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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 3

# Chapter 3: Paper Trails

I sat in Quentin's study, surrounded by the soft glow of his desk lamp as rain tapped against the floor-to-ceiling windows. It was past midnight, but sleep had become a luxury I could rarely afford. With my father's lawsuit looming, Quentin had granted me access to his study to review documents his legal team had forwarded.

My eyes burned from staring at the screen for hours. I rubbed them, taking a moment to absorb my surroundings. Unlike the rest of the penthouse's clinical minimalism, this room held traces of the man himself—leather-bound books, a chess set with pieces frozen mid-game, and the lingering scent of his cologne.

I scrolled through another batch of emails, most of them mundane corporate correspondence that might reveal something about my father's case against me. Then a familiar subject line caught my eye: "Revolutionary Aerodynamic Design – Carter Dynamics Breakthrough."

My heart stuttered. That was *my* design—a concept I'd developed during my engineering internship at Carter Dynamics last year. I'd presented it to the board, only to have it dismissed as "impractical" by my father.

I opened the email thread, my fingers trembling slightly. There it was—my original design documents, complete with my detailed notes and calculations. But the sender wasn't me.

It was Sydney.

"As requested, I'm forwarding my latest aerodynamic concept for the CT-7 model," her message read. "I believe this innovation could reduce drag by 18% while maintaining structural integrity."

My words. My calculations. My design—stolen and presented as her own.

I scrolled further, finding responses from board members:

"Brilliant work, Sydney."

"This is exactly the kind of thinking Carter Dynamics needs."

"Harrison was right about your potential."

A bitter laugh escaped my lips. Of course. While I was being publicly destroyed and legally attacked, Sydney was building her future with my stolen work.

The study door opened, and I quickly minimized the window, heart pounding. Quentin stood in the doorway, his tie loosened and sleeves rolled up, looking more human than I'd seen him since our arrangement began.

"Still working?" he asked, stepping inside.

I nodded, unsure whether to share my discovery. He moved to a cabinet, retrieving a crystal decanter and two glasses.

"You look like you could use this," he said, pouring amber liquid into both. He handed me one and settled into the leather chair across from me.

The Scotch burned pleasantly down my throat. "I found something," I admitted, turning the screen toward him. "Sydney stole my design work and is passing it off as her own."

Quentin leaned forward, scanning the emails with narrowed eyes. "Intellectual property theft," he murmured. "Actionable."

"It won't matter," I said bitterly. "My father would never believe me over her."

Quentin studied me over the rim of his glass. "You underestimate your position, Evelyn."

"My position?" I laughed hollowly. "I'm being sued by my own father for crimes I didn't commit, while my stepsister steals my work with impunity."

"Your position," he repeated firmly, "as my wife."

Something in his tone made me look up. For the first time, I glimpsed something beyond his calculated exterior—a flash of genuine anger on my behalf.

"I once trusted the wrong person too," he said after a long moment, swirling the liquor in his glass. "A business partner who sold proprietary algorithms to our competitors."

"What happened to them?" I asked quietly.

A cold smile touched his lips. "They're currently managing a convenience store in Anchorage."

I stared at him, realizing there were depths to Quentin Shaw I hadn't begun to fathom.

"Betrayal," he continued, "is something I understand intimately."

The rain intensified outside, drumming against the windows as we sat in companionable silence. For the first time since my world collapsed, I felt something like hope—or perhaps it was simply the dangerous comfort of aligned interests.

Quentin raised his glass. "To new alliances."

I clinked mine against his. "To new alliances."

---

The next morning, a small package waited on my desk. No note, no wrapping—just a tarnished silver locket I recognized instantly. My fingers trembled as I picked it up, the familiar weight bringing a rush of memories I'd fought to suppress.

Inside was a tiny photograph: two children beneath the sprawling branches of my mother's cherished apple tree. Ryan and me, age ten, gap-toothed and innocent.

My throat tightened. Davies appeared in the doorway, his expression carefully neutral. "A Mr. Daniels left that for you downstairs."

I snapped the locket shut, slipping it into my pocket. "Thank you."

After Davies left, I found a folded note that had been beneath the locket. Ryan's handwriting hadn't changed since we passed notes in high school.

*Evie, please talk to me. I need to explain. What happened that night wasn't what you think. -R*

I stared at the words until they blurred, feeling the weight of the locket in my pocket. Twenty years of friendship against one night of betrayal. The scales shouldn't balance so easily.

With steady hands, I struck a match and held it to the corner of his note, watching the flame consume his plea until nothing remained but ash.

Some betrayals cut too deep for explanations.

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