythm against her ribs.
She stared at Matilda. The urge to cross the room and snap the old woman's neck was a physical ache in her muscles.
But she forced her jaw to relax. She forced her breathing to slow. She needed to be inside the Montgomery estate to find the truth about her mother's death. A momentary explosion of anger would ruin years of careful planning. She swallowed the killing intent, locking it away behind a wall of ice.
"Fine," Sera said. Her voice was eerily calm, devoid of any human emotion. "I'll marry him."
Matilda let out a breath, a triumphant, ugly smile stretching across her wrinkled face. She waved her hand dismissively at the maids.
"Take this country girl to the guest room," Matilda ordered. "Scrub her clean. Prepare her for her miserable fate."
Sera didn't look at the maids. She turned her back on Matilda and walked toward the grand staircase, her footsteps silent on the thick carpet.
The Substitute Bride's Lethal Secret
Yixi Yuhuan
Modern
Chapter 1
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Chapter 2
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Chapter 3
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Chapter 4
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Chapter 5
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Chapter 6
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Chapter 7
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Chapter 8
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Chapter 9
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Chapter 10
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