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"Bound By The Wrong Brother"

Chapter 7 7

Word Count: 456    |    Released on: 30/03/2026

h shifted, turning his head slig

ow. The harsh desert sun bounced violently off the truck's polished side pan

back booth, illuminating

h stopped dead

ched from the base of his neck, d

ammed against her ribs with terri

rom her grasp, hitting the ceramic

pping her burger. "Jesus

ouldn't

contents until she pulled out her phone, her fingers

lling up the grainy photo she ha

screen. The image on her phone was blurry, but the combination was undeniable: the same custom watch, the same b

rror and electric adrenaline

er. The man who knew wh

eating palms against the e

h, her knees shaking so badly they

oom," Harper said, her v

n look up from h

center of the narrow aisle. She sucked in a lungf

against the black-and-w

Clack

d over the low

the shift in the room. Their broad shoulders tensed. Three of them c

red the let

from the edge of his table, starin

looking down

ately, the man

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"Bound By The Wrong Brother"
"Bound By The Wrong Brother"
“My father gave me an ultimatum: marry a man I despise or lose my entire inheritance. I chose to run, boarding a private jet with no intention of looking back. But his reach is absolute. The phone buzzed before we even left New York airspace. "Send me a picture with Sterling now," his voice barked, "or I'm calling your pilot to turn that jet around." I faked the photo and fled to Las Vegas, my last resort. My mission was simple: find my father's illegitimate son, the one secret that could break his hold over me. My only lead was a grainy picture of a ruthless fixer, a man who cleaned up my father's messes. I found him in a desolate diner, a giant of a man surrounded by a wall of guards. I gambled everything on a single coin toss for the information I needed. He saw right through my desperate bluff. He leaned in close, his voice a low, gravelly rasp. "In my city, the house always wins." I was left standing there, humiliated and defeated. But as he turned to leave, he glanced over his shoulder. "But you're lucky. Today, I'm just curious what Howard Bright's daughter is doing so far from home." He had seen me not as a threat, but as a curiosity. I had lost the battle, but I wasn't done yet. I was no longer running. I was hunting.”