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Rejecting His Love Plea Novel Cover

Rejecting His Love Plea

I balanced the coffee tray carefully as I made my way to Maximilian's home office. Three years of marriage had taught me the precise way he liked his coffee—black with one sugar—and the exact moment he preferred it delivered: precisely at 10:30 AM, after he'd reviewed the morning's financial reports. The house was quiet, sunlight streaming through the floor-to-ceiling windows that overlooked the manicured gardens. I'd learned to move silently through these halls, to make myself as unobtrusive as possible. It was easier that way. "Your coffee, Maximilian," I said softly, placing the tray on the edge of his mahogany desk. He barely glanced up, his attention fixed on his laptop screen. "Thank you." I turned to leave—that's when it happened. His phone buzzed, and Maximilian reached for it without looking away from the screen. The movement caused his elbow to bump against the trackpad.
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Chapter 1

I balanced the coffee tray carefully as I made my way to Maximilian's home office. Three years of marriage had taught me the precise way he liked his coffee—black with one sugar—and the exact moment he preferred it delivered: precisely at 10:30 AM, after he'd reviewed the morning's financial reports.

The house was quiet, sunlight streaming through the floor-to-ceiling windows that overlooked the manicured gardens. I'd learned to move silently through these halls, to make myself as unobtrusive as possible. It was easier that way.

"Your coffee, Maximilian," I said softly, placing the tray on the edge of his mahogany desk.

He barely glanced up, his attention fixed on his laptop screen. "Thank you."

I turned to leave—that's when it happened. His phone buzzed, and Maximilian reached for it without looking away from the screen. The movement caused his elbow to bump against the trackpad. The screen flickered, and a document came into view.

"Accountability Board: Dixon Family Status."

My hand froze on the doorknob. Dixon. My family name.

"Maximilian?" I whispered.

He was still reading his message, distracted. "What is it?"

"What is the Accountability Board?"

His head snapped up, eyes narrowing as he quickly moved to close the document. But I'd already seen enough—column after column of names. My father's company. My mother's volunteer organization. And my brother's medical practice.

"Jane," he said, his voice suddenly sharp. "You shouldn't be looking at that."

"Those are my family members," I said, my voice trembling as I stepped closer to the screen. "Why are their names on your computer?"

Maximilian's expression hardened into something I recognized all too well—the look he got when business associates challenged him. Clinical. Detached.

"You're overstepping," he said, closing the laptop with a decisive click.

But I'd seen enough. Dates. Scores. Notes in the margins. "Failure to maintain appropriate public image during charity gala." "Insufficient progress in social integration." "Brother's medical practice showing signs of independence."

My legs felt weak. "What is this... accountability system?"

Maximilian sighed, as if I were a child asking about something too complex to explain. "It's exactly what it sounds like, Jane. A system of consequences."

"Consequences for what?" My voice sounded distant to my own ears.

"For your failures." He stood, towering over me. "Did you think there wouldn't be repercussions for your mistakes? For embarrassing me? For failing to be what I needed?"

I stumbled backward, knocking into his bookshelf. A row of leather-bound volumes shifted, and one fell to the floor with a thud that echoed in the silent room.

---

Dinner that evening was a blur of crystal glasses and silver cutlery. I pushed food around my plate while Maximilian cut into his steak with surgical precision.

"I want answers," I finally said, setting down my fork with a clatter. "About the Accountability Board."

Maximilian continued eating, unfazed. "And?"

"Why is my family being punished for my supposed failures? What gives you the right?"

He dabbed his mouth with a napkin before responding. "The right? I believe our marriage contract was quite clear about expectations."

"Expectations for what? To be a good wife?"

"To be what I needed." His eyes met mine, cold and unflinching. "Did you really think this was a love match, Jane? That I chose you for any reason beyond convenience?"

The room seemed to tilt slightly. "What are you saying?"

"I'm saying that you've always known your place." He took a sip of wine. "You were a temporary arrangement. A substitute, if you will."

The word 'substitute' hit me like a physical blow. "A substitute for whom?"

Maximilian didn't answer. He didn't need to.

---

The phone call came just as we finished dessert. Maximilian's expression changed instantly when he saw the caller ID.

"Sasha," he said, his voice warmer than I'd heard in months.

I sat frozen, dessert spoon halfway to my mouth.

"I'm coming," he continued, already standing. "No, don't take a taxi. I'll send Marcus."

He was already moving toward the closet where he kept his coats. "Jane," he called over his shoulder, "Sasha's returning from Milan. Earlier than expected."

I followed him mechanically. "Sasha?"

"My childhood friend," he said, as if I should know this. Perhaps I did. "We have plans to discuss."

"Oh." What else could I say?

"We'll need to prepare the house," he continued, already dialing another number. "Marcus? I need you to arrange a welcome celebration for Sasha. Something intimate but special."

I stood in the hallway, watching as he outlined details for a party I wouldn't be invited to.

"And Jane's things will need to be moved," he added, pausing to look at me. "The guest quarters in the east wing should be prepared. Sasha will be taking the master bedroom."

I felt myself disappearing, becoming invisible as Maximilian continued making arrangements around me—as if I were furniture to be rearranged, possessions to be relocated.

"The celebration will be Saturday," he said into the phone. "And Jane will be out of the master suite by tomorrow evening."

Tomorrow evening. Less than twenty-four hours to pack up three years of my life. To move out of the bedroom I shared with my husband—who had just confirmed I was never truly his wife at all.

Just a substitute. Waiting to be replaced.

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