
After Framing Me, My Lover Married His Socialite
Chapter 3
I was half-dragged, half-carried through the service exit, my heels scraping against the polished marble floor. The security guards deposited me roughly on the sidewalk, my borrowed dress hitching up my thighs as I stumbled to regain my balance. Tears of humiliation burned behind my eyes, but I refused to let them fall. Not here. Not now.
As I straightened my dress with trembling fingers, a soft voice called from behind me.
"Olivia? Wait."
I turned to find Whitney Evans standing in the doorway, her champagne gown shimmering under the hotel's exterior lights. My grandmother's sapphire ring—my ring—glinted mockingly on her finger as she stepped toward me.
"I'm so sorry about that scene," she said, her voice dripping with a sweetness that didn't reach her eyes. "Jonathan was just... surprised to see you. We all were."
I stared at her, searching for sincerity in her perfectly made-up face and finding none. My hand instinctively went to my throat, my fingers tracing the scar tissue left by the poison.
"Look," Whitney glanced over her shoulder, then leaned closer. "I think there's been a terrible misunderstanding. Jonathan told me everything about your... arrangement." She lowered her voice. "Why don't we talk somewhere private? I'd like to clear things up."
I hesitated. Every instinct screamed that this was wrong, that I should walk away. But what choice did I have? Where would I go? Who would listen to a mute ex-convict with nothing but a thrift store dress and twenty dollars to her name?
Whitney's crimson lips curved into what might have passed for a sympathetic smile. "There's an alley behind the hotel. We can talk there without causing another scene."
She turned and walked toward the side of the building, glancing back once to ensure I was following. Like a moth drawn to a flame, I trailed after her, desperate for any explanation that might make sense of the nightmare my life had become.
The alley was narrow and dark, littered with garbage and smelling of rot. The sounds of the city seemed muffled here, as if we'd stepped into a pocket dimension where no one could hear or see us. Whitney's heels clicked against the pavement as she led me deeper into the shadows.
"You know," she said, her back to me, "Jonathan told me how you volunteered to take the fall for him. Very noble." She turned, her expression hardening. "Very stupid."
Movement in the shadows caught my attention. Two men emerged, their massive frames blocking what little light filtered into the alley. I recognized the predatory stance, the flat, dead eyes—I'd seen enough men like them in prison to know exactly what they were.
"Did you really think he'd wait for you?" Whitney's voice had lost all pretense of warmth. "That he'd throw away everything for some nobody from the wrong side of the tracks?"
I backed away, but there was nowhere to go. One of the men grabbed me from behind, his meaty arm locking around my throat. I clawed at him, my silent screams trapped in my damaged vocal cords.
"Make it look like a mugging gone wrong," Whitney instructed, stepping back to avoid getting blood on her designer gown. "And make sure she ends up in the Hudson."
The first blow caught me in the stomach, driving the air from my lungs. The second cracked against my ribs with a sickening sound. I tasted blood as I collapsed to my knees, the world spinning around me.
They were methodical, these men. Professional. Each strike calculated to cause maximum damage without killing me too quickly. Through swollen eyes, I saw Whitney watching, her expression one of cold satisfaction.
When they finally dragged me toward the water, my consciousness was already fading. The icy shock of the Hudson enveloped me as they pushed me in, the current immediately pulling at my broken body.
As I sank beneath the dark surface, a strange vision swam before my eyes: my grandmother, sitting alone in her nursing home room, tears streaming down her lined face as she called my name. The walls were peeling, the floor stained. She looked so small, so abandoned.
"Livvy," she seemed to whisper. "Why didn't you come?"
The guilt and heartbreak were more crushing than the water filling my lungs. I had failed her. I had failed myself. And for what? For a man who had discarded me like garbage, for a love that had never been real.
As darkness claimed me, one final thought crystallized in my fading consciousness: This couldn't be the end. It couldn't all have been for nothing.
Somehow, someday, they would pay.
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