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My Husband Let His Sister Ruin Our Marriage Novel Cover

My Husband Let His Sister Ruin Our Marriage

The camera flashes were violent, a strobe-light assault that turned the red carpet into a disjointed stop-motion film. I smiled until my cheeks ached, the muscle memory of a Manhattan socialite taking over. My hand rested on the crook of Ian Edwards’ arm, feeling the expensive wool of his tuxedo, but no heat beneath it. To the world, we were the apex: the tech titan and the heiress, a union of staggering net worth and photogenic perfection. "Look this way, Mrs. Edwards! Ian, over here!" I leaned into him, tilting my head just so. For a second, the pressure of his side against mine felt real. Then the heavy door of the limousine slammed shut, sealing us inside a vacuum of leather and tinted glass. Ian peeled himself away from me instantly, shifting to the far side of the bench seat as if my touch were corrosive.
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Chapter 2

The weekend was supposed to be a ceasefire. I had spent three days curating the itinerary for the Hamptons—secluded beaches, a reservation at a restaurant Ian actually tolerated, and enough distance from the city to perhaps make him remember I existed. The trunk of the Aston Martin was open, gaping like a hungry mouth. I lifted my weekend bag, the leather handle cool against my palm, and walked toward the car.

Ian stood by the driver’s door, tapping a frantic, irregular rhythm on the roof. He wasn't looking at me. He was staring at the screen of his phone as if it held the nuclear codes.

It rang. He answered before the first trill finished.

"Arielle?"

The change in his posture was immediate and visceral. His spine stiffened, the perpetual boredom evaporating into sharp, jagged tension. I watched his knuckles whiten around the device.

"Where are you? Lock the door. I’m coming."

He hung up and looked at me. No, he looked *through* me. His eyes were wild, focused on a threat I couldn't see.

"Get your bag out."

I froze, the weight of my luggage straining my shoulder. "Ian, we’re supposed to leave in five minutes. The reservation—"

"Arielle says someone is outside her apartment. A stalker."

"She has a doorman, Ian. She has a twenty-four-hour security detail. The police—"

"I said get your bag out."

He didn't wait for me to comply. He reached into the trunk, grabbed the strap of my bag, and hauled it out. He dropped it onto the driveway with a careless thud. The expensive leather scuffed against the asphalt, a sound that made me flinch.

"Ian, please. This is the third time this month," I said, my voice rising, desperate to bridge the chasm opening between us. "You can't just leave me here."

"She needs me."

He slid into the driver's seat without another glance. The engine roared, a guttural growl that vibrated in my chest. He didn't wave. He didn't apologize. He just peeled out, tires screeching, leaving me standing in a cloud of exhaust, staring at my luggage like a discarded prop in a play that had been cancelled mid-scene.

***

I shouldn't have gone to his office two days later. It was a fool's errand, born of the pathetic hope that proximity might breed affection.

I stood outside the frosted glass of the boardroom, a bag of takeout from Le Bernardin heavy in my hand. I could hear shouting from inside—a rare, volatile sound in the sterile silence of Edwards Corp.

"She is a liability, Ian! The press is asking questions about the funds—"

"Then kill the story!" Ian’s voice was a thunderclap, shaking the glass. "If you question Arielle’s role in this foundation again, you can clear out your desk."

I flinched. That was Marcus, his CFO. A man who had been with the company since the IPO.

"We’re talking about a hundred-million-dollar merger," Marcus argued, his voice strained. "You're jeopardizing the stock for... for her whims. She doesn't even attend the board meetings."

"I don't care about the stock. I care about protecting family."

I pushed the door open, unable to listen to the wreckage any longer. The air in the room was thick, suffocating. Ian stood at the head of the table, his hands planted on the mahogany, leaning over Marcus like a predator.

"Ian," I said softly, stepping into the crossfire. "Maybe Marcus has a point. If the press is digging, we should be careful."

Ian’s head snapped toward me. His eyes were shards of ice, stripping the skin from my bones.

"Get out."

"I brought lunch. I thought—"

"You thought you could walk in here and lecture me on business?" He stalked toward me, looming over my frame until I had to tilt my head back to meet his gaze. "You plan parties, Blaire. You wear dresses and smile for cameras. Do not presume to understand loyalty. You have no concept of what it means to bleed for someone."

My throat tightened, the sting of his words sharper than any physical blow. "I'm your wife," I whispered.

"Then act like it," he sneered, turning his back on me. "And leave the thinking to the adults."

***

The storm hit that night. Rain lashed against the estate windows like handfuls of gravel, and the wind howled through the chimneys. When the power died, the silence was instant and heavy.

"Ian?" I called out, but the house swallowed my voice. He wasn't home. He was never home anymore.

I grabbed a heavy-duty flashlight and headed for the wine cellar where the main breaker panel was housed. The air grew colder as I descended the stone steps, the smell of damp earth and aging oak rising to meet me.

I found the panel, my fingers fumbling with the latch in the erratic beam of light.

"You're wasting your time."

I spun around. The beam of my flashlight caught Arielle standing at the top of the stairs. She wasn't wearing her usual mask of fragility. She was smiling, but it didn't reach her eyes. In the harsh light, she looked spectral.

"Arielle? What are you doing down here?"

She descended slowly, trailing a hand along the rough stone wall. "He hates it when you try to fix things, you know. It makes you look... desperate."

"I'm resetting the breaker. Move."

"You really think you can win, don't you?" She stopped three steps above me, looking down like a queen addressing a peasant. "You think if you wear the right lingerie or cook the right meal, he'll suddenly forget?"

"Forget what?"

"That you're just the distraction." Her voice dropped, soft and venomous. "He doesn't touch you because he feels guilty, Blaire. Every time he looks at you, he's wishing you were me."

The cruelty of it took my breath away. "You're sick."

"I'm loved," she corrected.

She stepped back up to the landing. Panic flared in my chest.

"Arielle, wait—"

She grabbed the heavy iron handle of the cellar door.

"It's going to be a cold night," she said.

"Arielle, don't!"

She slammed the door. The sound echoed like a gunshot in the confined space. I heard the distinct *clack* of the external deadbolt sliding home.

"Arielle!" I screamed, rushing up the stairs and pounding on the solid wood until my palms burned. "Open this door!"

"Oops," her voice came through, muffled and mocking. "The handle must have jammed. Don't worry, Blaire. I'm sure Ian will find you... eventually."

Then, the thin line of light under the door vanished. She had turned off the emergency switch.

Darkness crashed down on me, absolute and terrifying, leaving me buried alive in the silence of my own home.

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