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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 4

The Roosevelt Room smelled of lemon polish, bitter coffee, and impending executions. I sat at the far end of the long mahogany table, my tablet perfectly aligned with the edge of the wood, watching Christina Bennett prepare her strike.

"The First Lady’s education rollout is admirable, Mr. President," Christina said, her voice a masterclass in feigned regret. "But it simply lacks the structural integrity to survive the upcoming budget battles. If we allow her to launch independently at 2:00 PM on Tuesday, she’ll be exposed. We need to absorb her initiative into your 2:15 PM West Wing domestic policy briefing. It’s the only way to protect the administration."

The President frowned, tapping his gold fountain pen against his legal pad. He was leaning toward her logic. The invisible wall was closing in.

I didn't wait for permission. I leaned forward, the heavy leather of my chair whispering in the silent room. "With respect, Ms. Bennett, that assessment fundamentally misunderstands the funding mechanisms of the bill."

Every head at the table snapped toward me. Christina’s smile froze, the corners of her mouth tightening into microscopic white lines.

"The initiative doesn't rely on the discretionary budget," I continued, my voice a smooth, ringing chime that carried effortlessly across the mahogany. "It utilizes the surplus allocations from the 1994 Elementary and Secondary Education Act reauthorization. Specifically, Subsection 4, Paragraph B. Furthermore, internal polling from three key swing states shows that if the West Wing absorbs this, we look bureaucratic. If the First Lady champions it independently, we secure a twelve-point bump among suburban women. She isn't exposed, Mr. President. She’s your vanguard."

Silence hung heavy in the air. I didn't blink. I held the President's gaze, feeding him the exact data he craved.

Slowly, the President’s frown smoothed out. He pointed the cap of his pen at me. "She’s right, Christina. The funding is already fenced. Let Victoria have the floor at two o'clock. Clear my 2:15."

"Of course, sir," Christina murmured. But beneath the table, her knuckles were bone-white. She slowly turned her head, her eyes locking onto mine. It wasn't a look of defeat. It was the cold, clinical stare of a predator assessing a new, dangerous threat. The political strangulation had failed, and Christina Bennett had just realized I was the one holding the scalpel.

She didn't retreat; she went digging.

It took her exactly three weeks to unearth the bones of my past. I should have expected it. Washington was a city built on leverage, and Christina was its chief architect. I just didn't anticipate the weapon she would choose to wield.

The trap was set during a joint cabinet committee meeting in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building. I was organizing my briefing folders when the heavy double doors swung open.

The temperature in my veins plummeted.

He walked in wearing a custom navy suit that cost more than my first car, his dark hair perfectly styled, his jaw set with that familiar, devastating confidence. Lucian Herrera.

Christina Bennett walked in right behind him, a smug, venomous satisfaction radiating from her posture. "Everyone," she announced, taking her seat. "Given the complex jurisdictional overlap of the First Lady's new initiatives, the West Wing has retained external counsel from Sterling & Vance to ensure we don't overstep. Mr. Herrera will be advising us moving forward."

Lucian’s eyes found mine across the room. He expected to see shock. He expected to see the frayed, desperate girl from Brooklyn who used to type his notes.

I gave him absolutely nothing. My heartbeat remained a slow, rhythmic drum against my ribs.

Thirty minutes into the meeting, Lucian made his move. He stood up, unbuttoning his suit jacket with practiced theatricality. "Ms. Stevens, I’ve reviewed your proposed framework for the federal grant distribution," he said, his voice dripping with that persuasive, courtroom cadence I used to adore. "It’s a valiant effort. Truly. But it’s legally porous. You’re violating the Commerce Clause by bypassing state educational boards. If you proceed, you’ll tie the administration up in litigation for years."

He leaned his hands on the table, offering me a patronizing, sympathetic look. "I can help you restructure it, Raya. But you have to concede the distribution rights back to the West Wing."

He was trying to corner me. He wanted me to break, to ask for his help, to submit to his brilliance in front of the most powerful people in the country.

I let the silence stretch for three agonizing seconds. Then, I closed my folder with a sharp, definitive snap.

"Mr. Herrera," I said, my voice dropping to a register so cold it seemed to frost the air between us. "Your concern would be touching, if it weren't entirely obsolete."

Lucian’s confident smirk faltered.

"You’re citing *United States v. Lopez*, assuming the grants are conditional upon interstate commerce," I continued, my eyes tracking the subtle, panicked shift in his posture. "But if you had read past page four of my brief, you would have seen the grants are structured under the General Welfare Clause, specifically mirroring the precedent upheld in *South Dakota v. Dole*. The state boards aren't bypassed; they are incentivized through waiver programs. It’s bulletproof. A first-year law student could spot the distinction."

I leaned back, tilting my head. "Tell me, does Sterling & Vance usually bill the White House for incomplete reading, or is this a special service you provide?"

A stifled cough echoed from the Secretary of Education.

Lucian’s face drained of color. His mouth opened, but the slick, polished legal arguments died in his throat. He stared at me, his eyes wide, finally realizing the terrifying truth. He hadn't cornered a frightened girl. He had walked blindly into the jaws of a woman who had spent the last year learning how to tear men like him apart.

I shifted my gaze to Christina Bennett. Her smug smile had vanished entirely, replaced by a tight, rigid mask of alarm.

"If there are no further elementary legal questions," I said, seamlessly addressing the room, "let's move on to the budget."

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