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Divorce After Betrayal Novel Cover

Divorce After Betrayal

The cold marble floor bit through my silk stockings as I knelt before the altar in our private chapel, five years to the day since Father's funeral. The diamond tiara—Mother's tiara—felt heavier than usual in my trembling hands, its faceted stones catching the weak afternoon light filtering through stained glass windows. Each crystal seemed to hold a memory: Father in his dress uniform, his medals gleaming with honor before the court-martial stripped away everything he'd built. "I'm sorry, Father," I whispered to the empty air, my voice barely audible in the sacred silence. "I should have listened to you about Dorian. I should have—" The chapel door burst open with such violence that the brass hinges shrieked in protest. I didn't need to turn around to know who had shattered this moment of grief. Dorian's footsteps echoed off the vaulted ceiling, each step deliberate and cold. "Still mourning that disgraced old fool?" His voice carried none of the warmth I'd once cherished, none of the tenderness that had convinced me to defy Father's wishes five years ago. I clutched the tiara tighter, its sharp edges pressing into my palms.
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Chapter 3

The grandfather clock in the hallway chimed midnight as I made my way through the darkened corridors toward Dorian's study. My bare feet whispered against the cold marble, each step a betrayal of my pride. But desperation had long since consumed whatever dignity I had left.

I paused outside his study door, pressing my palm against the polished wood. Golden light seeped through the crack beneath, and I could hear the soft scratch of his pen against paper. He was working late again—or perhaps avoiding the guest room where I now slept like a stranger in my own home.

I knocked softly, then entered without waiting for permission. Dorian looked up from his desk, his face illuminated by the warm glow of the banker's lamp. For a moment, just a moment, I saw a flicker of the man I'd fallen in love with five years ago—the merchant's son who'd promised me the world with eyes full of wonder and devotion.

"Lyra." His voice was carefully neutral, but I caught the slight tightening around his eyes. "It's rather late."

"I couldn't sleep." I closed the door behind me, leaning against it for support. "I keep thinking about when we first met. Do you remember?"

His pen stilled in his hand. "What's the point of—"

"The charity auction at the Astors'." I stepped closer, my voice barely above a whisper. "You bid on that hideous vase just to have an excuse to talk to me afterward. You said you'd never seen anyone look so beautiful while trying not to laugh."

Something shifted in his expression—a crack in the armor he'd built around himself. "Lyra, don't."

"You walked me through the rose garden that night." I moved to the chair across from his desk, the same chair where I'd sat countless evenings, reading while he worked. "You told me you'd been watching me all season, waiting for the courage to approach. You said I was different from other society ladies—that I had substance, intelligence."

"That was a long time ago." But his voice had lost some of its edge.

"You promised me forever, Dorian." My hands trembled as I reached across the desk, almost touching his fingers before he pulled away. "You said our love would weather any storm. You said—"

"I said many things." He set down his pen with deliberate precision, his politician's mask sliding back into place. "People change, Lyra. Circumstances change. What I felt then... it was the infatuation of youth."

The words hit like physical blows, but I pressed on. "And what about now? What about the promises you made at our wedding? Before God, before—"

"What I feel for Serena is different." His voice grew stronger, more certain. "It's real love, not some romantic notion built on moonlight and roses. She understands me. She appreciates what I've accomplished, what I'm building."

"Real love?" The phrase escaped as a broken whisper. "Then what was ours?"

Dorian's eyes met mine directly for the first time in weeks, and what I saw there destroyed the last fragile hope I'd been nurturing. "A marriage of convenience that served its purpose. You gave me respectability, access to your father's military connections. But that currency has lost its value."

I felt something inside me shatter—not just break, but pulverize into dust. "A marriage of convenience? Is that truly how you remember it?"

"How else should I remember it?" He adjusted his cufflinks, that familiar gesture now seeming like a weapon. "Your father opposed the match from the beginning. He saw what you refused to see—that we were fundamentally incompatible."

"My father opposed it because he saw your character more clearly than I did." The words came out steadier than I felt. "He knew you would abandon me the moment it became advantageous."

Dorian's face hardened completely. "Your father was a disgraced fool who died in shame. Perhaps it's time you stopped measuring the world by his failed standards."

I rose from the chair, my legs somehow supporting me despite the trembling that had overtaken my entire body. "And perhaps it's time I started honoring his memory by showing the strength he always believed I possessed."

Without another word, I turned and walked toward the door. Behind me, I heard the scratch of his pen resuming, as though our conversation—our marriage, our shared history—was nothing more than a brief interruption in his evening's work.

I climbed the stairs to the second floor, but instead of turning toward the guest room that had become my exile, I found myself walking toward the opposite wing—toward Mother's old rooms, rooms that had remained untouched since her death three years ago. The door creaked as I pushed it open, releasing the faint scent of lavender and old roses.

Moonlight streamed through the tall windows, illuminating the familiar furniture draped in dust covers. But it was the small writing desk in the corner that drew me forward, pulled by some instinct I couldn't name. My fingers traced the delicate carved roses along its edge—the same desk where Mother had written her letters, where she'd taught me to form my first careful sentences.

I pulled open the top drawer, expecting to find it empty. Instead, my fingers encountered a small brass key tucked into the corner. My heart began to race as I examined the desk more carefully, running my hands along its surface until I found what I was looking for—a hidden compartment, barely visible in the moonlight.

The key turned with a soft click.

Inside lay a folded document and an envelope bearing my name in Father's distinctive handwriting. With trembling fingers, I lifted out the papers, and my breath caught as I recognized the legal language of the document beneath.

Divorce papers. Prepared, signed, and notarized. All that remained was my signature.

I opened Father's letter with reverent care, and his words reached across the grave to embrace me:

*My dearest Lyra,

If you are reading this, then my fears about your marriage have proven justified. I pray I am wrong, but your happiness has always been my greatest concern, and I could not bear to leave you without protection should you need it.

You are stronger than you know, my daughter. You have your mother's gentle heart and my stubborn will—a combination that will serve you well in the trials ahead. Do not let anyone, not even a husband, diminish the light that makes you who you are.

These papers are my final gift to you—not because I wish your marriage to fail, but because I want you to always have a choice. Freedom is the most precious inheritance I can leave you.

Live boldly, my brave girl. You are worthy of a love that honors rather than diminishes you.

With all my devotion,

Father*

I pressed the letter to my chest, tears streaming down my face as I felt the weight of his love and foresight. Even in death, he was still protecting me, still believing in my strength when I had forgotten it myself.

The divorce papers lay before me like a bridge to an unknown shore—terrifying and liberating in equal measure.

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