Font Size
15px

CLARK POV

I managed to keep Clare off my back by finding the perfect distraction. Sothing loud, dangerous, and exciting enough to wipe moville from her brain entirely.

Her motorcycle.

Or, as I like to call it: the two-wheeled death trap.

I had never in my life wanted to ride it—just being in the garage with it made uneasy. But desperate tis called for reckless decisions. So I told her I wanted to learn how to ride. Her eyes lit up in a way that imdiately made regret opening my mouth.

She got that wicked grin she always gets when her common sense switches off. It’s the sa look she had the ti she jumped off our garage roof with a bedsheet because she "just wanted to test gravity." Spoiler: gravity worked.

Still, I threw myself into it.

It wasn’t easy, considering how dangerously close she’d co to Googling "moville University." But I found the perfect distraction: adrenaline.

Her bike.

Her "death trap," as I like to call it, had been sitting in the garage like so cursed object from an old movie. She adored it. It scared the hell out of . So, I told her I wanted to learn how to ride it.

And just like that, her curiosity about colleges vanished. Poof. Like magic. Replaced by sothing far more chaotic.

She got that look in her eyes—the wild one, where her common sense completely shuts off. I swear, when Clare’s logic takes a lunch break, soone ends up in a hospital. I’ve seen it too many tis.

But I volunteered. Sacrificed myself to the cause.

And I ca out of that first week with two solid conclusions:

One: Clare is an absolutely terrible teacher.

Two: Riding a bike isn’t as terrifying as I thought—as long as the person behind the throttle has at least so regard for staying alive. Which Clare does not.

We fell—hard—on our very first try. She had insisted on riding behind "for support," which turned out to be code for "leaning into every turn like a psychopath." I panicked, twisted the throttle too much, and we tipped over like a sack of bricks.

I swear I saw my ancestors for a second.

Clare? She was laughing her head off. "You looked like you were trying to summon the bike gods with your panic flailing," she said, brushing gravel from her jeans like it was just a Tuesday.

The second crash ca when I tried to go solo. Clare was watching from the driveway, waving like a proud parent. I made it ten feet before panicking, forgetting which handle did what, and crashing into a trash can. I managed to stay up for exactly ten seconds before I freaked out, tried to brake too suddenly, and skidded across our neighbor’s gravel like a flopping fish. Clare was filming. Of course.

By the third fall, I’d gained enough experience to know how not to cry in front of my sister. Progress? Honestly, I don’t even rember how that one happened. It was just a blur of panic, gravel, and the sound of Clare yelling, "YOU’RE SUPPOSED TO TURN, NOT LAUNCH!"

Two weeks of bruises, gravel rash, and repeatedly fearing for my life. But I endured it. Because every ti she dragged outside, every ti she adjusted my helt or shoved toward the bike with a maniacal grin, she wasn’t thinking about college.

She kept dragging out for "lessons" over the next two weeks. Not because I was getting better. No—because watching flail around on two wheels was apparently more entertaining than Netflix.

But I didn’t complain. Not really.

Because it was working.

Every ti she laughed, every ti she handed the helt or adjusted the mirror or yelled, "Don’t die, dumbass!" as I rolled down the driveway, she wasn’t thinking about college.

She wasn’t thinking about moville.

And that was the whole point.

anwhile, Mom and Dad were on a full-blown campaign to get Clare into school. It was kind of impressive—like watching a pair of high-level politicians spin a press tour.

They tried everything. "We’ll talk to soone who knows soone," Mom said. "Your grades are good enough. You don’t need to apply—we’ll make it work."

Dad even offered to "call in a favor," which sounded shady but also kind of cool, in a mobster-movie sort of way. They promised financial help, emotional support, therapy, tutors—hell, they would’ve offered her a private butler if it ant she’d say yes.

Clare just stared at them like they’d asked her to join a cult.

"No, thanks," she said, casually flipping through one of her old sketchbooks. "I passed my exams. Doesn’t an I want to waste the next four years proving it to strangers."

She was stubborn before. But now? Now she was sothing else—deliberate. She wasn’t just avoiding college. She was setting fire to the very idea of it.

She didn’t just refuse college. She rejected the whole idea of it like it was a scam. The more they tried, the more she doubled down. She got snarkier. aner, even. Said college was just a "four-year delay for people too scared to fail."

Dad nearly popped a vein the last ti she said that.

But ? I was quietly relieved.

Because if she suddenly changed her mind—if she wanted to go to moville—then everything I’d done would fall apart. My entire stolen future would shatter.

And the guilt? It was already killing .

My prediction was right. The more they pushed, the more she resisted.

I had other offers. Good ones. Schools that wanted . Schools I’d worked hard to get into. But none of them were moville. None of them had what Sara and I had planned for. None of them were my dream.

And through all this chaos, I kept lying.

To everyone.

To Mom and Dad, who thought I was going to moville. To Sara, who texted almost every day, asking if I’d gotten my acceptance email yet, still excited about us eting on campus.

I told her I got in.

I told her I was ready.

I told her we’d see each other soon.

