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After My Groom Betrayed Me for the Judge’s Daughter Novel Cover

After My Groom Betrayed Me for the Judge’s Daughter

The scent of rosemary and garlic hung heavy in our tiny Brooklyn apartment, masking the damp, metallic smell of the peeling radiator. The candles I had lit an hour ago were melting into deformed stubs, pooling wax onto the cheap tablecloth. I smoothed the front of my thrifted dress, my heart hammering a frantic, hopeful rhythm against my ribs. Tonight was the night. Lucian had passed the New York bar exam with the highest honors and secured an associate position at the highly coveted firm of Sterling & Vance. After four years of paying his rent, typing his briefs, and surviving on instant ramen, we had finally made it. The front door clicked open. Lucian stepped inside, shaking the autumn rain from his umbrella. He was wearing a new bespoke suit—charcoal wool, sharp enough to cut glass. He didn't look like the exhausted boy who used to study on our worn mattress.
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Chapter 2

Four months. That was how long it took to trade the scent of cheap Brooklyn linoleum for the suffocating perfume of Manhattan’s elite.

Standing in the shadows of the Plaza Hotel’s Grand Ballroom, I adjusted the painful plastic earpiece coiled behind my neck. My feet throbbed in clearance-rack heels, but I kept my spine rigid, gripping my event-management clipboard like a shield. The room was a sea of bespoke tuxedos and dripping diamonds—the exact world Lucian had sold me out for.

Then, the harmony of clinking crystal shattered.

It didn’t happen with a shout, but with a synchronized, mechanical vibration. A hundred cell phones buzzing at once. Whispers hissed through the ballroom like an open gas line.

"Embezzlement," the voice of my floor manager crackled in my ear, thick with panic. "The Times just broke it. The founder skimmed two million. The donors are walking."

I watched the exodus begin. Silk gowns swept toward the exits, faces twisted in aristocratic disgust. The charity was bleeding out in real-time.

Through the panic, I spotted her. Congresswoman Emerson Williams, tonight’s keynote speaker, was marching toward the service corridor, her signature silver bob slicing through the chaos. Her aides trailed behind her like anxious ducklings, already dialing damage-control numbers.

Instinct, cold and sharp, hijacked my limbs. I abandoned my post, my heels biting into the marble as I sprinted to cut off her exit.

"Congresswoman." I stepped directly into her path.

Her lead security detail immediately shifted, reaching for my shoulder, but Emerson held up a hand. Her eyes—shrewd, assessing, and utterly devoid of patience—locked onto me. "You have exactly ten seconds to move, girl."

"They're walking out because they feel like fools," I said, the words firing from my chest like bullets. "If you leave now, you're just another politician fleeing a sinking ship. But if you take that podium and pivot, you own the narrative."

Emerson didn't move, but the air around her seemed to crackle. "Eight seconds. Pitch it."

"Don't defend the founder. Crucify him," I urged, stepping closer, ignoring the glare of her security. "You pledge an independent audit of the charity by tomorrow morning. You re-center the victims. You tell this room full of billionaires that walking away now makes them complicit in the theft, but staying makes them the saviors. Turn this scandal into a crusade for transparency."

Silence stretched in the dimly lit corridor. I could hear the frantic pounding of my own pulse in my ears.

Emerson’s gaze dropped to my cheap nametag, then back to my eyes. A slow, dangerous smile curved her lips. "What's your name?"

"Raya. Raya Stevens."

"Well, Raya Stevens," she murmured, adjusting the lapels of her sharp ivory suit. "Let's go make these rich bastards open their checkbooks."

Ten minutes later, Emerson Williams delivered my exact words from the podium. The exodus halted. The applause that followed was deafening. The night wasn't just saved; it broke fundraising records.

The victory tasted like champagne, but by sunrise, it had turned to ash.

I sat in the cramped breakroom of the event agency, staring at the muted television screen. The morning news flashed a chyron: *JUNIOR BOARD MEMBER SAVES GALA.*

Jennifer Vasquez sat perfectly poised on the studio couch, her dark hair blown out into loose, wealthy waves.

"It was a crisis, of course," Jennifer told the anchor, placing a manicured hand over her heart. "But I knew we had to pivot. I told the Congresswoman, we must pledge an independent audit. We must turn this into a crusade for transparency."

My coffee went cold in my hands. The mug trembled, not from sorrow, but from a rage so pure it felt like a physical weight pressing against my ribs. She hadn't just stolen Lucian. She was stripping me of my mind, my work, my very existence.

The breakroom door swung open. My manager, a perpetually sweating man named Davis, wouldn't meet my eyes. He held a thin white envelope.

"Raya. We need to let you go."

I stood up slowly, the cheap plastic chair scraping against the floor. "The gala raised an extra million dollars last night because of me."

"The junior board requested a staff restructuring," Davis muttered to the floorboards. "Miss Vasquez specifically noted that your presence was... disruptive. I'm sorry. Her family's connections... we can't afford to lose their patronage."

I looked from Davis's cowardly posture back to the television, where Jennifer was flashing a brilliant, empty smile. She thought she was crushing me. She thought she was stomping out the last dying ember of the girl she had humiliated in that Brooklyn apartment.

I took the envelope from his trembling hand. My knuckles were white, but my voice was a deadly calm.

"Tell Miss Vasquez I appreciate the lesson," I said softly.

I walked out into the biting Manhattan wind, the cold air filling my lungs. I was done crying. I was done playing by the rules of people who inherited their power. If Jennifer Vasquez wanted a war of influence, I was going to need a bigger weapon.

And I knew exactly which Congresswoman I was going to call.

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