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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 3

The Manhattan wind was a physical blow, biting through my thin coat and stinging the tears right out of my eyes. But I welcomed the pain. It sharpened the chaotic buzz in my skull into a single, lethal point. Standing on the corner of 5th and 59th, I didn't hail a cab. I reached into my pocket and pulled out the heavy, embossed cardstock Congresswoman Emerson Williams had slipped into my palm the night before.

My fingers were stiff with cold as I dialed the private cell number. It rang twice.

"Speak," a voice barked.

"It's Raya Stevens. Jennifer Vasquez just fired me on national television."

A dry, raspy chuckle echoed through the receiver. "I saw the broadcast. Vasquez sounded like a panicked parrot reading off a teleprompter. She didn't have the spine to look into the camera when she delivered your lines. I knew it was stolen valor the second she opened her glossed mouth."

"She has the Vasquez name," I said, my voice dropping to a low, hard register. "She has the network. I have nothing but the clothes in my duffel bag."

"Good," Emerson snapped. The sound of a lighter flicking punctuated her sentence. "People with safety nets get lazy. I don't hire victims, Raya. I hire weapons. Be at my D.C. office by eight a.m. Monday. We have a country to run."

The line went dead. I stared at the darkened screen, the reflection of the city traffic washing over my face. I wasn't going to be the girl crying in a Brooklyn apartment ever again. I was going to Washington.

***

A year later, the scent of cheap linoleum and instant ramen had been entirely replaced by the suffocating aromas of expensive bourbon, floor wax, and desperation.

The Capitol Hill reception was a masterclass in gilded claustrophobia. I stood near the edge of the mahogany bar, nursing a club soda, my eyes tracking the subtle currents of power in the room. I was no longer a junior event planner in frayed thrift-store fabric. I wore a tailored navy sheath dress bought with my own congressional salary, my spine rigidly aligned with Emerson's expectations.

Across the room, the atmosphere curdled. Senator Hastings, his face flushed a violent, mottled red from too much scotch, was backing the French Ambassador against a marble pillar. The Senator's finger jabbed aggressively into the diplomat's personal space. The Ambassador's jaw locked, his eyes darting toward his security detail. An international incident was brewing in real-time.

I didn't wait for Emerson's nod. I moved, my heels silent on the thick Persian rug.

"Senator Hastings," I interrupted, my voice a smooth, carrying chime that sliced cleanly through his drunken tirade. I stepped directly between the two men, offering the Senator a warm, blinding smile. "Forgive the intrusion, but the Majority Leader is looking for you. He mentioned something about the agricultural subsidies in your district. He seemed quite eager."

Greed instantly eclipsed the belligerence in the Senator's glassy eyes. "The subsidies? Where is he?"

"Just by the terrace doors. I'd hurry, sir. You know how impatient he gets."

As Hastings stumbled away, I turned to the Ambassador, seamlessly switching to fluent, flawless French. *"A thousand apologies, Ambassador. The Senator's passion for domestic policy often outpaces his hospitality. May I show you to the private tasting room?"*

The diplomat's rigid shoulders dropped an inch. *"You are very kind, Mademoiselle."*

I escorted him away from the glaring lights, defusing the bomb without a single casualty. When I finally turned back toward the main floor, my gaze collided with a pair of icy, assessing blue eyes.

First Lady Victoria Manning stood by the grand staircase, surrounded by her Secret Service detail. She wasn't looking at the politicians or the donors. She was looking exclusively at me. She offered a single, microscopic nod.

By the end of the week, my transfer papers from the Capitol to the East Wing of the White House had been signed, sealed, and expedited.

***

The White House was a different kind of battlefield. The knives here weren't drawn in the open; they were slipped between your ribs with a smile.

Six months into my tenure as the First Lady's deputy chief of staff, I sat alone in my cramped office, the blue light of my monitor reflecting in the dark windowpanes. The rest of the staff had gone home hours ago, but my eyes were locked on the administration's master scheduling matrix.

Something was wrong. The rhythm was off.

I traced the digital color blocks. Victoria was slated to launch her flagship education initiative at a children's hospital in Alexandria next Tuesday at 2:00 PM. It was the culmination of months of our work. But buried deep within the West Wing's restricted docket—a folder I had spent three weeks quietly learning how to breach—was a sudden, unannounced presidential press briefing on the exact same education bill.

Scheduled for 2:15 PM.

My blood ran cold. If the President took the podium fifteen minutes after Victoria arrived at the hospital, the press pool would abandon her entirely. She would be visually and politically erased from her own victory.

I checked the digital signature on the West Wing docket revision.

*C. Bennett.*

Christina Bennett. The President's Senior Advisor.

I leaned back in my chair, the leather creaking in the silent room. My pulse didn't race; it steadied into a cold, lethal cadence. Christina wasn't just managing the President's time. She was actively building a wall around the Oval Office, brick by invisible brick, and isolating the First Lady. It was a subtle, brilliant act of political strangulation.

I reached for my encrypted phone, my thumb hovering over Victoria's direct line. Lucian and Jennifer had taught me how it felt to be blindsided in the dark. But Christina Bennett was about to learn what happened when you tried to play games with a woman who had already survived the fire.

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