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My Husband Framed My Best Friend to Trap Me Novel Cover

My Husband Framed My Best Friend to Trap Me

The divorce papers felt heavier than they should have in my hands. Three months of drafting, redrafting, consulting lawyers who spoke in careful euphemisms about 'irreconcilable differences' — all of it reduced to twenty-three pages of legal text that might as well have been a suicide note for the life I'd been clinging to. I found Ronan in his study, the one room in our sprawling Brookhaven estate that had always felt more like a mausoleum than a home. Floor-to-ceiling windows framed the manicured lawn beyond, but the light that filtered through seemed to die before it reached the mahogany desk where he sat, reviewing what looked like acquisition reports for Larson Group. He didn't look up when I entered. "Sign these." I placed the papers in front of him, my voice steadier than the hand that had carried them here. Ronan's pen continued its path across whatever document held his attention. The scratch of ink on paper was the only sound for a long moment. Then he set the pen down with deliberate precision, lifted the divorce papers, and began reading. Not skimming — reading.
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Chapter 1

The divorce papers felt heavier than they should have in my hands. Three months of drafting, redrafting, consulting lawyers who spoke in careful euphemisms about 'irreconcilable differences' — all of it reduced to twenty-three pages of legal text that might as well have been a suicide note for the life I'd been clinging to.

I found Ronan in his study, the one room in our sprawling Brookhaven estate that had always felt more like a mausoleum than a home. Floor-to-ceiling windows framed the manicured lawn beyond, but the light that filtered through seemed to die before it reached the mahogany desk where he sat, reviewing what looked like acquisition reports for Larson Group.

He didn't look up when I entered.

"Sign these." I placed the papers in front of him, my voice steadier than the hand that had carried them here.

Ronan's pen continued its path across whatever document held his attention. The scratch of ink on paper was the only sound for a long moment. Then he set the pen down with deliberate precision, lifted the divorce papers, and began reading. Not skimming — reading. Every word, every clause, as though he were reviewing a contract for structural flaws.

My thumb pressed against the inside of my wrist. Grounding. Steadying.

"No," he said finally.

The word landed like a scalpel between ribs.

"Ronan—"

"I said no, Sophia." He picked up the papers and, with the same methodical care he'd used to read them, began tearing. Not ripping in anger — tearing with purpose, each sheet divided into neat halves, then quarters, the sound of rending paper filling the space between us like something dying.

I watched the pieces fall onto his desk like snow. Like ash.

He stood, closing the distance between us until I could smell the faint trace of his cologne — the same one he'd worn the night he proposed in that snowstorm a lifetime ago. When he leaned in, his breath was warm against my ear, his voice a low, even murmur that somehow felt worse than shouting.

"The only way out is over my dead body."

He pulled back just enough to meet my eyes, and what I saw there wasn't rage. It was something colder. More final.

I left without another word, my legs carrying me through hallways that had never felt like home, past rooms we'd furnished together back when I still believed in us.

---

The café where I met Jazmine the next afternoon was one of those aggressively cheerful places — exposed brick, Edison bulbs, the kind of intentional warmth that made the cold inside me feel even sharper by contrast.

Jazmine was already there, tucked into our usual corner booth, her face lighting up when she saw me. She stood to hug me, and I let myself sink into it for just a moment, breathing in her familiar jasmine perfume.

"You look exhausted," she said, pulling back to study my face with what looked like genuine concern. "What happened?"

I told her. All of it. The papers, the tearing, Ronan's whispered threat. Jazmine's hand found mine across the table, her grip warm and solid.

"God, Soph. I'm so sorry. He can't keep you trapped like this."

"He can. He is." My coffee sat untouched, going cold. "I don't know what else to do."

"We'll figure something out." She squeezed my hand. "You're not alone in this. You know that, right?"

I nodded, grateful for the lifeline even as some part of me wondered why it felt like I was drowning anyway.

Her phone buzzed on the table. She glanced at it, typed something quickly, then slipped it back into her purse with an apologetic smile. "Sorry. Work thing."

---

The Larson family dinners were a monthly ritual I'd learned to endure rather than enjoy. That evening's gathering was held in the formal dining room of Eleanor Larson's estate, a space designed to make guests feel small.

Eleanor sat at the head of the table, her posture perfect, her expression carved from ice. Ronan's father had passed years ago, leaving her to rule the family with the same exacting standards she applied to Larson Group's board meetings.

"Sophia." She didn't look up from her plate. "I trust your surgical schedule allowed you to attend this time."

The implication hung in the air — that my work was an inconvenience, a distraction from my real duties as a Larson wife.

"I wouldn't miss it," I said, the lie smooth and practiced.

Ronan sat across from me, silent, his attention on his phone. We might as well have been strangers.

My own phone vibrated in my lap. Elio's name flashed across the screen. I excused myself, ignoring Eleanor's disapproving glance, and stepped into the hallway.

"Dr. Burke." Elio's voice was tight with urgency. "We have a problem. Someone's been accessing your research files — the neural regeneration data. Unauthorized changes to the raw datasets. I caught it during a routine backup check."

The floor seemed to tilt beneath me.

"How long has this been going on?"

"At least two weeks. Maybe longer. I'm still tracing it."

I pressed my thumb against my wrist, harder this time. "Lock everything down. I'm on my way."

When I returned to the dining room, Eleanor was speaking about some charity gala. Ronan was watching me now, his expression unreadable.

I didn't sit back down.

"I have to go. Emergency at the hospital."

Eleanor's fork paused midair. "Of course you do."

I left them there — the cold mother-in-law, the silent husband, the life I was already halfway out of — and drove toward the only thing I had left that still felt like mine.

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