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Betrayal at Ceremony Novel Cover

Betrayal at Ceremony

The notification chime on my phone cut through the quiet hum of my photography studio like a knife. I was editing wedding photos—ironically enough—when the sound made me glance up from my computer screen. The afternoon light streaming through the tall windows cast everything in a golden glow, the kind of light that usually made me feel peaceful and inspired. I picked up my phone absently, expecting maybe a text from Jensen about dinner plans or when he'd be back from his business trip to Chicago. He'd been gone for three days, and I missed him terribly. We'd been married for three years, and I still got that flutter in my stomach when I thought about him coming home. But it wasn't Jensen's name on my screen. It was an unknown number. The message was simple: "Thought you should know." Attached were three photos. My hands started trembling before my mind could fully process what I was seeing.
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Chapter 1

The notification chime on my phone cut through the quiet hum of my photography studio like a knife. I was editing wedding photos—ironically enough—when the sound made me glance up from my computer screen. The afternoon light streaming through the tall windows cast everything in a golden glow, the kind of light that usually made me feel peaceful and inspired.

I picked up my phone absently, expecting maybe a text from Jensen about dinner plans or when he'd be back from his business trip to Chicago. He'd been gone for three days, and I missed him terribly. We'd been married for three years, and I still got that flutter in my stomach when I thought about him coming home.

But it wasn't Jensen's name on my screen. It was an unknown number.

The message was simple: "Thought you should know."

Attached were three photos.

My hands started trembling before my mind could fully process what I was seeing. The first image showed a hotel room—expensive, judging by the crisp white linens and modern furniture. The second showed two figures in bed, tangled in sheets. And the third...

The third showed Jensen's face clearly. His eyes were closed, his expression peaceful in a way I recognized from our own intimate moments. But the woman beside him wasn't me. She had long dark hair spread across the pillow, her bare shoulder visible above the covers. Even in the dim hotel lighting, I could see she was beautiful in a way that made my chest tighten with something that felt like drowning.

I dropped the phone like it had burned me. It clattered against my desk, the screen still glowing with those damning images.

"No," I whispered to the empty studio. "No, this isn't real."

But even as I said it, details were clicking into place with horrible clarity. The way Jensen had been more distant lately. The phone calls he'd take in another room. The business trips that seemed to be happening more frequently. I'd attributed it all to work stress, to the pressure of building his art career. I'd been so supportive, so understanding.

I'd been so stupid.

My legs felt unsteady as I stood up, my wedding ring catching the light as I reached for the filing cabinet where I kept our important documents. My marriage certificate was in the second drawer, tucked safely in a manila folder labeled "Personal - Important." I'd looked at it so many times over the years, tracing Jensen's signature with my finger on our anniversary, remembering how nervous and happy I'd been on our wedding day.

Now I pulled it out with shaking hands, studying every detail as if seeing it for the first time. The official seals, the registration numbers, the signatures—everything looked legitimate. But those photos on my phone made me question everything I thought I knew about my life.

I had to know. I had to be sure.

The drive to city hall passed in a blur. I gripped the steering wheel so tightly my knuckles went white, the marriage certificate sitting on the passenger seat like evidence in a crime I was still trying to understand. Other drivers honked when I sat too long at green lights, but I barely heard them over the roar of blood in my ears.

The clerk at city hall was a middle-aged woman with kind eyes and graying hair pulled back in a neat bun. She looked up when I approached her window, probably seeing something in my face that made her expression shift from routine politeness to concern.

"I need to verify this marriage certificate," I said, my voice sounding strange and distant even to myself. I slid the document through the slot under the bulletproof glass.

She took it with practiced efficiency, her eyes scanning the paper as she turned to her computer. I watched her type in numbers, frowning slightly as she tried different search parameters.

"I'm sorry," she said after what felt like an eternity. "This registration number doesn't exist in our system."

The words hit me like a physical blow. "What do you mean?"

"Let me try a different search." Her fingers flew over the keyboard, but I could see from her expression that she wasn't finding what she was looking for. "Ma'am, I'm afraid this certificate appears to be fraudulent. The registration number, the official seals—none of this matches our records. We have no record of a marriage between Quinn Rivera and Jensen Matthews."

The floor seemed to tilt beneath my feet. "That's impossible. We were married three years ago. I have witnesses, photos..."

"I'm very sorry," she said gently. "But according to our database, you are not legally married to this man."

I drove home in a daze, the fake marriage certificate crumpled in my fist. Every red light felt like a lifetime, giving me too much time to think, to remember, to piece together the elaborate lie my husband—my not-husband—had been living.

By the time I reached my studio, rage was beginning to burn through the shock. I dialed Jensen's number with trembling fingers, my heart pounding so hard I could hear it in my ears.

"Hey, beautiful," he answered on the third ring, his voice warm and familiar. "Miss me?"

The casual affection in his tone made me want to scream. "I got some interesting photos today, Jensen."

Silence stretched between us, long enough that I wondered if the call had dropped.

"Quinn, I don't know what you're talking about—"

"Hotel room. Chicago. You and another woman." My voice was steady now, cold as winter. "Want to explain that?"

"Someone's trying to frame me," he said quickly. "Baby, you know I would never—those photos have to be doctored. People can do anything with computers these days."

"And our marriage certificate? Is that doctored too?"

Another pause, longer this time. When he spoke again, his voice had changed. The warmth was gone, replaced by something guarded and desperate.

"What about our marriage certificate?"

"It's fake, Jensen. Completely fake. City hall has no record of us ever being married."

The silence that followed was deafening. I could hear him breathing, could almost feel him scrambling for another lie, another explanation that would somehow make this all go away.

"Quinn, listen to me—"

"Who is she?" I interrupted. "Who is Natalia Lawrence?"

The sharp intake of breath on the other end told me everything I needed to know. When the line went dead, I wasn't even surprised.

I sat in my studio as the golden afternoon light faded to dusk, staring at my phone and the marriage certificate that had never been real. Three years of my life. Three years of love, sacrifice, and dreams built on nothing but lies.

The photos were still there when I looked at my phone again. Jensen's peaceful face, another woman's hair on the pillow beside him. A life I'd never known about, a truth I'd never suspected.

I was twenty-eight years old, and I'd just discovered I'd never been married at all.

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