The rain blasted against Anya Petrova's grimy Brooklyn loft windows, doing a good job of imitating all the tears she'd refused to shed. Her fingers trembled, stained by cerulean blue and burnt sienna, as she read the landlord's text again:
"48 HOURS. $3,200 OR THE LOCKS CHANGE."
The smell of turpentine and desperation was cloying. Around her, half-faked-forgery-a-Van Gogh starry night sky bleeding into a Monet waterlily pond-leaned against the cracked plaster walls. Masterpieces that weren't hers. Paychecks that never came.
A knock, loud and angular, broke the silence. Not the landlord. Too... precise.
Anya wiped her hands on a rag that was becoming stiff with paint. Her heart felt like a trapped bird against her ribs. She opened the door to a silhouette sharp enough to cut glass. Evelyn Thorne, Liam's mother, stood framed in the dim hallway light. She wore a Chanel suit unaffected by the murky humidity permeating the building. Her eyes that were the same glacial blue as her son's swept over Anya's paint-covered jeans and the peeling linoleum with undisguised contempt.
"Petrova." The name resounded like an indictment. "We need to talk. Inside."
Evelyn didn't wait for an invitation. She slipped past Anya, her perfume-the cold, expensive-screaming in rebellion at the smell of poverty and oil paint. A folded tabloid was laid on Anya's rickety working table. The first line screamed:
"THORNE TECH HEIR LIAM THORNE IN COMA AFTER MYSTERIOUS YACHT PLUNGE!"
A photo beneath showed Liam, devastatingly handsome even unconscious in a hospital bed, surrounded by machines. Anya's breath hitched. Three years. Three years since he had looked at her with that same stillness before destroying her life, accusing her of sabotaging his precious AI project, Horizon.
"This," Evelyn tapped the paper with a manicured finger, "is inconvenient."
Anya found her voice, roughened by disuse and infused with fury. "What do you want, Evelyn? Gloat? Your golden boy finally tripped over his own ego?"
A flicker of something dangerous crossed Evelyn's face, gone as quickly as it appeared. She produced a single sheet of crisp, legal paper. "I want you to somehow save his legacy. And by doing that, save yourself." She slid the paper towards Anya. "Sign this. Pretend to be his devoted wife for six months. Secure the Thorne inheritance. Walk away with ten million dollars."
Anya barked a laugh, harsh and brittle. "You have lost your mind. Our marriage was annulled before the ink dried! It was a drunken Vegas mistake buried years ago!"
Evelyn's smile was arctic. "Buried but not erased. The Thorne family trust has a clause, my dear. If Liam dies unmarried, his entire inheritance-half a billion dollars-vanishes. Poof. Gone. To obscure charities even I can't control."
"Why me?" Anya whispered, the absurdity warring with a terrifying sliver of hope. Ten million dollars. Freedom. Safety.
"Because you are technically still his wife on paper. Annulment paperwork conveniently... stalled." Evelyn leaned forward, lowering her voice to a venomous whisper. "And because I know about the Degas, Anya. The one hanging in Arthur Pendleton's study. The one you painted."
Ice flowed through Anya's veins. She saw it immediately-grainy security footage on Evelyn's phone, showing her younger, more desperate self switching Pendleton's genuine Degas sketch with her near-perfect replica. A crime born of starvation and student loans.
"Sign," purred Evelyn, setting down a solid gold pen beside the contract. "Or I send this footage to the authorities before sunset. Prison orange is such an unflattering color, don't you think?"
Rain drummed against the window. The weight of her eviction, her debts, and all her buried crimes pressed down on Anya. She picked the pen up. It felt like a shackle. Her scrawling signature, Anya Petrova Thorne, bled onto the page like an open wound.
Evelyn grabbed the treaty as a predator secured its prey. "Excellent. Pack a bag. You move into Thornhill Manor tonight. The world believes you have been quietly separated, yearning for reconciliation. Now, you're rushing to your beloved husband."
Evelyn turned as she began to exit and paused at the door. "Oh, and Anya? Try not to look so... indigent. You're a Thorne now. Again."
With it, the door clicked shut. Anya sank onto the paint-stained floor, crushed under the enormity of the lie. She was going to play wife to the man who ruined her. The man who might never wake up.
Her gaze fell on the tabloid photo of Liam. What have I done?