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Betrayed by Fiancé and Friend Novel Cover

Betrayed by Fiancé and Friend

The grandfather clock in the hallway chimed midnight as I sat alone in the vast library of the Reynolds mansion. Everyone else had gone to bed hours ago, but sleep eluded me. Something felt different tonight—a strange restlessness that had nothing to do with the opulent surroundings I'd called home since my memory disorder. I traced my fingers over the leather-bound books lining the shelves, trying to focus on their comforting solidity. But suddenly, without warning, a sharp pain lanced through my temple. "Lucy, look out!" The voice—my own voice—echoed in my mind as fragments of memory crashed through the fog that had clouded my thoughts for months. Images flashed before my eyes: the warehouse fire, Ezra's terrified face, the beam falling toward us... I gasped, clutching the edge of the mahogany desk for support as more memories flooded back—not just fragments this time, but whole scenes playing out with devastating clarity. "Ezra, don't go in there!" My voice sounded desperate, pleading. But he had gone in anyway, running straight into the flames when I'd tried to hold him back.
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Chapter 1

The grandfather clock in the hallway chimed midnight as I sat alone in the vast library of the Reynolds mansion. Everyone else had gone to bed hours ago, but sleep eluded me. Something felt different tonight—a strange restlessness that had nothing to do with the opulent surroundings I'd called home since my memory disorder.

I traced my fingers over the leather-bound books lining the shelves, trying to focus on their comforting solidity. But suddenly, without warning, a sharp pain lanced through my temple.

"Lucy, look out!"

The voice—my own voice—echoed in my mind as fragments of memory crashed through the fog that had clouded my thoughts for months. Images flashed before my eyes: the warehouse fire, Ezra's terrified face, the beam falling toward us...

I gasped, clutching the edge of the mahogany desk for support as more memories flooded back—not just fragments this time, but whole scenes playing out with devastating clarity.

"Ezra, don't go in there!" My voice sounded desperate, pleading.

But he had gone in anyway, running straight into the flames when I'd tried to hold him back. And then... then I'd pushed him out of the way when the beam came crashing down.

The pain in my side flared—not just a phantom ache now, but a visceral reminder of what I'd lost in that moment. My kidney. My health. My trust.

I pressed my hand against my scar, feeling the raised line beneath my silk nightgown. The doctors had explained everything when I'd woken up—how I'd needed emergency surgery, how I'd developed memory disorder from the trauma.

But they'd never explained this gap. This chasm between what I remembered and what everyone said had happened.

"Oh God," I whispered, sinking into a nearby chair as the truth hit me with full force. "It wasn't a dream."

The moonlight streaming through the tall windows illuminated the room in silver, casting long shadows across the Persian rug. I stood on shaky legs, drawn toward the French doors that led to the garden. Something pulled me outside—instinct, perhaps, or the magnetic force of betrayal.

The rose garden was in full bloom, the air heavy with perfume. I followed the stone path, my bare feet silent on the cool ground. The white roses Ezra had planted for me swayed gently in the night breeze, their petals luminous in the moonlight.

"Ezra?"

I froze at the sound of hushed voices coming from behind the marble fountain. My heart hammered against my ribs as I moved closer, staying in the shadows of the tall hedges.

"Lucy would never understand," Catherine's voice drifted through the night air. "She's too naive, too trusting."

"Shh," Ezra murmured. "Someone might hear you."

I stepped forward, my hand covering my mouth to stifle a gasp. There, beneath the arbor where Ezra had once promised me eternal love, stood my fiancé and my best friend. Catherine's arms were wrapped around his neck, her body pressed against his in unmistakable intimacy.

"Is this what you call taking care of me?" I asked, my voice barely above a whisper.

They sprang apart, Catherine's face a mask of false concern while Ezra's expression hardened into something unreadable.

"Lucy," he said, straightening his shirt. "You shouldn't be out here. You'll catch cold."

"Cold?" I repeated, disbelief making my voice shake. "I just caught you with your arms around my best friend!"

"Oh, darling." Catherine stepped forward, reaching for my hands. I pulled away from her touch. "You're confused again. The doctors warned us this might happen."

"I'm not confused!" My voice rose, echoing off the garden walls. "I remember everything now!"

The French doors burst open behind us, and Mrs. Reynolds appeared in her silk robe, her face a study in disapproval.

"What is going on out here?" she demanded, her gaze settling on me with thinly veiled contempt.

"I found them together," I said, pointing at Ezra and Catherine. "They're having an affair!"

Mrs. Reynolds exchanged a look with her son that made my stomach sink. "Ezra, I thought you said her condition was improving."

"It was," he said, his voice tight with frustration. "This is just a setback."

Catherine moved to stand beside him, her hand slipping into his with practiced ease. "Poor Lucy. This must be so frightening for her."

"I'm not frightened!" I insisted, but my protest fell on deaf ears. Their faces showed nothing but pity—the kind reserved for the mentally unstable.

"No one believes me," I realized aloud, the truth settling over me like a shroud. "No one."

Mrs. Reynolds sighed heavily. "Perhaps we should call Dr. Harrison in the morning. This delusional state is concerning."

"I'm not delusional!" I backed away from them, my heart pounding in my chest. "I know what I saw!"

But as I looked at their faces—Ezra's stubborn denial, Catherine's calculated concern, Mrs. Reynolds's cold disapproval—I understood with sickening clarity that I was trapped.

Trapped in an engagement with a man who had betrayed me with my closest friend.

Trapped in a house where no one believed my recovered memories were real.

Trapped in a nightmare of my own making, with no way out.

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