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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 4

The press release went live at 9:47 AM.

I was in the hospital cafeteria when my phone started vibrating—once, twice, then a continuous stream of notifications that didn't stop. News alerts. Twitter mentions. Emails from colleagues whose names I barely recognized, all with the same subject line: *Statement from Larson Group.*

I opened it with hands that had stopped shaking hours ago, past the point of shock, into that numb territory where nothing could hurt anymore because everything already had.

*"The Larson Group announces the immediate termination of all financial partnerships and philanthropic associations with Dr. Sophia Burke, effective immediately. Recent allegations of research misconduct represent a fundamental breach of the ethical standards our organization upholds. We extend our deepest apologies to the medical community and reaffirm our commitment to scientific integrity."*

Eleanor's signature sat at the bottom, crisp and final.

The cafeteria had gone quiet. I looked up to find a dozen pairs of eyes on me—residents, nurses, the attending who'd congratulated me on my last publication. They looked away, one by one, like I was contagious.

My phone rang. Unknown number. I answered anyway, because what did I have left to protect?

"Dr. Burke?" A woman's voice, clipped and professional. "This is Detective Sarah Chen with the NYPD. We have Elio Wood in custody. He's been charged with unauthorized access to protected medical data and conspiracy to commit fraud."

The floor dropped out from under me.

"That's impossible. Elio didn't—"

"We have evidence linking his workstation to the data alterations. He's being processed now. If you have information relevant to the case, I suggest you come down to the precinct."

The line went dead.

I ran.

---

The precinct smelled like burnt coffee and institutional despair. Detective Chen met me at the front desk, her expression professionally neutral in a way that told me she'd already made up her mind.

"I need to see him," I said.

"That's not possible. He's being questioned."

"He didn't do this. The intrusion happened during my surgery rotation—we can prove the timeline doesn't match."

"Dr. Burke." Chen's voice dropped, almost gentle. "We have server logs showing repeated unauthorized access from Dr. Wood's credentials. We have encrypted communications between his personal email and an offshore account. And we have testimony from Larson Group's IT security team documenting his attempts to cover his tracks."

Testimony. From Ronan's people.

My thumb pressed against my wrist, but the grounding technique didn't work anymore. Nothing worked.

"How long are you holding him?"

"Arraignment's tomorrow morning. Bail will be set then." Chen hesitated. "For what it's worth, Dr. Burke—you might want to get yourself a lawyer too."

I left before she could see me break.

---

My apartment was dark when I got home, the kind of darkness that felt permanent. I hadn't paid the electric bill. Or maybe I had, and Ronan had found a way to cut the power anyway. At this point, the distinction didn't matter.

I sat on the floor in the living room, my back against the wall, staring at nothing.

The knock came at 10:23 PM.

I knew who it was before I opened the door. Some part of me had been waiting for this—the final act, the closing argument.

Ronan stood in the hallway, rain-soaked and perfectly composed, holding a manila folder.

"May I come in?"

I stepped aside. He walked past me into the darkness, not bothering to turn on a light, as if he could navigate my life blind.

He set the folder on the coffee table and opened it. Even in the dim glow from the hallway, I could see the letterhead: *Public Statement of Responsibility.*

"Sign this," he said. "Confess to the data fabrication. Take full responsibility. Do it publicly, in front of the medical board and the press."

"And if I don't?"

"Elio Wood will spend the next five to seven years in prison." Ronan's voice was flat, factual. "The evidence against him is airtight. I made sure of it. But if you confess—if you give them the narrative they want—I'll make a call. The charges disappear. He walks."

I stared at the document, the words blurring in the darkness.

"You're asking me to destroy what's left of my career."

"I'm offering you a trade." He moved closer, close enough that I could smell the rain on his coat. "Your reputation for his freedom. Seems fair, doesn't it? After all, you've always been so good at sacrificing yourself for the people you love."

The cruelty in his voice was almost tender.

I thought of Elio in that cell, alone, paying for loyalty he should never have given me. I thought of the underground fights, the blood Ronan had spilled for me once, back when his devotion hadn't yet curdled into this.

"When?" My voice came out hollow.

"Tomorrow. Two PM. The hospital's main conference room. I've already arranged for the press."

He left the folder on the table and walked to the door. He paused there, silhouetted against the hallway light.

"You know what the worst part is, Sophia?" He didn't turn around. "You still think there's a version of this where you win."

The door closed behind him, and I was alone in the dark with the confession that would end me.

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