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My Husband Betrayed Me With My Sister Novel Cover

My Husband Betrayed Me With My Sister

The clock on my laptop read 2:17 AM as I hit send on the final press release. The screen's blue light cast shadows across my face, highlighting the dark circles I'd grown accustomed to. Another PR crisis averted. Another night saved. I leaned back in my chair, rubbing my tired eyes. The Malibu mansion around me was silent except for the distant sound of waves crashing against the cliffs below. Ryder was still out—another "industry event" that would likely end with him drunk in some VIP section. My phone buzzed with a notification from Miranda Hayes, Ryder's publicist and my former boss. "Excellent work, Elena. You just saved his ass again.
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Chapter 1

The clock on my laptop read 2:17 AM as I hit send on the final press release. The screen's blue light cast shadows across my face, highlighting the dark circles I'd grown accustomed to. Another PR crisis averted. Another night saved.

I leaned back in my chair, rubbing my tired eyes. The Malibu mansion around me was silent except for the distant sound of waves crashing against the cliffs below. Ryder was still out—another "industry event" that would likely end with him drunk in some VIP section.

My phone buzzed with a notification from Miranda Hayes, Ryder's publicist and my former boss.

"Excellent work, Elena. You just saved his ass again. The Sun will run with your angle tomorrow—exhausted father taking a rare night off. Genius as always."

I didn't respond. What was there to say? This was my life now—ghostwriting press releases, crafting narratives, and managing scandals for a husband who barely acknowledged my existence.

The front door slammed shut, echoing through the empty halls.

"Elena?" Ryder's voice called out, slurring slightly. "Where's my dinner?"

I walked to the kitchen, where I'd left a plate covered in plastic wrap hours ago. Ryder stood in the doorway, his tie loosened, jacket thrown over one arm. Even disheveled, he looked like he'd stepped from the pages of GQ—all sharp angles and perfect bone structure.

"It's in the fridge," I said, pulling out the plate and placing it in the microwave. "I'll heat it up."

"You should have texted me," he muttered, loosening his cufflinks. "I had to order fries at the club."

The microwave beeped. I handed him the plate, our fingers brushing briefly. He didn't notice.

"Your hand is cold," he commented, taking the fork I offered.

"I've been working," I replied simply.

He nodded absently, already scrolling through his phone. "The pasta's overcooked."

I bit back a response. Eight years of marriage had taught me when to speak and when to remain silent.

---

The next morning, I sat in my home office, scrolling through my surveillance system—a network of alerts and notifications that monitored every mention of Ryder Scott across the internet. My job was to identify potential scandals before they went viral.

A notification popped up from Xposure, a paparazzi agency we regularly paid for "kill fees"—money to suppress unwanted photos.

Another drunken night out, I thought, clicking on the link. Probably Ryder stumbling out of some club, looking disheveled. I'd handle it like I always did—pay the fee, draft a statement about him being exhausted from filming, maybe plant a story about him visiting a children's hospital.

The page loaded, and my stomach dropped.

It wasn't Ryder stumbling drunk from a club.

It was Ryder kissing Zahra—my sister, the girl I'd mentored since she was sixteen. They stood on the deck of a yacht, his hands tangled in her hair, her body pressed against his. The timestamp showed it was from three weeks ago, when Ryder claimed to be at a remote location shoot.

I scrolled through the images, each one more intimate than the last. Zahra's hands on his chest, his mouth on her neck, both of them laughing like they didn't have a care in the world.

Like they hadn't just destroyed mine.

The dates on the photos spanned months—all during times Ryder had claimed to be working. All during times I'd been home alone, raising our son, managing his career, believing in our marriage.

My hands trembled as I closed the laptop. The room felt suddenly airless.

---

"Where were you three weeks ago?" I asked, standing in the doorway of Ryder's study.

He looked up from his script, annoyed at the interruption. "On location in San Diego. You know that."

"I know what you told me," I replied, my voice surprisingly steady as I placed the printed photos on his desk.

His expression changed as he recognized Zahra in the images—first confusion, then anger, not remorse.

"You're spying on me now?" he demanded, standing up.

"You're sleeping with my sister," I said, fighting to keep my voice from breaking. "The sister I welcomed into our home. The sister I helped build a career."

"You had no right to invade my privacy like this," he hissed, stepping toward me.

I pulled divorce papers from behind my back. "Sign these, and we can end this quietly."

Something dark flashed in his eyes. He grabbed my wrist, twisting until my hand slammed against the desk edge. Pain shot through my fingers—my writing hand.

"Let go," I gasped.

"You're nothing without me," he snarled, squeezing tighter. "No one would even know your name if it wasn't attached to mine. You think anyone would care about your pathetic little PR firm if I wasn't your client?"

Tears blurred my vision as I felt something in my hand give way. "You're hurting me."

He released me with a shove. "Get out. And if you try to leave me or say anything about this, I'll destroy you. No one will believe you over me—America's sweetheart versus his bitter, jealous wife? Who do you think will win that battle?"

I cradled my throbbing hand against my chest, backing away. "This isn't over."

"It is for you," he said coldly. "Now get out."

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