
My Lover’s Fiancée Tried to Frame Me for Murder
Chapter 3
The studio manager's office smells like burnt coffee and panic. I sit across from him, watching his hands shake as he pulls up the security system.
"I don't know what you think you'll find," he says. His eyes keep darting to the door, where I can hear Camila's performance continuing. Sirens wail in the distance. "The cameras might not have caught—"
"They caught everything." I lean forward. "Four angles. You told me yourself when I arrived. State-of-the-art system."
He swallows. Clicks the mouse. The screen splits into quadrants.
There. Camila at the top of the stairs, phone raised. But in this footage, she's not looking at me. She's checking the camera positions, her head tilting as she calculates angles. Her free hand adjusts her dress, pulling it just so. Then she glances at her phone screen—checking the livestream frame, making sure she's centered.
I'm still ten feet away, hands at my sides.
Camila takes a breath. Squares her shoulders. And throws herself backward with the precision of a stunt performer.
"Jesus," the manager whispers.
"Send it to me," I say. "All four angles. Unedited."
"I could lose my job—"
"You'll lose more than that if you don't." My voice comes out colder than I intended. "She's claiming I assaulted her. That I killed her baby. You want to be complicit in that?"
His finger hovers over the mouse. Then clicks.
My phone buzzes. File received.
I'm out the door before he can change his mind.
The footage goes live at 9:47 PM. I don't add commentary. Don't need to. The four-angle split-screen speaks for itself—Camila's calculated preparation, her practiced fall, the ten feet of empty space between us.
Within an hour, it's everywhere. Twitter. Instagram. TikTok. The same platforms she used to build her empire now dismantling it frame by frame.
By midnight, #CamilaLied is trending. By morning, her sponsors are dropping her. By noon, someone's dug up her medical records—no pregnancy, no miscarriage, no baby at all.
I watch it unfold from my Brooklyn studio, tracing my scar, feeling nothing.
The press conference happens three days later. I watch it on my laptop, Gemma reading beside me on the secondhand couch I bought last week.
Richard Hall stands at a podium, Margaret beside him, both dressed in funeral black. The Hall Enterprises logo gleams behind them.
"Effective immediately," Richard says, his voice carrying that boardroom authority, "we are formally disowning our son, Dillon Hall. He will be stripped of all executive titles and removed from the family trust."
Flashes pop. Reporters shout questions.
Margaret leans into the microphone. "We raised our son to value integrity. To honor those who sacrifice for him." Her voice cracks, just slightly. "He has failed in every measure. We will not allow the Hall name to be further tarnished by his choices."
"What about the stock prices?" someone yells.
"Hall Enterprises will survive," Richard says. "It always has. But it will do so without Dillon."
Gemma looks up from her book. "Are those the people who gave you the envelope?"
"Yes."
"They look sad."
I close the laptop. "They are."
"Because of their son?"
"Because they finally see who he really is."
Gemma considers this, then returns to her book. After a moment, she shifts closer, her shoulder pressing against mine.
The apartment in Tribeca has three bedrooms and a balcony that catches the morning sun. The security system cost more than my first car, but after Camila, I'm not taking chances.
Gemma stands in the doorway of what will be her room, clutching her garbage bag of belongings. She hasn't moved in five minutes.
"It's really mine?" she asks.
"Really yours."
"What if you change your mind?"
I kneel beside her, eye level. "I won't."
"Everyone says that."
"I'm not everyone." I touch the scar on my palm. "I know what it's like to give everything and get nothing back. I won't do that to you."
She searches my face. Then, slowly, steps inside.
The balcony garden starts small. Basil and mint in terracotta pots, lavender in a wooden planter. I show Gemma how to pinch the leaves, release the oils, the way my grandmother taught me.
"This is how we healed before," I tell her, crushing mint between my fingers. "Before the magic. Just plants and knowledge and time."
Gemma copies my movements, careful and precise. "Does it work?"
"Not like magic. But yes. It works."
We plant rosemary for remembrance. Chamomile for calm. Sage for wisdom. Each one a promise that we're building something that can't be taken away.
"Can I plant something?" Gemma asks.
I hand her a packet of seeds. Forget-me-nots.
She reads the label, then looks at me with those too-old eyes. "So we remember?"
"So we remember we're worth remembering."
She presses the seeds into soil with gentle hands. When she's done, she wipes her palms on her jeans, leaving dark smudges.
I trace my scar and feel something new. Not emptiness. Not exhaustion.
Hope.
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