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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 3

Jazmine didn't scramble off Ronan's lap. She didn't even have the decency to look ashamed. Instead, she stood with the languid grace of someone who had been waiting for this moment, smoothing her skirt with hands that had once held mine across coffee shop tables.

"God, Sophia." Her voice was different now—sharper, stripped of the warmth I'd mistaken for friendship. "You really are as naive as he said you'd be."

The words landed like a physical blow. I opened my mouth, but nothing came out. My throat had closed around the question I couldn't form.

Ronan rose from the sofa, buttoning his shirt cuff with the same methodical precision he'd used to tear the divorce papers. He crossed to the bar cart, poured two fingers of scotch, and took a slow sip before turning to face me.

"Your father," he said, his voice low and even, "destroyed my family."

The room tilted. "What?"

"Gerald Burke." He said the name like a curse. "The man who raised you. The man whose name you carry. He's the reason my sister disappeared twenty years ago. The reason my mother spent a decade searching for a ghost."

My thumb pressed against my wrist so hard I felt the pulse beneath. "That's insane. My father was a schoolteacher. He never—"

"He was involved." Ronan's knuckles whitened around the glass. "The police reports, the witness statements—his name was all over the case file. And when I found out you were his daughter, I knew exactly what I had to do."

The floor seemed to drop away beneath me. "You married me to—"

"To make you pay for what he took from me." He drained the scotch. "Every year of this marriage, every moment you thought we were building something—it was all leading here. To watching you lose everything that matters."

Jazmine moved to his side, her hand sliding possessively around his arm. "You should have seen your face at dinner last night. So earnest. So desperate to believe I still cared."

The jasmine perfume was suffocating now, cloying and wrong. I thought of every coffee date, every late-night phone call, every time she'd held my hand and promised I wasn't alone. All of it—performance. Reconnaissance.

"How long?" My voice came out broken.

"Does it matter?" Jazmine's smile was cruel. "Long enough to know every password, every research file, every weakness. You made it so easy, Soph. You trusted me."

I turned and walked out. Not ran—walked. One foot in front of the other, through the foyer, into the elevator, across the lobby. The rain hit me the moment I stepped outside, cold and merciless, but I barely felt it.

---

The cemetery was empty, the downpour keeping even the groundskeepers away. I knelt in the mud beside my father's headstone, the silver locket clutched in my fist—the one he'd given me the day before he died, pressing it into my palm with hands that shook from the cancer eating through him.

*"Keep this close,"* he'd whispered. *"It'll keep you safe."*

I opened it now, staring at the faded photograph inside: a little girl with dark curls, smiling at the camera. Me, at five years old, before the world taught me that love could be weaponized.

The rain mixed with something hotter on my cheeks. I thought of Ronan's face after those underground fights—split lip, swollen eye, blood crusting in his hairline. He'd come home at three in the morning, and I'd cleaned his wounds in our tiny bathroom, my hands steady even as my heart broke for him.

*"Why do you keep doing this?"* I'd asked.

*"Because you're worth it,"* he'd said, catching my wrist, pressing his forehead to mine. *"Everything I do is for you."*

I'd believed him. God help me, I'd believed every word.

Now I understood: even then, he'd been building the scaffold for my execution. Every act of devotion was just another nail.

---

Elio's text came through as I sat in my car, shivering in wet clothes: *Found the intrusion point. Meeting you at the lab in 20.*

The hospital's server room was a maze of blinking lights and humming machinery. Elio was already there when I arrived, his laptop open, lines of code scrolling across the screen.

"Look at this." He pointed to a timestamp. "The data alterations happened during your surgery rotation. You were in the OR for six hours straight. There's no way you could have accessed these files."

"Can you trace who did?"

"Working on it. The IP address is masked, but whoever did this left a digital fingerprint in the metadata. Give me another hour and I'll—"

His phone buzzed. Then mine. Then the overhead lights flickered.

Elio's screen went black.

"What the hell?" He frantically typed commands, but nothing responded. "Someone just locked me out of my own system."

My phone lit up with a notification from the hospital's internal network: *Security Alert: Unauthorized Access Detected from Dr. Elio Wood's Workstation.*

We stared at each other, the truth settling between us like a stone.

"They're framing you too," I whispered.

Elio's jaw tightened. "Then we go to the police. We show them—"

"Show them what? Logs they've already rewritten? A paper trail that leads straight back to you?" My voice cracked. "Ronan doesn't leave loose ends, Elio. He never has."

The rain hammered against the windows, relentless and cold, washing away everything I thought I knew.

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