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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 2

The doorbell chimed through the mansion at precisely 3:00 PM. I stood frozen in the foyer, my fingers still clutching the small suitcase containing my toiletries—the last items I was permitted to take from what had been our bedroom.

"Jane, please move aside," Maximilian said, straightening his tie as he strode toward the front door. "Sasha doesn't like to wait."

I stepped back, pressing myself against the wall as if I could somehow make myself invisible. The door swung open, and there she was—Sasha Kelley in all her glory.

She was everything I wasn't—tall and willowy with honey-blonde hair that caught the afternoon light. Her smile was dazzling as she embraced Maximilian.

"Max, darling! It's been too long!" Her voice was musical, confident.

"Welcome home, Sasha," he replied, his hands lingering at her waist longer than necessary.

She finally noticed me, her smile faltering for just a moment before returning, sharper than before. "And you must be Jane. How... quaint."

"Jane was just gathering her things," Maximilian explained, as if I weren't standing right there. "She'll be staying in the east wing guest quarters from now on."

Sasha's eyes swept over me, assessing and dismissing in the same glance. "Well, we'll need to make some changes around here, won't we? The decor is rather... dated."

I watched in silence as she walked through my home—no, not my home anymore—pointing out things that needed changing. The curtains were too heavy. The artwork too pedestrian. The furniture arrangement all wrong.

"Jane," she called over her shoulder, "be a dear and have the staff bring my luggage to the master bedroom."

Maximilian caught my eye, his expression warning me not to protest. "Sasha, perhaps we should—"

"No, no," she interrupted. "I need to settle in properly. And Jane looks like she could use some direction."

---

Two weeks later, I found myself suspended twenty feet in the air, wrapped in silks for the Shaw Foundation charity commercial. My arms ached, and the harness dug uncomfortably into my thighs.

"Higher," the director called. "We need more dramatic shots."

I pulled myself up the silks, muscles trembling. Below me, Maximilian stood watching, his expression unreadable. Beside him, Sasha whispered something in his ear, her hand possessively on his arm.

"Jane," she called up, "you need to arch more. Like this." She demonstrated a impossible contortion.

"I don't think the safety equipment is—" I began.

"Nonsense," Sasha cut in. "The crew checked everything. You're being dramatic."

Something felt wrong. The harness seemed looser than before, and when I pulled on the silks, they didn't feel as secure as they had during rehearsal.

"Could someone check the equipment?" I called down.

Sasha waved dismissively. "We're on a schedule, Jane. Stop delaying."

I took a deep breath and attempted the final pose—a dramatic drop and twist. As I released one hand, I felt the silk slip. My body plummeted, the harness giving way just as I fell.

Pain exploded through my hip and side as I crashed onto the safety mat—which had been moved several feet from where it should have been.

"Cut! Cut!" The director shouted.

I lay there, gasping, as crew members rushed over. Through tears of pain, I saw Sasha's satisfied smile.

"Such a shame," she murmured, just loud enough for me to hear. "Some people just aren't cut out for the spotlight."

---

"Jane," my brother's voice was tense over the phone. "I need to talk to you."

I sat on the edge of my bed in the guest quarters, wincing as my bruised body protested. "What's wrong?"

"I received a notice from the medical board today." He paused. "Someone filed a complaint against me. Patient safety concerns, regulatory violations... all fabricated."

My stomach dropped. "What kind of violations?"

"Everything from improper record keeping to unnecessary procedures." His voice cracked. "Jane, this could destroy my practice."

I thought immediately of the Accountability Board document I'd seen on Maximilian's computer. "When did this start?"

"Three days ago. Right after I called to check on you." He hesitated. "Jane, what's really going on with you and Maximilian?"

Before I could answer, there was a knock at my door. I opened it to find a thick envelope.

"Priority mail," the housekeeper said. "For Mr. Dixon."

With trembling hands, I opened it. Inside were copies of complaints filed with the medical board—all bearing Sasha's distinctive handwriting in the margins.

"Brody," I whispered into the phone, "I think I know who's behind this."

As I stared at the evidence of Sasha's latest attack on my family, something hardened inside me. This wasn't just about me anymore. This was war—and for the first time, I realized I might have to fight back.

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