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My Husband Framed Me to Protect His Mistress Novel Cover

My Husband Framed Me to Protect His Mistress

The roasted chicken sits in the center of the dining table, golden and perfect, steam no longer rising from its crisp skin. I've set out the good china—the Wedgwood set Riley's mother gave us for our third anniversary, the one she said was "too fine for everyday use." The irony isn't lost on me as I stare at the empty chair across from mine. My phone buzzes against the mahogany surface. Riley's name lights up the screen. "Gem, I'm so sorry." His voice carries that practiced apologetic tone I've learned to recognize over seven years of marriage. "There's a crisis with the Jenkins account. I need to pull an all-nighter at the office." I close my eyes, counting the holidays. Easter. Fourth of July. Labor Day.
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Chapter 2

Marcus Thompson's office sits on the forty-second floor of Columbia Tower, all glass and steel and the kind of quiet that money buys. His receptionist—a woman with silver hair and eyes that have seen every variety of human misery—shows me into a conference room overlooking Elliott Bay.

Marcus enters three minutes later. He's younger than I expected, maybe forty, with the lean build of a runner and a handshake that's firm without being performative.

"Mrs. Crawford." He gestures to the leather chair across from him. "Tell me everything."

I slide my phone across the table. The screenshot is still pulled up—Riley's reflection in Selena's wine glass, their hands touching, Vineyard 29's rustic walls framing their intimacy.

"My husband told me he was working. He was in Napa Valley with his assistant." My voice comes out level, clinical. "They were at the vineyard where he proposed to me."

Marcus studies the image, his expression unchanging. "Emotional affair?"

"At minimum."

"Physical evidence of sexual contact?"

"Not yet."

He nods, making notes on his legal pad. "Assets?"

"We co-founded Crawford-Nelson Technologies seven years ago. Current valuation is approximately forty-three million. We own the penthouse jointly—paid off, worth three-point-two million. Joint accounts, investment portfolio, the usual."

"Children?"

"No."

"Prenup?"

"No." I watch his eyebrows rise slightly. "We were young. In love. Stupid."

"Not stupid. Optimistic." Marcus sets down his pen. "Here's what we're going to do. You're going to go home and act like nothing has changed. Be the dutiful wife. Meanwhile, I need you to document everything—bank statements, business records, emails, text messages. Anything that shows marital funds being used for her. Anything that proves he's hiding assets or planning to push you out of the company."

The company. The one I helped build from a Harvard dorm room pitch into a Seattle success story. The one where I gradually became 'Riley's wife' instead of 'co-founder Gemma Nelson.'

"How long?" I ask.

"Two weeks. Maybe three. We file when we have an airtight case." He leans forward. "Mrs. Crawford, I've handled two hundred divorces. The ones who win are the ones who stay cold. Can you do that?"

I think of the chicken dinner congealing on our dining table. The empty promises. The jasmine perfume clinging to my husband's collar.

"Yes," I say. "I can do that."

---

Three days later, I make French toast.

Riley comes downstairs at seven-thirty, showered and dressed in the charcoal Tom Ford suit I helped him pick out last month. He's been sleeping in the guest room since our fight, but this morning I've set the table like nothing happened. Orange juice in crystal glasses. Coffee in his favorite mug.

He pauses in the doorway, suspicious.

"Good morning," I say, sliding a plate toward his usual seat.

He sits slowly, watching me like I might be concealing a weapon. "What's this about?"

"Breakfast." I take a sip of coffee. "I've been thinking about what you said. About being controlling. Maybe you're right."

Something in his shoulders relaxes. "I'm glad you're being reasonable."

I reach for the manila envelope beside my plate. "I need you to sign this. Just a receipt confirmation for some business documents Marcus is handling."

Marcus Thompson, my college roommate's brother. Riley met him once at a barbecue four years ago. He won't remember.

Riley takes the envelope, barely glancing at the papers inside before scrawling his signature across the bottom of the service acknowledgment. He slides it back to me, already checking his phone.

"Thanks," he says absently. "I've got an eight o'clock."

He's halfway to the door when curiosity gets the better of him. He stops, turns back, and picks up the envelope again. This time he actually reads.

I watch his face change. Confusion first, then comprehension, then something that might be amusement.

"Divorce papers?" He laughs—actually laughs—and tears the petition in half. "Jesus, Gemma. This is pathetic. You wouldn't last a week without me. Without my name, without my company, you're nobody."

He drops the torn papers on the table between us like confetti.

"Grow up," he says, and walks out.

I wait until his car pulls out of the garage. Then I photograph the torn petition, the signature still visible on the service receipt, and text it to Marcus.

His response comes thirty seconds later: *Perfect. See you in court.*

---

The Crawford-Nelson Technologies building is downtown, all glass and ambition, our logo etched into the marble lobby. I haven't been here in six months—not since Riley suggested I "focus on the home front" while he handled operations.

I take the elevator to the executive floor. My old office is at the end of the hall, the one with windows overlooking Puget Sound.

The door is open.

Selena sits at my desk—the custom walnut piece I commissioned from a local craftsman, the one with my initials carved subtly into the drawer pull. She's using my stationery, the cream cardstock with "GN" embossed at the top, writing what looks like a personal note.

She glances up when I enter, and her expression shifts into something practiced. Sympathy with an edge of triumph.

"Gemma." She stands, smoothing her skirt. "I heard about the divorce. I'm so sorry."

Her wrist catches the light. A diamond tennis bracelet, delicate and expensive, winks against her skin. I recognize it—I saw the charge on our joint account last week. Fifteen thousand dollars at Tiffany's. Riley said it was a client gift.

"Are you here to collect your things?" Selena asks, her voice dripping false concern. "I can have security bring you a box."

I don't answer. I'm too busy cataloging details. The way she's rearranged the desk. The framed photo of her and Riley at some company event, positioned where my Harvard diploma used to hang. The jasmine perfume saturating the air.

"The bracelet is lovely," I say finally.

Her hand moves to cover it, instinctive and guilty. "Oh, this? Riley gave it to me for closing the Jenkins account."

The Jenkins account that doesn't exist.

I smile. It feels like ice cracking. "Of course he did."

I turn and walk out, leaving her in my office, at my desk, wearing my husband's guilt on her wrist.

Marcus is going to love this.

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