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Love After a Broken Marriage Novel Cover

Love After a Broken Marriage

The Seattle rain pattered against the taxi window as I stared at the familiar skyline. After three years away, the city's silhouette was both comforting and strange—just like the feeling in my chest. Three years of caring for my grandfather in his final days, three years away from the life I'd built with Mason. I should have felt nothing but relief to finally be home. Yet something felt wrong even before the taxi pulled up to our mansion's circular driveway. "Welcome back to Seattle, ma'am," the driver said, helping with my luggage. I tipped him generously and turned to face the three-story Victorian home Mason and I had purchased together. The garden looked different—the roses I'd planted replaced by exotic orchids I didn't recognize. Small changes that sent a chill down my spine despite the mild spring evening. When my key didn't work in the front door, the chill intensified.
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Chapter 2

The next morning brought no relief from the suffocating tension that had settled over the house like a heavy blanket. I'd barely slept, lying rigid in the guest bedroom—my own guest bedroom—while Mason and Sariyah occupied what used to be our sanctuary.

I found them in the kitchen, sharing coffee and intimate whispers that ceased the moment I appeared. Sariyah wore one of my cashmere robes, the emerald necklace catching the morning light as she leaned against the marble counter.

"We need to talk," I said, my voice steady despite the storm brewing inside me. "About the necklace."

Mason sighed, not bothering to look up from his newspaper. "Emilia, we discussed this last night. It's just jewelry."

"That necklace is worth two hundred million dollars," I said quietly. "But more importantly, it's the last thing my mother gave me before she died."

Sariyah's perfectly sculpted eyebrows rose. "Two hundred million? For this little thing?" She fingered the emerald pendant with casual disregard that made my stomach clench.

"It belonged to Russian royalty before my great-grandmother acquired it," I explained, fighting to keep my voice level. "The emerald is flawless, and the diamonds surrounding it are—"

"Oh please," Sariyah interrupted with a laugh that sounded like breaking glass. "You're being dramatic. It's pretty, but two hundred million? That's ridiculous."

She stood up abruptly, the movement causing her to stumble slightly. Whether it was genuine clumsiness or calculated theater, I'll never know. But as she caught herself against the counter, her hand flew to her throat.

The delicate platinum chain snapped.

Time slowed as I watched my mother's necklace arc through the air, the emerald catching fragments of sunlight before it struck the marble floor with a sound like my heart breaking.

The pendant shattered on impact. Green shards scattered across the white marble like drops of my mother's tears, the surrounding diamonds rolling in different directions like scattered stars.

"Oops," Sariyah said, her voice dripping with false innocence. "I'm so sorry. It was an accident."

I dropped to my knees, my hands shaking as I tried to gather the pieces of what had been my most precious possession. The emerald was beyond repair—centuries of perfect beauty destroyed in a single moment of calculated cruelty.

"You did that on purpose," I whispered, my voice barely audible.

"That's enough," Mason's voice cut through the air like a whip. "Emilia, you're being unreasonable. Sariyah said it was an accident."

I looked up at him from the floor, emerald fragments cutting into my palms. "She destroyed my mother's necklace, and you're defending her?"

"You're making our guest feel unwelcome with these accusations," he said, his tone growing harder. "I think you owe Sariyah an apology."

The words hit me like a physical blow. I stared at my husband—this man I'd loved, supported, built a life with—demanding I apologize to the woman who'd just destroyed the most precious thing I owned.

"An apology?" I stood slowly, my legs unsteady. "You want me to apologize?"

"Yes," Mason said firmly. "You're causing a scene over an accident. Sariyah feels terrible about it."

I looked at Sariyah, who had managed to summon tears that didn't quite reach her calculating eyes. "I really am sorry, Emilia. I know how much it meant to you. Maybe we can find someone to fix it?"

The emerald lay in irreparable pieces at my feet. Fix it. As if twenty generations of history could be glued back together.

Something inside me snapped—not like the delicate chain, but like a steel cable under too much pressure. The sound was internal, final, and strangely liberating.

"No," I said, my voice gaining strength. "I won't apologize. And you can't fix this."

I walked past them both, ignoring Mason's demands that I come back and "stop being childish." In my study, I closed the door and pulled out my phone with hands that no longer shook.

"Margaret Chen's office," came the familiar voice of my financial advisor's assistant.

"This is Emilia Warren. I need to speak with Margaret immediately. It's urgent."

Margaret's voice came on the line within minutes. "Emilia, darling! I heard you were back. How was—"

"Margaret, I need you to pull all financial records for Mason's accounts and business dealings over the past three years. Everything."

A pause. "May I ask why?"

"Because I think my husband has been stealing from me, and I need to know exactly how much."

Another pause, longer this time. "I'll have everything ready within the hour. Emilia... are you all right?"

I looked down at my palms, still stained with emerald dust. "I will be."

An hour later, Margaret's findings confirmed my worst fears. The luxury apartment on Fifth Avenue—paid for with my money. The designer wardrobe, the expensive jewelry, the exotic vacations—all funded by accounts I'd established to support Mason's business ventures.

Two point seven million dollars. That's what my husband had spent on his mistress while I was caring for my dying grandfather.

I sat in my study, surrounded by financial documents that painted a picture of systematic betrayal. Mason hadn't just been unfaithful—he'd been stealing from me to fund his infidelity.

The broken necklace was just the beginning.

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