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After My Fiancé Used Me to Protect His Mistress Novel Cover

After My Fiancé Used Me to Protect His Mistress

The metal gate groaned as it slid open, a sound that had bookended the last three years of my life. I stepped out of the Federal Correctional Institution in Danbury, the upstate New York air biting at my exposed skin. I wore the same cheap gray slacks and white blouse I’d been arrested in—fabrics that now hung loose on a frame stripped of softness by prison rations and sleepless nights. My thumb drifted unconsciously to my left wrist, tracing the jagged ridge of the scar there. It wasn’t a nervous tic. It was a grounding mechanism. A reminder of the first time I’d done this for him. Ten years. That was the tally today. A decade of my life bartered away in chunks of eighteen months, two years, three years.
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Chapter 1

The metal gate groaned as it slid open, a sound that had bookended the last three years of my life. I stepped out of the Federal Correctional Institution in Danbury, the upstate New York air biting at my exposed skin. I wore the same cheap gray slacks and white blouse I’d been arrested in—fabrics that now hung loose on a frame stripped of softness by prison rations and sleepless nights.

My thumb drifted unconsciously to my left wrist, tracing the jagged ridge of the scar there. It wasn’t a nervous tic. It was a grounding mechanism. A reminder of the first time I’d done this for him.

Ten years. That was the tally today. A decade of my life bartered away in chunks of eighteen months, two years, three years. I inhaled deeply, tasting freedom, but it didn't taste like fresh air. It tasted like expectation. Today wasn’t just a release date; it was our anniversary. The end of the long game. Jason had promised. *One last time, Sloan. Then it’s just us. Forever.*

A sleek black Bentley idled at the curb, its polished surface looking alien against the backdrop of razor wire and gray concrete. My heart hammered a frantic rhythm against my ribs—not fear, but a desperate, starving hope.

I walked toward the car, my legs feeling unsteady on pavement that wasn't enclosed by walls. The rear window was tinted, an obsidian mirror reflecting my gaunt face, but I knew who was inside. I reached for the handle, my fingers trembling.

The door swung open.

Jason sat in the driver’s seat, the leather interior smelling of sandalwood and money. He turned, flashing that practiced, devastating smile that had been my undoing for a decade. But it didn't reach his eyes. His gaze was flat, assessing me like an asset that had depreciated in value.

"Get in, Sloan," he said. No *I missed you*. No *I love you*.

I slid into the passenger seat, the heavy door thudding shut and sealing us in a vacuum of silence. That’s when I saw the movement in the rearview mirror.

"Bryce?" The name caught in my throat, a ragged whisper.

My nine-year-old son sat in the back, small and rigid. He didn't look up. His eyes were glued to a tablet screen, his fingers moving mechanically over a game. He wore a stiff polo shirt that looked too expensive for a child, his hair gelled into a miniature version of his father’s style.

"Baby, look at me," I pleaded, twisting in my seat, the seatbelt cutting into my neck. "Mommy’s here."

Bryce flinched. He looked up then, and the expression on his face wasn't joy. It was recoil.

"Jason," I said, my voice hardening. "Why is he looking at me like that?"

Jason put the car in gear, merging onto the highway with aggressive precision. "He’s confused, Sloan. It’s been three years. You can’t expect him to just flip a switch."

"I expect him to know his mother," I snapped.

Bryce spoke then, his voice high and reedy, reciting words that felt foreign in his mouth. "Good mothers don't go to jail."

The air left my lungs. It was a script. I could hear the cadence of someone else’s voice in his tone—Mariah’s.

"Bryce, that’s not—" I started, reaching back.

"Sit back, Sloan," Jason ordered, his hand shooting out to grip my forearm. His fingers dug in, not a caress, but a warning. "Don't upset him."

I stared at Jason, really looked at him. The expensive suit was armor. The cufflinks were gold. He looked immaculate, untouched by the ruin he’d left me in. I looked for the ring box. The glove compartment, his pocket, the center console. Nothing.

Instead, he reached into the door pocket and pulled out a blue folder. He tossed it into my lap.

"What is this?" I asked, the paper feeling heavy, ominous.

"The next step," Jason said, staring straight ahead at the road.

We were passing the exit for Westchester. The turn for our home. He didn't blink. He kept driving south, the skyline of Manhattan rising like jagged teeth in the distance.

"Jason, you missed the turn. Where are we going? City Hall?"

"We have a stop to make first," he said, his voice devoid of warmth.

I opened the folder. It wasn't a marriage license. It was a confession.

My eyes scanned the legal jargon, my stomach churning. *Shell companies. Tax evasion. Five hundred million dollars.* The name *Mariah Ryan* wasn't on the paper, but her fingerprints were all over the scheme. It was sloppy, greedy, and massive. And at the bottom, a blank line waiting for *Sloan Kelley*.

"You’re joking," I whispered.

"Mariah has a minor tax issue," Jason said casually, as if discussing a parking ticket. "She’s brilliant, Sloan, but she got careless with the offshore accounts. We need a fall guy. Someone with a history."

"I just got out," I said, my voice rising. "Today. It’s our anniversary, Jason. You promised."

"And I keep my promises," he said, his eyes cold as glaciers. "But loyalty is a two-way street. You sign this, you take the heat for the shell companies—it’s white-collar, minimum security this time—and then we’re done. Then we get the house in the Hamptons. Then we’re a family."

The car slowed. We weren't at a courthouse. We were pulling up to the curb of the 19th Precinct on the Upper East Side. The brick building loomed over us, a fortress of corruption I knew too well.

Jason hit the power locks. *Click.*

He turned to me, the charm vanishing completely, replaced by the sneer of a man who believed he owned me.

"This is the test, Sloan," he hissed. "The final sacrifice. Sign the paper, confess to the detectives waiting inside, or get out of my car and rot on the street. But if you walk away, you never see Bryce again."

I looked back at my son. He was watching us now, clutching the tablet like a shield, his eyes wide with fear and confusion. He didn't see a mother. He saw a criminal.

I looked down at the pen Jason held out to me. My hand didn't tremble this time. The hope that had sustained me for ten years shattered, sharp and final.

"You don't want a wife, Jason," I said softly, the realization settling in my bones like lead. "You want a scapegoat."

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