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The Divorce He Begged For Novel Cover

The Divorce He Begged For

He told me I was stressed. That I was creating tension. That his sister was a lifesaver. I had the video. His sister, smiling while she filmed my son's meltdown. The midnight texts asking if I was asleep yet. The voice message where she said she wanted to move in—permanently. My husband chose not to look. So I stopped asking him to. What none of us knew: Jade had done this before. Three families. Four cities. A predator who slips into homes on the edge, becomes the better version of the wife, and is already positioned when everything falls apart. What none of us knew: the one man who did see her was the family patriarch—my father-in-law, who built an empire and had been quietly building a file. And he came to me with a single question. Are you going to stay invisible? Or are you going to make yourself impossible to ignore?
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Chapter 1

Three hours.

That's how long I'd been sitting on this kitchen stool, staring at fifteen seconds of footage that turned my whole life into a lie.

The coffee in front of me had gone cold an hour ago. A pale skin had formed across the top of the mug. I didn't touch it. My thumb just kept dragging the timeline back to the start. Play. Pause. Back. Play.

In the clip, Noah was on the living room rug, screaming. His face was red, fists balled, that full-body meltdown only seven-year-olds know how to throw. I was on my knees beside him, doing every single thing the therapist taught me. Counting. Breathing. Soft voice. Open palms.

But that wasn't what kept me watching.

It was the figure in the corner of the frame.

Arms folded. Phone half-raised. A small, satisfied curve at the edge of her mouth.

Jade.

My sister-in-law. Standing in my house. Filming my son's worst moment. Smiling.

Footsteps came down the stairs. Heavy. Measured. Ryker had gotten Noah down for his nap, and now he was coming to check the next box on his to-do list. Manage the wife. Smooth the situation. Move on.

He didn't look at me when he crossed to the cabinet. Pulled down a fresh mug. Filled it from the pot I'd abandoned. Slid my cold coffee back toward me like that solved anything.

"We need to talk about Noah."

I lifted my eyes. Looked at the man I'd married eleven years ago. Square jaw. Stubble he kept forgetting to shave. Eyes that used to look at me like I was the only woman alive.

Now he looked at me the way he looked at a Q3 expense report.

"His teacher emailed again," Ryker said. He leaned against the counter, perfectly relaxed. "She's worried about his emotional regulation. I think you've been too quick to push back at him lately. You're creating tension."

I slid my phone across the granite. Screen up. Ring app open.

"Watch this first."

He glanced down. Snorted. Looked away.

"The angle's bad. You can barely see anything." He sipped his coffee. "I'm not going to dissect every interaction. That's not productive."

My throat closed.

"You're not even going to look at it."

"I looked, Sloane." He set his mug down hard enough that coffee sloshed over the rim. "It's grainy. I can't tell what's happening. What do you want me to say? That you're right? That our son has issues?"

Yes. I wanted to scream it. Look at your wife's face in that video. Look at the terror in it. Tell me you see what I see.

But my mouth wouldn't move.

"Jade's been a lifesaver this week," he said, and just like that he poured gasoline on a fire he didn't know existed. "Noah actually listens to her. He's calmer when she's in the room."

That one lodged right under my ribs.

Jade. His younger sister. The one who'd shown up four months ago with a single suitcase and a sob story about an apartment fire. The one who now knew Noah's bedtime routine better than I did. The one who made dinosaur-shaped pancakes on Saturdays while I slept in, then brought me coffee with that careful, pitying smile.

I pushed the cold mug away.

"So whose house is this, Ryker?"

He blinked. "What?"

"In this family, right now—whose comfort matters most? Because it sure as hell isn't mine."

He didn't answer. He turned and yanked open the refrigerator instead. Light spilled across his back. He grabbed a sparkling water, twisted the cap off, and drank standing up with his back to me.

The silence stretched.

I thought about that video again. About what it actually showed. Noah, screaming. Me, trying. And a woman in the background, recording. Not helping. Not intervening. Just standing there with her arms crossed and that look on her face. The one she always wore when I was failing at something.

Had she recorded it on purpose?

The question scratched at the inside of my skull.

Ryker finally turned around. His face had softened, but his eyes stayed careful.

"Look. I'm not trying to fight. I'm saying maybe we need to see the bigger picture. Noah's struggling. Jade's helping. You're..." He paused, searching for the word. "Stressed. That's all I'm saying."

Stressed.

That was the word he chose. Not overwhelmed. Not drowning. Not surviving each day by the skin of my teeth while another woman raised my child in my own house.

"Stressed," I repeated.

"Yeah." He exhaled. "Maybe you should take a break. Some time away. Jade and I can handle things for a while."

The words landed.

Jade and I.

Not "we." Not "the family." Just Jade and Ryker. The team I was apparently no longer part of.

I stood. My stool scraped against the tile.

"Goodnight, Ryker."

I didn't wait for a response. I walked out of the kitchen, up the stairs, down the hallway lined with wedding photos and Noah's school portraits. A picture-perfect family that had never actually existed.

Noah's door was cracked open. I pushed through, silent on bare feet.

He was sprawled across his bed, one leg hanging off the edge, hair in every direction. His lips parted with each soft breath. Tucked against his cheek, a Lego dinosaur. Bright green. Bigger than his fist.

Jade had given it to him last week.

I stared at it for a long moment.

Then I picked it up, walked it over to his desk, and placed it down beside his other toys. I came back and tucked his blanket around his shoulders. My hand lingered.

"I love you," I whispered. "So much."

He didn't stir.

In the master bedroom, I sat on the edge of the bed and opened my laptop. My fingers hovered over the keyboard. Priya and I hadn't spoken in months. Her firm had been in merger hell and I'd been here—drowning. But she was a family lawyer. More importantly, she was my friend.

I typed: I need to ask you something. Professional. Can we talk tomorrow?

I hit send before I could lose my nerve.

That's when I heard it.

Ryker's phone, lighting up on his nightstand. A message preview glowing in the dark.

I didn't mean to look. But the name was right there.

Jade.

And beneath it, the first words.

Is she asleep yet?

I went very, very still.

A moment later, Ryker walked in. He saw me looking. Saw his phone screen. Without a word, he crossed the room, picked the phone up, and turned it face-down on the nightstand.

"Goodnight, Sloane."

He said it calmly. Like this was nothing. Like he hadn't just been messaged by his sister, at eleven o'clock at night, asking whether his wife was unconscious yet.

I lay in the dark with my eyes open. I listened to his breathing slow into sleep. I thought about the video. About the dinosaur on Noah's pillow. About Jade's message and the way Ryker had flipped his phone like the most natural thing in the world.

Something was rotten in this house.

And I was going to find out exactly how deep it ran.

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