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After My Stepsister Framed Me, I Married Her Rival Novel Cover

After My Stepsister Framed Me, I Married Her Rival

# Chapter 1: The Fall The glittering chandelier of the Waldorf ballroom cast diamonds of light across the champagne flutes and designer gowns of New York's elite. I stood at the center of it all, a reluctant queen bee in a hive of ambitious socialites. My father had insisted on this 'bachelorette gala'—a thinly veiled auction where I was the prize lot. "Smile, Evelyn," Sydney whispered, her manicured hand squeezing my arm with hidden force. "Daddy's investors are watching." I forced my lips upward, feeling the strain in my cheeks. The Carter family image was everything, even if the reality behind closed doors was cold as ice. The soft ping of a microphone being tapped echoed through the room. Sydney stepped away from me, her emerald dress shimmering as she took the stage. Something in her smile made my stomach clench. "Ladies and gentlemen," she began, her voice honey-sweet, "we're gathered to celebrate my dear stepsister, Evelyn Carter, heiress to Carter Dynamics." I searched the crowd for Ryan's face, finding comfort in his familiar features.
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Chapter 2

# Chapter 2: Gilded Cage

The elevator ascended silently to the penthouse level of Shaw Tower, carrying me away from the world that had so eagerly devoured me the night before. Quentin stood beside me, his presence both commanding and distant. We hadn't spoken since I signed the contract—his driver had simply appeared with instructions to pack essentials while his lawyers handled the rest.

"Welcome to your new home, Miss Carter," he said as the doors slid open, revealing a vast expanse of gleaming hardwood and floor-to-ceiling windows that framed Manhattan like a living painting.

I stepped into the space, my heels clicking against the polished floor. The penthouse was breathtaking—and utterly impersonal. No photographs, no mementos, nothing that revealed the man who owned it. Just sleek furniture, abstract art, and cool, perfect emptiness.

"Mr. Shaw prefers minimalism," a deep voice explained.

I turned to find a broad-shouldered man with military posture watching me with assessing eyes.

"This is Arthur Davies, my head of security," Quentin said, already moving toward what appeared to be his home office. "He'll explain the arrangements. I have calls to make."

The office door closed behind him with a soft click of finality.

Davies gestured for me to follow him down a hallway. "Your suite is the east wing," he explained, his tone professional but not unkind. "Mr. Shaw occupies the west. The common areas—kitchen, dining room, main living room—are shared spaces."

He showed me to a bedroom larger than my entire first apartment, decorated in muted blues and grays. It connected to a private bathroom with a soaking tub and a walk-in closet already stocked with designer clothing in my size.

"Your keycard and biometrics will grant you access to your suite and common areas only," Davies continued, handing me a sleek black card. "Mr. Shaw values his privacy. The elevator requires a code for both entry and exit. I've programmed it into your phone."

I clutched the keycard, reality sinking in. I'd traded one gilded cage for another.

"And my... obligations?" I asked, hating how my voice wavered.

"Weekly social appearances as Mrs. Shaw, beginning with the Donovan Foundation charity tea tomorrow afternoon. The contract stipulates you'll present as a united couple in public." His expression remained carefully neutral. "Mr. Shaw has a reputation to maintain."

I nodded numbly. So did I, once.

"One more thing, Miss Carter," Davies added, pausing at the door. "Whatever game you're caught in with the Carters—Mr. Shaw doesn't play to lose."

---

The Donovan Foundation's annual charity tea was held in the conservatory of the Plaza Hotel, where New York's elite gathered to sip Darjeeling and pretend their donations weren't tax write-offs. I entered on Quentin's arm, wearing a pale blue dress from my new closet that probably cost more than a month's rent in most of Manhattan.

The room fell silent at our arrival, then erupted in hushed whispers.

"Smile," Quentin murmured, his hand warm against the small of my back. "They're all wondering why I chose you."

"So am I," I whispered back, maintaining my practiced smile.

His lips twitched. "Perhaps I enjoy mysteries."

We made our way through the crowd, accepting congratulations on our "whirlwind romance" with practiced grace. I could feel Sydney before I saw her, that prickle between my shoulder blades that had always warned me of impending humiliation.

She appeared in a flutter of emerald silk, air-kissing my cheeks as if we were still sisters rather than mortal enemies.

"Evelyn, darling! And Mr. Shaw—how... unexpected." Her smile was razor-sharp. "I've been telling everyone how worried we've been about Evie's... stability. This sudden marriage is quite concerning."

I felt Quentin tense beside me. Before either of us could respond, waiters began circulating with small silver trays. Sydney plucked something from one—not a canapé, but a stack of cards.

"Oh, look what someone's distributing!" she gasped with theatrical shock.

My stomach dropped as I glimpsed the cards—elegant ivory stock bearing my name alongside a list of men's names and dates, with "Available for Appointments" embossed at the bottom.

The whispers grew louder. Faces turned toward us, some pitying, others gleeful at the fresh scandal. I felt myself shrinking, that familiar sensation of public shame threatening to drown me.

Then Quentin's hand cupped my face, turning me toward him. His dark eyes held mine for one electric moment before he leaned down and kissed me.

It wasn't gentle. It was possessive, deliberate, and unmistakably territorial. When he finally released me, the room had fallen completely silent.

"My wife," he said, voice carrying easily through the hushed space, "is not available for anything or anyone but me."

Sydney's face contorted with thwarted rage before she smoothed it into a brittle smile. "How... romantic," she managed.

As we left the conservatory an hour later, I realized I'd been holding my breath since that kiss. "Thank you," I said quietly.

Quentin's expression remained unreadable. "It was tactical, not chivalrous. Remember that."

---

I was alone in the penthouse the next morning when the intercom buzzed. The doorman's voice was apologetic. "Miss Carter? There's a gentleman here with papers to serve you. Legal documents from Carter Dynamics."

My father's latest attack. I instructed the doorman to send him up, hands trembling as I waited.

The process server looked uncomfortable as he handed me the thick envelope. "Evelyn Carter? You've been named in a lawsuit filed by Harrison Carter and Carter Dynamics for embezzlement and corporate espionage."

The accusations were absurd—I'd never had enough access to company finances to embezzle so much as a paperclip. But truth wasn't the point. This was about breaking me completely.

When Quentin returned that evening, I was still sitting on the sofa, the legal papers spread around me like fallen leaves.

"My father's suing me," I said hollowly. "I'll need to find a lawyer."

Quentin picked up the complaint, scanning it with narrowed eyes. "No. You'll use mine." He pulled out his phone. "Davies, connect Miss Carter with the legal team. Full access, full resources."

He set the papers down, loosening his tie. "You signed a contract, Evelyn. Your battles are now mine."

I looked up at him, searching his inscrutable face. "Why? What do you really want from this arrangement?"

Something dangerous flickered in his eyes. "Perhaps the same thing you do," he said softly. "Justice."

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