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Divorce After Lottery Win Novel Cover

Divorce After Lottery Win

I heard the door slam with unusual force, rattling the cheap frames on our apartment wall. Jake never came home this excited. Something was different tonight. "Sarah!" His voice rang through our cramped Portland apartment, breathless with excitement. "Sarah, where are you?" I emerged from the kitchen, dish towel still in hand, to find my husband's face flushed with an almost manic energy. His blue eyes gleamed in a way I hadn't seen since our early dating days, before the subtle criticisms and cold shoulders became routine. "You won't believe what happened," Jake said, his fingers trembling as he pulled a small paper from his pocket. He held it up like it was the Holy Grail. "Ten million dollars, Sarah. Ten.
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Chapter 1

I heard the door slam with unusual force, rattling the cheap frames on our apartment wall. Jake never came home this excited. Something was different tonight.

"Sarah!" His voice rang through our cramped Portland apartment, breathless with excitement. "Sarah, where are you?"

I emerged from the kitchen, dish towel still in hand, to find my husband's face flushed with an almost manic energy. His blue eyes gleamed in a way I hadn't seen since our early dating days, before the subtle criticisms and cold shoulders became routine.

"You won't believe what happened," Jake said, his fingers trembling as he pulled a small paper from his pocket. He held it up like it was the Holy Grail. "Ten million dollars, Sarah. Ten. Million. Dollars."

My stomach dropped. The lottery ticket fluttered between his fingers—just a small slip of paper from the gas station down the street. The same gas station where I'd overheard the owner complaining about counterfeit tickets circulating.

"What? Jake, are you sure?" I reached for the ticket, but he snatched it away.

"Don't touch it!" he snapped, then immediately softened his tone with practiced ease. "I mean, it's fragile, babe. This little paper is our future."

Something in his eyes made my skin crawl—a coldness behind the excitement. I'd seen that look before, when he thought I wasn't watching. It was the same look he gave my grandmother's Victorian house whenever we drove past it.

"We need to verify it," I said carefully. "Make sure it's legitimate before we—"

"Oh, it's legitimate all right." Jake's smile widened, but it didn't reach his eyes. "And it changes everything."

He reached into his jacket and pulled out a thick manila envelope, tossing it onto our coffee table with theatrical flair. The envelope skidded across the surface, knocking over my half-empty tea mug.

"What's this?" I asked, though something in me already knew.

"Divorce papers." Jake's voice was flat now, the excitement replaced by cool detachment. "I've been waiting for this day, Sarah. Now I can finally be with who I really love."

The words hit me like physical blows. Each syllable a separate punch. Divorce. Waiting. Finally. Really love.

"What are you talking about?" My voice sounded distant to my own ears, like I was speaking underwater.

"Rebecca," he said simply, as if that explained everything.

My mind raced to process. Rebecca? His brother's widow? The woman who had cried on my shoulder at the funeral? The same Rebecca who had accepted my hand-me-down maternity clothes with tearful gratitude?

Before I could form words, a soft knock came at the door. Jake's smile returned as he strode to answer it.

Rebecca stood in the doorway, her dark hair falling in perfect waves around her shoulders. In her arms was a baby—not her toddler son from her marriage to Jake's brother—but an infant I'd never seen before.

"Meet my son," Jake said proudly, taking the baby from Rebecca's arms. "My actual son. Not my brother's kid."

The room tilted sideways. Three years of marriage collapsed around me like a house of cards.

"How long?" I whispered.

"Long enough," Rebecca answered, her voice dripping with newfound confidence. "Long enough to know he never loved you."

Heavy footsteps in the hallway announced another arrival. Jake's mother, Brenda, appeared behind Rebecca, her thin lips twisted into a triumphant smile.

"Well, well," she said, eyeing me with undisguised contempt. "Looks like your free ride is over, princess."

Jake thrust a pen into my hand, his fingers closing around mine with bruising force.

"Sign the papers, Sarah," he demanded. "Now that I'm rich, I don't need your grandmother's house anymore. But I want it anyway. Consider it payment for wasting three years of my life."

Brenda pushed past Jake, her bony finger jabbing toward the papers. "Sign them now, you useless girl. We've been waiting long enough for what's rightfully ours."

I stared at them—my husband, his mistress, his mother—all watching me with predatory anticipation, like vultures circling a dying animal. The baby in Jake's arms began to cry, a piercing wail that seemed to echo the scream building inside my chest.

The pen felt impossibly heavy in my hand as they closed in around me.

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