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After My Husband Framed Me for His Crimes Novel Cover

After My Husband Framed Me for His Crimes

The crystal chandelier cast dancing shadows across the white tablecloth as I sat stiffly in my chair, trying not to fidget. Five years of marriage to Edward Armstrong hadn't prepared me for nights like this—surrounded by Manhattan's elite in our penthouse dining room, where every word and gesture felt like a test I was destined to fail. I stared down at the menu card, the elegant script swimming before my eyes. The letters refused to form words I could understand. My fingers trembled slightly as I reached for my water glass. "Is something wrong, Magnolia?" Natasha's voice sliced through the quiet conversation. She was seated across from me, her red lips curved into what others might mistake for concern. "You look... confused." "I'm fine," I murmured, my Appalachian accent thickening under stress. "Just deciding." "Perhaps I could help?" Natasha tilted her head, her diamond earrings catching the light.
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Chapter 3

The heavy metal door clanged shut behind me with a finality that echoed through my bones. Six months. One hundred and eighty-three days of hell had ended, yet freedom felt more terrifying than confinement.

I stood on the steps of Blackwater State Penitentiary, clutching a small paper bag containing my few possessions. The morning air bit at my skin—too cold for September, or perhaps I'd simply forgotten what normal weather felt like.

"Move along," the guard barked, already turning her back on me.

I descended the steps slowly, my legs unsteady after months of confinement. The world looked different somehow—brighter, faster, more dangerous. Manhattan awaited me, but it no longer felt like home.

The bus ticket they'd given me would take me to Port Authority. After that, I had no plan.

---

Manhattan's skyline loomed before me as I emerged from the subway, disoriented and overwhelmed. The noise, the people, the towering buildings—everything pressed in from all sides. I walked aimlessly, one foot in front of the other, unsure where to go.

Smoke billowed into the sky ahead, drawing a crowd of onlookers. Sirens wailed in the distance as firefighters rushed toward a burning commercial building. I should have kept walking, but something rooted me to the spot.

"Look!" someone shouted. "Someone went in!"

My breath caught in my throat as I recognized the figure sprinting toward the flames—Edward. His tailored suit was rumpled, his face contorted with panic as he shoved past firefighters and disappeared into the inferno.

Time seemed to slow. Five years of marriage flashed before my eyes—every cold glance, every dismissive gesture, every moment he'd looked through me rather than at me.

Minutes stretched like hours before Edward emerged from the smoke-filled doorway. His face was blackened with soot, his expensive shirt singed and torn. Cradled in his arms was Natasha, her body limp, her designer clothes smoldering.

"Get a paramedic!" he shouted, his voice raw with desperation. "Please, someone help her!"

I'd never heard such anguish in his voice—not when his mother died, not when his father threatened to disown him, certainly never when he looked at me.

"She's going to be okay," a paramedic assured him as they loaded Natasha into an ambulance. "You got her out just in time."

Edward climbed in after her, his eyes fixed on her face with naked adoration. As the ambulance doors closed, I caught one last glimpse of his expression—a raw, desperate love he'd never once shown me.

---

Night fell as I approached our—no, his—penthouse building. The doorman's eyes widened in recognition, but he said nothing as I slipped inside. Perhaps he'd been instructed not to stop me, or perhaps he simply didn't care what happened to the disgraced wife.

I moved silently through the darkened apartment, gathering the few possessions that truly belonged to me—my mother's locket, a photograph of my parents, the simple dress I'd worn the day Edward proposed. Everything else was tainted by lies.

Voices drifted from Edward's study—laughter, the clink of glasses, the unmistakable tone of celebration.

"It was perfect timing," Edward was saying, his voice loose with alcohol and triumph. "The stupid bitch actually believed I was doing her a favor."

My hand froze on the drawer handle as I heard my husband—no, my betrayer—continue.

"Magnolia was always just a shield," he said, chuckling. "A dumb hillbilly too naive to question anything. She signed whatever I put in front of her."

"And now?" someone asked.

"Now she's served her purpose. Six months in prison should have taught her to stay away."

More laughter followed, cutting through me like glass.

"She really thought you loved her," Natasha's voice purred. "It was almost too easy."

I backed away from the door, my heart shattering into pieces too small to ever reassemble.

---

The hand came from nowhere—a vise-like grip around my upper arm, yanking me into the shadows of the building's service entrance.

"Mrs. Armstrong," a man's voice hissed in my ear. "We need you to come with us."

I struggled against his grip, but a second man appeared, blocking my escape.

"Natasha sends her regards," the first man said, his breath hot against my face.

A black SUV materialized at the curb. Before I could scream, they'd shoved me inside and slammed the door.

The warehouse district was deserted at night. They dragged me through a side entrance, down concrete steps that led to a heavy metal door.

"Inside," the taller man ordered, shoving me forward.

I stumbled into darkness—absolute, impenetrable darkness. The door slammed shut behind me, and a heavy lock clicked into place.

Then came the sound that would haunt my nightmares—the mechanical whir of a refrigeration system kicking on.

"Please," I begged, pounding on the metal door. "You've made a mistake!"

"No mistake, Mrs. Armstrong," Natasha's voice came through a speaker somewhere above me. "You're exactly where you belong."

Cold enveloped me, seeping through my thin clothes and into my bones. I huddled against the door, shivering uncontrollably as the temperature dropped further.

"One night in here should cool your jets," Natasha continued, her voice eerily calm. "Consider it a reminder of your place."

The speaker went silent. Alone in the pitch-black freezer, I wrapped my arms around myself and tried not to think about how much more I could lose before there was nothing left of me at all.

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