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My Wedding Ring Paid for His Funeral Novel Cover

My Wedding Ring Paid for His Funeral

I wrote the code. I secured the funding. I built the company from a concrete garage floor while Julian practiced his smile for the cameras. Then, on the night of our fifth anniversary, he walked our own gala with his assistant in a replica of my custom Parisian gown, kissed her hand into the microphone, and called her his muse — in front of five hundred investors and every press outlet in the city. By midnight, I had dropped my wedding ring in a trash can, handed our fiercest rival CEO the patent transfer that made Julian's entire platform illegal to operate, and locked every server in his empire behind a thirty-two-character password he will never crack. He thinks I'm the scorned wife throwing a tantrum. He doesn't know Arthur Mercer owns the stage at tomorrow's Tech Summit. He doesn't know I filed that patent three years ago. He never read the fine print. And now, neither will his investors.
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Chapter 1

Two women stood on my stage in the same midnight-blue dress.

Julian took her hand instead.

He pressed a long, deliberate kiss to her knuckles — right into the microphone, in front of five hundred investors, on the fifth anniversary of the company I had coded from a garage floor.

"She is my muse," he told the room. "The quiet force behind everything we've built."

I lifted a goblet of dark red wine off the nearest tray.

The wine detonated across the white anniversary cake in a heavy arc — dark and jagged, the color of an open vein.

"Enjoy the cake, Julian." I set the glass on the ruined display. "It's the last sweet thing you'll ever get from me."

He never checked whose name was on the patent.

***

The five-tier pure white fondant cake resting on the center stage was supposed to be a monument to my five-year marriage and the tech empire I had built from scratch. Instead, it was about to become a crime scene.

"Five years, Evelyn." Marcus, our lead investor, raised his crystal flute, his eyes sweeping over the lavish ballroom. "You built an empire from a tiny garage."

"We built it," I corrected automatically, tapping my glass against his, playing the role of the supportive partner. But the secret patent registration secured under my private LLC—my ultimate insurance policy—told a very different story. "Julian and I. We skipped our honeymoon for a product launch, remember?"

"I remember you sleeping under your desk for three weeks," Marcus laughed, his voice booming over the elegant string quartet. "And it paid off. Look around."

He gestured across the grand ballroom. Five hundred of the city's elite filled the space. Investors, ruthless competitors, and rabid media representatives.

"They all want a piece of your success tonight," a woman's voice chimed in.

Sarah, our head of PR, joined our circle, her tablet clutched tightly to her chest. "The press is rabid, Evelyn. They want photos of the power couple by the cake in exactly ten minutes."

"Tell them to wait," I instructed, my tone leaving no room for argument. "Julian needs to give his speech first."

"Well, the man of the hour is heading this way," Marcus noted, nodding toward the entrance. "Ready for your moment?"

I turned toward the grand archway. Julian strode through the parted crowd like a conquering king. He wore a tailored tuxedo, his jaw set in that familiar, confident angle that had charmed millions out of venture capitalists.

"Always," I answered.

I smoothed the silk of my midnight-blue haute couture gown. I had spent months meticulously planning this gala. Every detail, down to the hand-crafted sugar roses on the massive anniversary cake, belonged to me.

"Julian," I greeted, stepping away from the towering champagne pyramid to meet my husband.

His gaze slid right over my face. He didn't blink. He didn't slow his pace.

The violent brush of his shoulder against mine sent a jarring, physical shock through my collarbone.

"Julian?" I asked, my voice barely audible over the sudden swell of the music.

He kept walking.

Sarah exchanged a highly nervous glance with Marcus. "Did you two change the run of show? He's supposed to walk up with you."

"We didn't change anything," I said, a cold prickle of unease crawling up my spine.

Marcus frowned, lowering his expensive drink. "Did you two have a fight before you got here?"

"No. We drove in the same car. He was fine."

I tracked my husband's path through the sea of guests. He stopped dead at the edge of the VIP tables. A woman stood up.

The murmurs in the room instantly shifted. The pitch rose from polite, elegant chatter to confused, buzzing whispers.

"Evelyn," Marcus muttered, leaning dangerously close. "Why is she wearing your dress?"

A block of solid ice formed in my gut, freezing the breath in my lungs.

Clara Vance stepped into the aisle.

She wore the exact same midnight-blue silk gown. The unique asymmetrical cut, the heavy silver embroidery along the bodice—it was an identical match to the custom piece I had commissioned in Paris.

Julian took her hand. He pressed a lingering, intimate kiss to her knuckles.

"Thank you for coming," he told her, his voice loud enough for the front rows of our investors to hear perfectly.

"I wouldn't miss it," Clara replied, her lips curving upward into a sickly sweet smile. "You promised tonight would be special."

"What the hell is this?" Marcus demanded, his face flushing red. "Who is that?"

"His assistant," I whispered, my vocal cords tight.

"His assistant is wearing a fifty-thousand-dollar gown?" Sarah hissed.

I curled my fingers inward. I dug my manicured nails into my palms until the sharp, grounding sting of pain anchored me to reality. I pushed harder, feeling the fragile skin break.