And every ti I texted her back, my gut twisted a little more. Because I knew the truth. I wasn’t accepted. I had faked my way into Clare’s spot. I stole it—her only acceptance, her only offer—and she didn’t even want it. But that didn’t make it right.

I justified it in my head every day. She wasn’t interested. She hated school. She didn’t even want to apply. I had the grades. The recomndations. The drive. I belonged at moville.

Right?

But that guilt... man, it’s sticky. It clings. Even when you try to forget it.

Clare suspicious. She knew sothing was off.

But I wasn’t ready for her to know.

Not yet.

So I threw myself back into the driving lessons. Into the distractions. Into anything that kept the truth buried for just one more day.

Because if Clare ever found out I took her spot—chose her future for her—she’d never forgive .

And maybe, just maybe, I’d never forgive myself either.

********

So yeah... when the offer letter finally ca through on Clare’s email, I hijacked it.

Logged into her account, deleted the ssage, cleared the trash, cleared the history. Scrubbed every trace of it from her devices like it never existed. Just like that, her acceptance to moville vanished.

Tomorrow, I’ll be gone.

Out of this house, out of this town, out of the ss I created. I keep telling myself that if I can just make it to campus—just put a few miles between and the truth—then maybe it’ll all be fine. Maybe Clare won’t care that much. Maybe she’ll forgive when the dust settles. Maybe she’ll never even find out.

But I hate that I’m leaving her.

I really do.

It’ll be the first ti in our lives that we’ll be more than a room apart. First ti I won’t hear her yelling for her charger or see her lounging upside down on the couch watching true cri like it’s cartoons. And maybe she doesn’t say it outright—but she feels it too. I can see it in the way she’s been clinging to the whole day. Not physically, at least not at first, but she hasn’t left my side since breakfast. Followed around like a shadow. Made dumb jokes. Called a nerd five tis in a row. Forced to taste her cereal even though it had actual marshmallows floating in it like soggy rocks.

That’s Clare. Her way of saying she’ll miss .

And now, it’s nightti. The house is quiet. Everyone’s asleep—or pretending to be.

I’m lying on my bed, waiting.

Because I know she’s coming.

She won’t sleep in her room tonight. Not knowing I’ll be gone tomorrow. Not knowing that the person she’s shared her entire life with is about to vanish down a highway toward a dream that wasn’t even mine to take.

Five minutes, tops. That’s what I gave it.

I was wrong.

It took three.

The door bangs open like it’s been kicked, and there she is, standing in the doorway with that dumb grin on her face and her stupid pillow in hand. Her hair’s a ss, she’s wearing the hoodie I thought I lost three months ago, and she’s looking at like I’m not allowed to sleep without her permission.

Then she jumps.

Right on top of .

"Jesus—Clare!" I groan, because she weighs a ton. I’m blaming the ten bags of snacks she downs every week and refuses to admit to. "Get off, you wildebeest."

She laughs and rolls over like she owns the bed. I try to kick her out, shove her with my feet, threaten to toss her off the side—but we both know how this ends. Always the sa way. After the third failed attempt, I just give up and pull the blanket over both of us.

She wins. Again.

If I’d known sooner this would be the last ti we’d sleep in the sa room like this—just us, just twins being dumb and stubborn and ourselves—I would’ve made her stay every single night this week. I wouldn’t have faked sleep or locked the door like I did two days ago. I wouldn’t have rolled my eyes when she brought her pillow the first night and claid she "heard ghosts."

If I’d known what I’d beco after tomorrow...

I wouldn’t have gone.

I would’ve stayed. Said screw moville. Said screw the lie. I would’ve told her everything, even if it ruined everything, because she deserves better than being left behind by her brother and betrayed without knowing it.

But I didn’t.

I told myself this wasn’t goodbye. That she’d crash here again during sester breaks. That she’d prank-call from ho pretending to be a college loan agent. That nothing would really change.

And maybe that lie got through tonight.

Because the truth—the brutal, crawling truth—is that next ti I ca it would be the last ti and I would be a shell of myself

You are reading Claimed by the Alpha and the Vampire Prince: Masquerading as a Man Chapter 140: Before The Horror on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
Share with your friends
Library saves books to your account. Reading History saves recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You may also like

Alpha's Dark Desires cover
Same author

Alpha's Dark Desires

lucymumbua ·Fantasy

AlphaKaneisnotoriousinthewerewolfworld—aruthlessleaderwhoseenemiestrembleathisapproach.Knownasthe“Ladykiller,”hehasleftatrailofsatisfiedwomen,allye...

Warlock Apprentice cover
Similar genre

Warlock Apprentice

牧狐 ·Fantasy

Thestatusofawizardistranscendentinallcontinentsandintheuniversalplane. Mysterious,wise,cruelandbloodthirstyaresynonymouswithwizards.Butwhatdoesarea...

Death Notice cover
Trending now

Death Notice

Gluttonous Monk ·Horror

Heisagiftedandintelligentyoungman.Heisamurdererthatenjoysthebloodshed.He...Readmore Heisagiftedandintelligentyoungman.Heisamurdererthatenjoystheblo...

No reviews yet. Be the first reader to leave one.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.