The CEO's Substitute: Love In London

The CEO's Substitute: Love In London

Bella Youngman

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My husband Kamden and I were the most powerful couple in New York, an unbreakable alliance of wealth and influence. To the world, we were perfect, especially with our new baby daughter, Penny, waiting for us at home. But the illusion shattered at the Jasper Stone gala when Cason Vincent walked in. He wasn't just a rival; he was a dead ringer for Kamden-a cruel, predatory mirror image who seemed to know the secrets of the year I spent in London. In front of the city's elite, a socialite screamed that I was a fraud, accusing me of using Kamden as a "substitute" for the man I truly loved. The music stopped, and the room turned into a sea of judgmental whispers. I expected my husband to shield me, but the paranoia in his eyes was sharper than any rumor. He grabbed my scarred left hand-the one I had ruined to save his life years ago-and squeezed it until I winced in pain. "Am I just a replacement?" he hissed, his voice trembling with a terrifying insecurity. He didn't see the wife who had sacrificed her world-class piano career for him; he saw a woman who had settled for a copy. The injustice of it felt like a physical blow. I had destroyed my body and my future to keep him safe, yet he was ready to believe a stranger's lies over three years of marriage. He didn't want the truth; he wanted me to beg for his forgiveness for a sin I never committed. I realized then that my silence wasn't an admission of guilt, but my last shred of dignity. I pulled my hand away and walked out of the gala alone, leaving Kamden standing face-to-face with the man who had come to dismantle our lives.

The CEO's Substitute: Love In London Chapter 1 No.1

The elevator doors slid open with a soft, expensive ping, depositing Dana Zhu directly into the foyer of the Griffith-Emerson penthouse. She adjusted the strap of her oversized tote bag, prepared for the usual sterile silence that defined the home of two of New York's most intimidating business tycoons.

Instead, she heard Mozart.

It was faint, drifting down the hallway, a soft piano sonata that seemed at war with the muted roar of Manhattan traffic vibrating against the floor-to-ceiling windows. The melody wasn't live; it was coming from a state-of-the-art sound system embedded in the walls, a ghost of a performance. Dana recognized the phrasing instantly. It was from one of Helena's old recordings, made before the accident, before the music had been stolen from her. Dana kicked off her heels, leaving them by the door, and followed the sound.

She found Helena Griffith in the nursery.

Helena wasn't working. There was no iPad in her lap, no phone pressed to her ear, no furrow in her brow dictating the fate of the Griffith Corporation. She was simply sitting in a plush velvet armchair, her silhouette sharp against the burning orange of the sunset bleeding through the window. Her shoulders, usually set in a permanent line of defense, were slumped.

Dana cleared her throat.

Helena turned. For a split second, the "Iron Lady" mask was gone. Her eyes were rimmed with red, her face slack with exhaustion. Then, she blinked, and the CEO was back. She straightened her spine, smoothing the fabric of her silk blouse.

"You're early," Helena said, her voice a little huskier than usual.

"And you're human. We all have our surprises." Dana walked past her to the crib in the center of the room. She leaned over the railing.

Penny was asleep. A tiny bundle of pink and white, her chest rising and falling in a rhythm that made the rest of the world seem chaotic. One small hand was curled into a fist near her cheek.

"God," Dana whispered. "Look at those fingers. They're microscopic."

Behind her, the fabric of the chair rustled. Helena shifted. Her right hand moved across her body, covering her left hand. Her thumb began to rub the base of her left ring finger, a rhythmic, unconscious motion.

"She has Kamden's nose," Helena said quietly.

Dana snorted, keeping her voice low. "Let's hope she gets his height and your brain. If she gets Kamden's emotional range, the poor girl is going to be an ice sculpture by kindergarten."

Helena let out a laugh. It was a rare sound, rusty and genuine. "He's not that cold, Dana."

"Please. The man signs billion-dollar mergers without blinking. I'm pretty sure his blood type is antifreeze."

"He cried."

Dana froze. She turned around slowly, eyes wide. "Excuse me?"

Helena looked at the crib, a softness entering her expression that made her look five years younger. "In the delivery room. When the nurse handed her to him. He was shaking so hard I thought he was going to drop her. He just... wept."

Dana's jaw actually dropped. "Kamden Emerson? Wept? Are you sure it wasn't allergies? Or sweat?"

