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Divorce Amidst Hit-and-Run Truth Novel Cover

Divorce Amidst Hit-and-Run Truth

The crystal chandelier cast dancing shadows across the white tablecloth as I adjusted my black dress one final time. Seven years. Seven years of marriage deserved celebration, didn't it? The intimate corner table at Le Bernardin had been reserved for weeks—our table, where Nikolai had proposed after paying my medical bills, where he'd whispered that he loved my soul when the rest of the world saw only my missing leg. I checked my phone again. 7:15 PM. Nikolai was never late for our anniversary dinners. The maître d' approached with an apologetic smile. "Mrs. Harrison, your husband called.
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Chapter 2

I called Samara from the parking lot of Marcus's office, my hands still shaking as I gripped the steering wheel.

"He froze everything," I said when she answered. "The salon accounts, my credit cards, even the joint checking account. I can't access a single dollar."

"That bastard." Samara's voice hardened with protective fury. "Come to my place. We're getting you out of that house today."

"Sam, I can't ask you to—"

"You're not asking. I'm telling. Pack your things while he's at work. I'll be there in twenty minutes."

The hilltop mansion felt like a mausoleum as I moved through it one final time. Seven years of my life contained in these sterile rooms with their expensive furniture and empty walls. Nikolai had never let me hang my old ballet photos—said they made the place look cluttered. Now I understood. He'd wanted no reminders that I'd once been whole, once been extraordinary at something.

Samara arrived with boxes and the kind of fierce determination that made me want to cry with gratitude. She took one look at my face and pulled me into a hug.

"Don't you dare apologize for needing help," she said against my hair. "That's what family does."

But shame burned in my throat anyway as we packed my belongings. Shame that I'd stayed so long. Shame that I'd believed his lies. Shame that at thirty-two, I was running to my cousin's apartment like a teenager fleeing a bad home.

"Stop it," Samara said, watching my face. "I can see you spiraling. There's no shame in leaving someone who treats you like garbage."

We worked quickly, filling boxes with clothes and personal items. I left behind the expensive jewelry Nikolai had given me over the years—guilt gifts, I realized now, payment for enduring his mother's cruelty and his own neglect. The only thing I took from my nightstand was the small wooden box that held my old pointe shoe ribbons.

By four o'clock, my car was packed. The mansion looked exactly as it had that morning, as if I'd never existed here at all.

Samara's apartment in Capitol Hill was small but warm, filled with colorful textiles and plants that actually thrived. She'd cleared space in her guest room, made up the bed with soft sheets that smelled like lavender.

"Stay as long as you need," she said, setting down the last box. "Seriously, Leona. I mean it."

I tried to thank her, but the words caught in my throat.

Nikolai found us by seven that evening. The pounding on Samara's door made us both jump, followed by his voice, loud enough to echo down the hallway.

"Leona! I know you're in there. Open this door."

Samara moved to stand between me and the door, her arms crossed. "Don't," she mouthed.

But Nikolai wasn't finished. "This is ridiculous. You can't just walk out on seven years of marriage because of one dinner. I'm willing to forgive you for overreacting, but you need to come home right now."

Forgive me. The audacity of it sparked something hot and bright in my chest.

"I'm not coming back," I called through the door. "The divorce papers are filed. It's over."

"Over? You think you can just decide that?" His voice shifted, taking on that smooth, dangerous quality I'd learned to fear. "Let me remind you of something, darling. Your salon? Your savings account? All frozen. You have nothing without me. No money, no business, no future. So unless you want to live off your cousin's charity forever, I suggest you stop this tantrum and come home."

Samara's hand found mine, squeezing hard.

"I'd rather live in a cardboard box than spend another night under your roof," I said, surprised by how steady my voice sounded.

The silence that followed was more frightening than his threats. When he finally spoke, his words were ice.

"Fine. But don't come crying to me when reality sets in. No one else is going to want you, Leona. I was the only one willing to overlook your... limitations."

His footsteps retreated down the hallway. Samara and I stood frozen until we heard the building's front door slam.

"I need a drink," I whispered.

Two nights later, Samara convinced me to join her at a downtown bar. "You can't hide forever," she'd argued. "Besides, you deserve one normal evening after this week from hell."

The bar was crowded but not oppressive, dim lighting and the low hum of conversation creating a cocoon of anonymity. We'd just settled into a corner booth when I saw them.

Nikolai and Kataleya, walking through the entrance like they owned the place. Like they owned the entire city.

My hands went cold around my glass.

"We can leave," Samara said immediately, following my gaze. "Right now."

But it was too late. Kataleya had spotted us, and her face lit up with malicious delight. She whispered something to Nikolai, then started walking toward our table, her heels clicking against the hardwood floor like a countdown.

"Leona." She stopped at our booth, her smile sharp enough to draw blood. "What a surprise seeing you here. Out celebrating your little rebellion?"

Nikolai hung back near the bar, watching but not intervening. Coward.

"We're just having a drink," Samara said coldly. "Please leave us alone."

But Kataleya wasn't finished. She leaned against our table, her perfume cloying and expensive. "I have to admire your persistence, Leona. Most women would have gracefully accepted reality by now. But here you are, still clinging to dignity you lost years ago."

"Get away from us," I managed.

"Why? Because the truth hurts?" Her eyes gleamed. "Let me make this simple for you. You can't give Nikolai what a real woman can. You're broken—we all see it, even if you refuse to. So why not do everyone a favor and sign whatever settlement he offers? At least then you'd leave with some self-respect intact."

The bar had gone quiet around us. Nikolai still stood frozen by the entrance, his expression unreadable.

"A real woman," I repeated softly. "Is that what you think you are?"

Kataleya's smile faltered.

"A real woman wouldn't need to destroy another person to feel whole. A real woman wouldn't have to rely on someone else's husband for validation." I stood, my prosthetic steady beneath me. "But you wouldn't know anything about that, would you?"

I walked past her, past Nikolai's shocked face, past the staring crowd. Samara was right behind me, her hand finding my elbow as we pushed through the door into the cool night air.

I made it to the corner before my legs gave out. Samara caught me as I sank against a building, gasping for air that wouldn't come.

"Breathe," she whispered. "Just breathe. You did so good in there, Lee. You stood up for yourself."

But all I could think about was Nikolai's silence. How he'd watched Kataleya tear me apart and done nothing. How seven years of marriage had taught him exactly where to aim his weapons—and he'd handed them all to her.

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