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Defending Love with a Knife Novel Cover

Defending Love with a Knife

The cathedral stretched before me like a gilded cage, every pew packed with faces I'd known my entire life. Chandeliers dripped crystal light across marble floors, and white roses—thousands of them—perfumed the air with a sweetness that made my stomach turn. I stood at the altar in my mother's restored lace gown, my fingers clutching the bouquet so tightly the stems bit into my palms. Jameson stood across from me, devastatingly handsome in his tailored tuxedo, but his eyes were flat. Empty. He hadn't looked at me once since the ceremony began, his jaw clenched in that familiar way that made the muscle in his cheek twitch. I told myself it was nerves. That once we said our vows, once this was finally real, he would soften. He would remember why we'd fallen in love. Father Benedict's voice rolled through the cathedral, steady and warm.
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Chapter 3

The cottage became my sanctuary. Each morning, I woke to sunlight filtering through gauzy curtains and the distant rhythm of waves against the shore. No phone calls. No pitying glances. No society columns dissecting my humiliation. Just space to breathe and remember who I was before Jameson Morgan had consumed my identity.

Milo gave me three days to settle in before gently coaxing me out of my self-imposed isolation.

"There's a restoration site I'd like you to see," he said one morning, leaning against the kitchen doorway as I nursed my coffee. "No pressure. Just a quick visit."

I almost refused—the thought of facing strangers still made my stomach clench—but something in his patient expression made me nod. "Give me fifteen minutes."

The site was a former lighthouse keeper's residence perched dramatically on a cliff edge. Workers moved purposefully through the stone structure, but Milo guided me away from them toward a quiet corner overlooking the sea.

"The owners want to preserve the historical integrity while creating a modern cultural space," he explained, unrolling blueprints against a makeshift table. "They're stuck on the interior textiles and period-appropriate fixtures."

I studied the plans, my fingers automatically tracing the lines. "The east wing gets morning light. They should use lighter fabrics there, maybe linen in sea glass tones to amplify the natural illumination."

Milo smiled, not the pitying smile I'd grown to hate, but one of genuine appreciation. "That's exactly what I was thinking."

For the next hour, I lost myself in design possibilities, my mind engaging with something other than heartbreak for the first time in weeks. When we left, Milo didn't comment on the small miracle that had occurred—how I'd spoken more words in that hour than I had in days.

Instead, he simply asked, "Hungry?"

We fell into a rhythm over the following weeks. Mornings at various restoration sites where my design insights were not just tolerated but valued. Afternoons working side by side in the cottage, sketching ideas and researching historical textiles. Evenings sharing simple meals on the porch overlooking the sea.

Milo never pushed for conversation about Jameson or the wedding. Instead, he listened when I needed to speak and respected my silence when I didn't. He created space for my healing without trying to rush or fix it.

One evening, as we sat with glasses of wine watching the sunset paint the water in shades of amber and rose, I realized I'd laughed three times that day. Real laughter, not the hollow sound I'd forced at society functions to please Jameson.

"Thank you," I said quietly.

Milo turned, the fading light catching in his eyes. "For what?"

"For remembering who I was when I'd forgotten."

He smiled, a gentle curve of lips that asked for nothing in return. "You were always there, Clare. You just needed space to find yourself again."

Two nights later, I stayed late at Milo's office, finalizing fabric selections for the lighthouse project. The building was quiet, most of the staff long gone. I'd stepped away to make tea when I noticed a worn leather sketchbook on Milo's desk, different from his professional portfolios.

I shouldn't have looked. But something about the aged leather called to me, and I carefully opened it.

The first pages contained architectural sketches—buildings and bridges from our university days. But as I turned the pages, I found something unexpected. Me. Sitting by the campus fountain, head bent over a book. Me laughing with friends at graduation. Me in profile at a gallery opening years ago, my expression serious as I studied a painting.

Each sketch was dated, spanning over a decade. Each captured a moment, a gesture, an expression with such tender attention to detail that I felt my chest tighten.

"Clare?"

I turned to find Milo in the doorway, two mugs of tea in his hands and uncertainty in his eyes.

"How long?" I asked softly, my finger resting on a sketch from eight years ago.

He set the mugs down carefully. "Since we were nineteen."

"Why didn't you ever say anything?"

"You were in love with Jameson." His voice held no bitterness, just simple truth. "And then you were engaged to him. Your happiness mattered more than my feelings."

I closed the sketchbook gently, suddenly understanding the depth of what he'd offered me—not just an escape or a job, but a chance to heal without expectation or demand.

"And now?" I asked, my voice barely above a whisper.

Milo met my gaze steadily. "Now I'm just grateful you're finding your way back to yourself. Whatever that means for us."

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