
Chapter 1 of When My Twin Died, I Took Over Her Life
The bass pounded through my veins, matching the rhythm of my heart as I slipped through the crowd at Velvet, one of the city's most exclusive nightclubs. Bodies pressed against me, the air thick with perfume, sweat, and desperation. I belonged here—not with the glittering elite clutching champagne flutes, but among the shadows, where people like me conducted business.
My fingers closed around the small plastic bag in my pocket. Leo had come through again, despite everything. Three hundred dollars lighter, but with enough powder to make the world bearable for another day or two.
"You look like you could use a drink," a server said, balancing a tray of colorful cocktails. Young guy, early twenties maybe, with kind eyes that didn't belong in a place like this.
"I'm good," I muttered, avoiding his gaze. His name tag read 'Evan.' He looked like he should be studying for finals, not serving overpriced drinks to trust fund kids and drug addicts.
"Water, then? On the house." He smiled, and for a second, I felt seen—not as a junkie, but as a person. It made me uncomfortable.
"Maybe later," I said, already moving toward the exit. I needed air, space, and privacy. The bathroom was too risky; security had been cracking down lately. The alley behind the club would have to do.
The cool night air hit my face as I slipped out the service door, the music immediately muffled. I leaned against the brick wall, exhaling slowly, savoring the momentary solitude. Just me, the stars, and soon, sweet chemical relief.
I'd found a relatively clean spot behind a dumpster when voices drifted from around the corner. Instinctively, I pressed myself deeper into the shadows.
"Please, Mr. Moretti, I can explain—" The voice was young, frightened. I recognized it—Evan, the server from inside.
"Explanations are for people who get second chances." This voice was different—smooth, controlled, with an edge of steel beneath the calm.
I peered around the dumpster, curiosity overwhelming caution. In the dim light of the single bulb above the service door, I could make out two figures. Evan, his server's uniform rumpled, was backed against the wall. Facing him was an older man in an impeccable suit, his silver-streaked dark hair slicked back, his posture relaxed yet somehow menacing.
"I swear, I didn't tell anyone—" Evan's voice cracked.
"That's the problem with trust," the man—Moretti—said, almost conversationally. "Once it's broken, it can't be fixed."
The movement was so fluid, so casual, that for a moment I didn't register what had happened. Moretti raised his hand, something glinted in the dim light—a gold pinky ring catching the glow as his finger squeezed the trigger of a silenced pistol.
The sound was nothing like in movies—not a dramatic bang, but a muffled thwack that seemed obscenely quiet for the violence it delivered. Evan's head snapped back, a small dark hole appearing between his eyes. His body crumpled to the ground like a marionette with cut strings.
I must have made a sound—a gasp, a whimper—because Moretti's head snapped in my direction, his eyes narrowing as they scanned the darkness.
"Check it out," he ordered someone I couldn't see. "No witnesses."
My body moved before my brain could catch up. I knocked over a bottle as I scrambled to my feet, the crash shattering the silence. Adrenaline flooded my system, washing away any thought of getting high. I ran, my footsteps echoing in the narrow alley.
"There! Get her!" Moretti's voice, no longer smooth but sharp with command.
I burst onto the main street, pushing past startled clubgoers waiting in line. Behind me, I heard shouts, the sound of pursuit. I didn't look back, just kept running, my lungs burning, my legs pumping.
Three blocks later, I ducked into another alley, then another, zigzagging through the city's underbelly like the rat I was. When I finally stopped, hidden behind a row of garbage cans in some nameless back street, my whole body was shaking.
I knew who Dominic Moretti was. Everyone in the city's underworld did. Businessman on paper, mob boss in reality. The kind of man who made problems—people—disappear permanently.
And now I was a problem.
I couldn't go back to my apartment. Couldn't call the cops—not with my record, not with drugs in my pocket. Couldn't turn to Leo; he'd sell me out in a heartbeat if Moretti's people came asking.
There was only one place left. One person who, despite everything, might not slam the door in my face.
Alex.
My twin sister. My mirror image. My complete opposite.
We hadn't spoken in years—not since that night when everything fell apart, when I accused her of sabotaging my one chance at art school. The night our parents finally gave up on me for good.
The taxi driver gave me a suspicious look when I gave him the address—a junkie like me had no business in that part of town—but the cash I handed over silenced any questions.
