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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 2

The notification from the National Medical Board arrived at 6:14 AM, silent and lethal. It sat in my inbox, a single bold line of text that weighed more than the building around me: *Notice of Formal Inquiry Regarding Data Fabrication.*

The coffee in my mug was still hot, steam curling into the sterile air of my office, but my blood ran cold. The unauthorized edits Elio had found weren't just vandalism; they were coordinates for a targeted strike. Someone had taken the raw datasets of my neural regeneration study—three years of sleepless nights, missed holidays, and relentless precision—and rewritten them into a lie.

By 8:00 AM, the executioners had arrived.

Two men in charcoal suits were already dismantling my life when I walked in. One was unplugging the server tower beneath my desk; the other was sweeping patient files into a cardboard box with efficient, terrifying indifference.

"What is this?" My voice was steady, a reflex of the operating room, but my thumb pressed hard against the inside of my wrist.

Dr. Raymond Holt stood in the doorway. For seven years, he had been my mentor, the man who toasted my fellowship and co-signed my grant applications. Now, he stood with his arms crossed, creating a physical barricade between me and the hallway.

"Administrative leave, Sophia," Holt said. He didn't look at me. His gaze was fixed on a point somewhere above my left shoulder, refusing to engage.

"Raymond, you know this data," I said, stepping toward him. "You were the lead author on the preliminary papers. You know I didn't fabricate anything. This is a hack. Elio found the intrusion trails yesterday."

"The Board received an anonymous submission detailing 'systematic falsification' of results," Holt replied, his voice flat, rehearsed. "The institution cannot afford the optics of a scandal. Not with the grant renewal pending."

"Optics?" The word tasted like bile. "You're stripping my credentials because of an anonymous tip? I need access to the audit logs. I can prove the timestamps don't match my shifts."

"Your access has been revoked." Holt finally met my eyes. There was no sympathy there, only the cold calculation of a man cutting off a gangrenous limb to save the body. He held out a hand. "Your badge, Dr. Burke."

The plastic rectangle felt heavy in my palm. I placed it on the desk, the click sounding like a gunshot in the quiet room. Outside the glass walls, nurses and residents—people I had trained, people whose careers I had nurtured—averted their gaze, suddenly fascinated by their clipboards. I was a ghost before I even left the building.

The parking garage was a concrete tomb, amplifying the sound of my breathing. I sat in my car, gripping the steering wheel until my knuckles turned white. The silence was deafening. I needed an anchor. I needed Jazmine.

I dialed her number. Straight to voicemail.

*"Hey, it's Jaz. Leave a message."*

Panic, sharp and irrational, spiked in my chest. I opened the location-sharing app we’d set up years ago. Her dot pulsed in the Upper East Side, a few blocks from the park. A luxury residential tower. The address triggered a faint, uneasy memory—something from Ronan’s portfolio I had glanced at once and forgotten.

I drove on autopilot, the city blurring into streaks of gray rain and steel. My mind raced through scenarios—Jazmine in trouble, Jazmine hurt—anything to keep the darker, more insidious thought at bay.

The building was a monolith of glass, the kind of place that smelled of old money and new secrets. The concierge desk was unmanned, the staff likely attending to a VIP resident. I slipped past the marble columns to the elevators, my heart rate climbing with the floor numbers.

Penthouse B.

The hallway was silent, the carpet swallowing the sound of my heels. The door to the unit was unlocked. Careless. Or maybe arrogant.

I pushed it open.

The foyer was bathed in the golden light of the afternoon sun, dust motes dancing in the air. The scent hit me first—a mix of expensive leather, rain, and the distinct, cloying sweetness of jasmine perfume. A coat was draped over the entryway chair. A trench coat. *Ronan’s.*

The air left my lungs.

I moved forward, drawn by a gravity I couldn't resist, toward the living room. The sound of laughter drifted out—low, intimate.

"She looked like a deer in headlights at dinner," Ronan’s voice said, rich with amusement. "Mother almost felt bad for her. Almost."

"Don't be mean," a woman’s voice purred. "She's going to need a friend when the board strips her license. I’ll have to be very supportive."

My stomach turned over.

I rounded the corner.

They were on the sprawling leather sofa, silhouetted against the skyline. Jazmine was straddling his lap, her fingers tangled in the hair at the nape of his neck—the same way she used to braid mine during med school study sessions. Ronan’s hands were on her waist, possessing her with a familiarity that spoke of years, not days.

The betrayal wasn't a sharp knife; it was a dull, heavy weight that crushed the breath out of me. The altered data. The divorce refusal. The "work thing." It wasn't just cruelty. It was a production. A play they had been rehearsing while I was in the audience, clapping.

Jazmine turned her head, perhaps sensing the shift in the air, the disturbance in their vacuum. Her eyes widened, losing focus for a second before landing on me.

"Sophia," she breathed, the name falling from her lips like a curse.

Ronan didn't flinch. He slowly turned to face me, his expression devoid of guilt. He looked at me with the cold, clinical detachment of a surgeon cutting into necrotic tissue.

"You're early," he said.

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