"He held her like she was made of glass," Helena whispered. Her thumb continued to rub her left ring finger, harder now. "Like he was terrified he'd break her."

The nursery door clicked open, and the night nanny stepped in, nodding politely. The spell broke. Helena stood up, the softness vanishing instantly. She gestured for Dana to follow her out.

In the living room, the city skyline was a wall of glittering lights. Dana flopped onto the expansive grey sofa, noticing a garment bag draped over the armrest. The logo was unmistakable: Jasper Stone.

"Is that for tomorrow?" Dana asked, pointing. Her cheeks heated up slightly.

Helena caught the reaction. One perfectly arched eyebrow went up. "It is. And yes, Jasper dropped it off personally. He seemed very interested in whether my 'plus one' had confirmed."

"I'm just going for the free champagne," Dana mumbled, looking away.

"He asked Kamden for your measurements last week, Dana. A designer doesn't ask for measurements unless he's planning to dress you."

Dana opened her mouth to deflect, but Helena's phone buzzed on the coffee table. The screen lit up with a notification: Gala Guest List - Final Update.

The teasing atmosphere evaporated. Helena picked up the phone. Her eyes scanned the list. She stopped at a name near the bottom.

Her breath hitched. Just once. A sharp intake of air that she immediately suppressed. Her grip on the phone tightened until her knuckles turned white. She swiped the screen off and placed the phone face down on the marble table with a deliberate clack.

"Problem?" Dana asked, sensing the shift.

"Just business," Helena lied.

Footsteps echoed from the hallway leading to the study. Heavy, rhythmic steps.

Kamden Emerson walked into the room. He was still in his work clothes-a crisp white shirt with the top button undone, sleeves rolled up to his elbows revealing forearms that looked like they were carved from marble. He looked impeccable, but the lines around his eyes spoke of a bone-deep fatigue.

He nodded at Dana. "Dana."

"Kamden. Heard you're a crier now."

Kamden didn't smile. He walked straight to Helena. He didn't ask about her day. He just placed his large hand on her shoulder. His fingers squeezed, a possessive, grounding weight.

Helena leaned back into him instantly. It was a magnetic pull. For two people who ran the city, they fit together like puzzle pieces in the quiet of their home.

"Everything set for tomorrow?" Kamden asked, his voice a deep rumble against Helena's ear.

Helena looked at the black screen of her phone. The name she had seen burned in her mind. Cason Vincent.

"Yes," she said, her voice steady. "Everything is perfect."

Dana stood up, feeling like an intruder in the sudden heaviness of the room. "I should go. Big day. Lots of hairspray required."

"See you there," Helena said, but her eyes were distant.

Dana slipped out the front door. The lock clicked shut, sealing the couple inside. Helena reached up and covered Kamden's hand with her own. Her left hand. The one that throbbed when it rained. The one she would never tell him about.

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The CEO's Substitute: Love In London The CEO's Substitute: Love In London Bella Youngman Modern
“My husband Kamden and I were the most powerful couple in New York, an unbreakable alliance of wealth and influence. To the world, we were perfect, especially with our new baby daughter, Penny, waiting for us at home. But the illusion shattered at the Jasper Stone gala when Cason Vincent walked in. He wasn't just a rival; he was a dead ringer for Kamden-a cruel, predatory mirror image who seemed to know the secrets of the year I spent in London. In front of the city's elite, a socialite screamed that I was a fraud, accusing me of using Kamden as a "substitute" for the man I truly loved. The music stopped, and the room turned into a sea of judgmental whispers. I expected my husband to shield me, but the paranoia in his eyes was sharper than any rumor. He grabbed my scarred left hand-the one I had ruined to save his life years ago-and squeezed it until I winced in pain. "Am I just a replacement?" he hissed, his voice trembling with a terrifying insecurity. He didn't see the wife who had sacrificed her world-class piano career for him; he saw a woman who had settled for a copy. The injustice of it felt like a physical blow. I had destroyed my body and my future to keep him safe, yet he was ready to believe a stranger's lies over three years of marriage. He didn't want the truth; he wanted me to beg for his forgiveness for a sin I never committed. I realized then that my silence wasn't an admission of guilt, but my last shred of dignity. I pulled my hand away and walked out of the gala alone, leaving Kamden standing face-to-face with the man who had come to dismantle our lives.”
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Chapter 39 No.39

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