Julian led Clara past the front tables. They walked straight up the carpeted stairs to the main stage, their fingers intertwined.

The spotlight operator tracked them, leaving me standing in the dim, forgotten periphery of my own empire. The oppressive heat of that massive overhead bulb radiated across the room, baking the back of my neck.

He tapped the microphone. The screech of feedback instantly silenced the remaining chatter. Five hundred pairs of eyes locked onto the stage.

"Good evening, everyone," Julian announced. His voice echoed through the massive speakers, smooth and practiced. "Five years ago, this company was nothing but a sketch on a napkin. We faced bankruptcy. We faced rejection. The banks laughed at us. The industry ignored us."

The crowd offered a supportive, wealthy chuckle.

"People often ask me how I kept going," Julian continued, completely erasing my existence from his narrative. He raised his free hand to quiet the room. "They ask where the vision comes from. They ask how I find the drive to keep pushing boundaries when the odds are stacked against me."

He turned to Clara. He pulled her closer to the center of the stage, right next to my masterpiece of a cake.

"A true creator needs a muse," he said softly, yet amplified for the world to hear.

A harsh, metallic taste flooded my mouth. I swallowed hard, forcing down the rising sourness and the distinct, coppery flavor of blood from my bitten cheek.

"This woman," Julian declared, gesturing grandly to Clara, "has been my anchor. She is the quiet force behind our biggest campaigns. When I wanted to quit, she told me to fight. She is the company's true inspiration. Clara, thank you."

Clara smiled, feigning a delicate blush. "You do all the hard work, Julian."

"I only build what you inspire," he countered lovingly.

The applause roared. It sounded like thousands of pieces of shattering glass in my ears.

"Evelyn," Marcus whispered frantically, grabbing my elbow. "Don't cause a scene. The press is everywhere. Your stock prices will tank before midnight."

I yanked my arm free with violent force. "I don't care about the stock prices."

"Evelyn, stop," Sarah pleaded, stepping in front of me. "Let PR handle this tomorrow. Please."

"I'm handling it tonight."

I stepped forward. The heavy, expensive fabric of my gown swept aggressively across the marble floor. I didn't rush. I kept my posture rigidly perfect, my chin angled high like a blade.

A waiter crossed my path, carrying a heavy silver tray loaded with fresh drinks.

"Excuse me," I said, reaching out.

"Ma'am, the toast is after the speech—" the young man stammered, trying to pull the tray back.

"I need this now."

I wrapped my fingers around a heavy crystal goblet filled to the brim with dark red wine.

I bypassed the front stairs and walked straight up the side ramp. My unexpected entrance onto the stage forced the frantic spotlight operator to widen the beam.

Now, three people stood in the blinding, suffocating circle of light. Two women in identical dresses. One man caught between them.

Julian finally looked at me. His confident, arrogant smile faltered, instantly replaced by a hard, warning glare.

"Evelyn," he hissed, covering the microphone with his palm to shield his venom from the audience. "Get down from here. You're embarrassing yourself."

"Am I?" I asked, my voice a lethal calm.

"Everyone is watching," he snapped. "Go sit down."

Clara took a strategic half-step behind Julian, using his broad shoulders as a shield. "Evelyn, please. Tonight is about the company's success. Don't make it about your petty jealousy."

A sharp, jagged laugh tore straight from my throat. It was loud, ugly, and completely out of place in the elegant ballroom. The front row of wealthy guests flinched visibly.

"Jealousy?" I repeated, my eyes locking onto her. "I built this company. You fetch his coffee."

"I warned you about her temper, Julian," Clara murmured, clutching his arm.

"Go back to the table," Julian ordered, dropping his voice to a threatening whisper. "We will discuss this at home. Like adults."

"We won't discuss anything."

I turned away from them. I walked slowly toward the center display. The five-tier anniversary cake towered over the stage, pure white fondant adorned with hand-crafted sugar roses. A masterpiece I had designed to represent our clean, perfect image.

"What are you doing?" Julian demanded, panic bleeding into his tone. He dropped the microphone. It hit the floor with a loud thud, sending a violent screech through the speakers. "Evelyn, step away from that!"

"Celebrating your inspiration," I replied.

I raised the goblet high.

"Stop!" Clara shrieked.

I flicked my wrist.

The dark red wine flew through the air in a violent, heavy arc. It crashed directly into the top tier of the cake. The liquid splattered across the pristine surface, soaking instantly into the sugar.

Dark, jagged streaks ran down the sides like open veins. The red pooled in the delicate petals of the white roses, looking exactly like fresh blood.

Gasps echoed through the massive room. Cameras flashed in rapid, blinding succession, capturing the ruined centerpiece and the ruined marriage.

Julian lunged forward. He grabbed my wrist, his fingers digging bruisingly into my bones.

"Are you insane?" he snarled, his breath hot against my face. "You just ruined everything!"

I looked down at his punishing grip, then slowly up to his furious, panicked eyes. I didn't try to pull away.

"Enjoy the cake, Julian. It's the last sweet thing you'll ever get from me."

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