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My Husband Thinks I Burned Down the Warehouse Novel Cover

My Husband Thinks I Burned Down the Warehouse

The fluorescent lights of the Queens Free Clinic buzzed overhead, casting a sickly pallor across Dr. Chen's face as he delivered the news I'd been dreading. "I'm sorry, Clara. The cancer has spread more aggressively than we anticipated." His voice was gentle but clinical. "Without proper pain management, your final weeks will be... difficult." I clutched my stomach, feeling the familiar burn that had become my constant companion. "How much for the medication?" Dr. Chen's eyes flickered with sympathy. "The specialized painkillers we discussed would cost around eight thousand dollars for a month's supply." Eight thousand. The number echoed in my mind as I nodded, pretending the figure didn't represent an insurmountable mountain of debt.
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Chapter 1

The fluorescent lights of the Queens Free Clinic buzzed overhead, casting a sickly pallor across Dr. Chen's face as he delivered the news I'd been dreading.

"I'm sorry, Clara. The cancer has spread more aggressively than we anticipated." His voice was gentle but clinical. "Without proper pain management, your final weeks will be... difficult."

I clutched my stomach, feeling the familiar burn that had become my constant companion. "How much for the medication?"

Dr. Chen's eyes flickered with sympathy. "The specialized painkillers we discussed would cost around eight thousand dollars for a month's supply."

Eight thousand. The number echoed in my mind as I nodded, pretending the figure didn't represent an insurmountable mountain of debt.

"Is there any assistance program?" I asked, though I already knew the answer.

"I've looked into everything, Clara. Your situation is... unique." He hesitated, choosing his words carefully. "Without insurance or assets to liquidate—"

"I understand." I cut him off, unable to hear the rest.

Outside the clinic, I leaned against the grimy brick wall, pulling my thin jacket tighter against the autumn chill. My fingers trembled as I reached into my pocket and withdrew the single asset I had left—a cream-colored invitation to the Wagner Charity Gala, hidden away for four years like a poisonous flower.

I stared at it, tracing the embossed gold letters that once represented my entire world. Harrison's world. The world that had cast me out like garbage.

"You're making the right choice," I whispered to myself, ignoring the tear that slipped down my cheek. "It's just for the money. Just to ease the pain."

---

The Metropolitan Museum of Art blazed with light, a beacon of wealth and privilege against the darkening Manhattan sky. Limousines lined Fifth Avenue as New York's elite arrived in waves of silk and diamonds.

I stood across the street, smoothing down the second-hand dress I'd purchased with my last twenty dollars. The fabric was cheap, the cut outdated, but it was the best I could do. My hands shook as I handed my invitation to the attendant, half-expecting him to laugh me away.

"Enjoy your evening, Ms. Stevens," he said instead, and I was through the gates.

The grand hall took my breath away—crystal chandeliers, marble columns, tables dripping with white orchids and champagne towers. Once, this had been my playground. Now, I was an intruder, a ghost haunting the periphery of a life that no longer belonged to me.

I spotted her near the buffet—my mother, resplendent in emerald silk, laughing with women who had once been my friends. For a moment, I allowed myself to hope. Perhaps she would help me. Perhaps blood would prove thicker than social standing.

"Mother," I called softly, approaching her with my head bowed.

She turned, and the laughter died on her lips. Her face drained of color, her eyes widening with horror—as if she'd seen a corpse walk from the grave.

"Clara?" she hissed, her voice barely audible. Then, louder, she called to a passing security guard. "This woman is not supposed to be here. She's riffraff—remove her immediately."

The guard's hand closed around my arm, but I pulled away. "I have an invitation," I said, my voice stronger than I felt.

"Check her purse," my mother ordered, her eyes never leaving my face. "I'm sure she stole it."

I backed away, ducking into the shadows of a massive Greek statue. The humiliation burned worse than the cancer eating away at my insides.

---

I waited for nearly an hour before I saw him—Harrison, immaculate in his tuxedo, commanding attention as he moved through the crowd. My heart lurched painfully in my chest.

Four years had changed him little. Perhaps a few more lines around his eyes, a harder set to his jaw. But he was still devastatingly handsome, still capable of making my traitorous heart race.

I started toward him, but a figure intercepted my path.

"Well, well," Valeria Payne's voice dripped with false warmth. "If it isn't Clara Stevens."

Valeria looked exactly as I remembered—sleek dark hair, perfect makeup, her smile sharp as a blade. She wore a stunning red gown that hugged her curves, making my cheap dress look like a mockery.

"Harrison will be so pleased to see you," she continued, loud enough for nearby guests to turn and stare. "Won't he?"

Before I could respond, she stumbled slightly—a calculated move—and her champagne flute tipped, emptying its contents down the front of my dress.

Gasps and titters erupted around us as the cold liquid soaked through the thin fabric, plastering it to my skin.

"How clumsy of me," Valeria said with a smirk. "Though perhaps it's an improvement?"

The crowd's laughter grew louder as Harrison appeared at Valeria's side, his eyes finding mine with unerring precision.

"Harrison," I began, my voice barely above a whisper.

He looked at me with such cold disdain that I nearly stepped backward. His gaze traveled from my face to the champagne stain spreading across my chest, then back to my eyes.

"How much did they pay you to embarrass me tonight?" he asked, his voice cutting through the ambient chatter like ice.

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