Clay Harker was the kind of political fixer people hired when they wanted to win and pretended not to care how.
Brilliant, ruthless, and useful in every room he entered, Clay knew how to turn sincerity into messaging, loyalty into leverage, and ordinary human weakness into strategy. Then an internal dossier leaks, exposing the machinery behind a grassroots campaign built on transparency and clean hands. Overnight, Clay becomes toxic: the hidden wolf behind the movement’s moral promise.
So he reaches for one last tactic.
A blank mask. A desperate wish. The face they would forgive.
He wakes as Claire Chen: young, gentle-faced, soft-spoken, and easy to underestimate. Everything Clay was is suddenly hidden behind a face that makes people lean closer, explain themselves, protect her, desire her, trust her. Claire has no ID, no past, no records, and no one who can prove she exists. But she has Clay’s mind, Clay’s instincts, and a campaign that still needs saving.
To survive, Claire does what Clay always did best. She reads the room. Finds the pressure point. Becomes whatever people need her to be.
But the better Claire gets at being believed, the harder it becomes to tell where the disguise ends. The campaign says it wants truth. Claire survives by choosing exactly what not to show. And Luke Sullivan, Clay’s former protégé, Claire’s borrowed shelter, and the first person she cannot bear to keep using, may be the one person she has to betray in order to stay safe.
Clay Harker was a wolf.
Claire Chen is what happens when the wolf learns how to look like the lamb.
This story is very good and is really different. The writing and dialogues are good, and the characters are interesting, but the MC is the best part by far. I don't know how to explain without spoiling the plot but the way she lies is fun to read and she doesn't come across as evil since she's desperate. From the description I thought it would be all politics but there is a lot of drama too which is well written.
My only complaint so far was the beginning was a little slow. It wasn't bad but the best parts start around chapter 4 or 5.
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