The Sterling mansion loomed like something from another world, all gleaming windows and manicured gardens. I stood at the gate, rain beginning to fall, soaking through my thin jacket. My finger hovered over the intercom button.
Pride told me to walk away. Survival instinct made me press it.
"Sterling residence." A clipped, professional voice.
"I need to see Alexandra Sterling," I said, my voice steadier than I felt. "Tell her it's Sylvia. Her sister."
A long pause, then the gate buzzed open.
The walk up the driveway felt endless. By the time I reached the massive front door, I was drenched, my dark hair plastered to my face, mascara probably running down my cheeks. The perfect counterpoint to the immaculate woman who opened the door.
Alex. My twin. My stranger.
"Sylvia." Her voice was cool, her expression carefully neutral. "What an unexpected surprise."
She looked exactly as I remembered, yet completely different. Designer clothes, perfect makeup, hair styled in an elegant bob so unlike my own tangled mess. We had the same face, the same eyes, yet she seemed to belong to another species entirely.
"I need help," I said simply, too desperate for pride.
Something flickered in her eyes—pity, disgust, or maybe a shadow of the connection we'd once shared. She stepped aside.
"Come in. You're dripping all over the marble."
The next hours passed in a blur. I told her everything—about Moretti, about Evan, about the gold ring and the gun and the way the young server's eyes had gone blank in an instant. She listened in silence, her face revealing nothing.
"You can stay," she finally said. "Temporarily. Until we figure this out."
"Thank you," I whispered, relief making me weak.
"Don't thank me yet." Her smile was brittle. "This doesn't change anything between us, Sylvia. You made your choices. I made mine."
"I know."
"Do you?" She stood, smoothing her immaculate slacks. "Look at you. Look at your life. Every opportunity you've ever had, you've destroyed. Every person who's tried to help you, you've pushed away."
Each word was a knife, precise and cutting. The worst part was, I couldn't argue. She was right.
"I have a birthday celebration tomorrow evening," she continued. "You'll stay out of sight. The guest room in the east wing should be far enough from the main house. I'll have clothes sent up."
She left me there, alone in her perfect living room, feeling like the stain I was.
I spent the next day in a haze of withdrawal and fear, jumping at shadows, expecting Moretti's men to appear at any moment. The mansion was silent, Alex absent, preparing for her party. The only evidence of life was the occasional staff member delivering food or fresh towels, their eyes carefully averted from the mistress's disgraceful twin.
Night fell. Music and laughter drifted from the main house as guests arrived for Alex's birthday celebration. I paced the guest room, restless, my skin crawling with need. The drugs I'd bought at the club were long gone, flushed down the toilet in a moment of desperate clarity.
A sound pulled me from my misery—water running, echoing through the pipes. Strange, since this wing was supposed to be empty. Curious, I followed the sound down the hallway to what appeared to be the master suite.
The bathroom door was ajar, steam escaping in tendrils. I should have turned back. Should have respected the one boundary Alex had set. Instead, I pushed the door open wider.
Alex sat in an enormous marble tub, the water milky with bath salts. She wore a silk nightgown that billowed around her like a cloud. Her makeup was perfect, her hair arranged as if for a photoshoot rather than a bath.
"Alex?" I called softly.
She turned, and the look in her eyes froze me in place. Not surprise. Not anger at my intrusion. Something else—something calculating, almost triumphant.
"Perfect timing, sister dear," she said, her voice eerily calm.
That's when I noticed the empty pill bottle on the edge of the tub. The glass of what looked like whiskey, nearly drained.
"Alex, what have you done?" I rushed forward, but she held up a hand, stopping me.
"Exactly what I needed to do." Her words were beginning to slur. "You always did have impeccable timing, Sylvia. Always showing up at exactly the right moment to ruin everything... or in this case, to save yourself."
She slipped lower in the water, her movements becoming sluggish. I reached for her, but she caught my wrist, her grip surprisingly strong.
"Don't you see?" she whispered, her eyes locked on mine. "This is your chance. Your only chance."
Then she let go, sliding beneath the milky surface, her eyes still open, still watching me, a smile playing at the corners of her mouth as the water closed over her face.
I screamed, plunging my arms into the bath, trying to pull her up. But Alex had always been the stronger one, in every way that mattered. And as I struggled to save the sister who had never wanted my help, I couldn't shake the feeling that somehow, impossibly, this was exactly what she had planned all along.
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