Follow
Chapters
Share
THE PROSECUTORS: An Accidental Love Story Novel Cover

THE PROSECUTORS: An Accidental Love Story

Ethan Carter, a workaholic prosecutor tired of his mother's constant matchmaking, proposes a fake marriage to new colleague Emily Sullivan. They agree to a one-year contract marriage with clear boundaries. However, after a celebration party, an unexpected night leads to Emily becoming pregnant with twins. What starts as a contract evolves into real love as they navigate career challenges, family dynamics, and eventually welcome six children while building successful careers in the justice system.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 2

Thursday afternoon arrived faster than Emily expected. She'd barely slept in three days, surviving on coffee and takeout while she analyzed every one of Ethan's thirty-two case files. Her presentation was solid—she knew it was—but her nerves jangled anyway as she set up the conference room.

Ethan walked in at precisely 2:00 PM, followed by Ryan Mitchell and two other senior ADAs, Jessica Chen and Marcus Webb. They all took seats around the table, and Emily caught Ryan giving her an encouraging nod.

"Whenever you're ready, Sullivan," Ethan said, settling back in his chair with that same assessing look he'd worn on her first day.

Emily clicked to her first slide. "I've organized these cases into four categories: ready for trial, needs additional investigation, plea bargain recommended, and dismiss or refer."

For the next forty-five minutes, she walked them through her analysis. She'd found evidentiary gaps in the Morrison fraud case, identified a witness credibility issue in the Chen embezzlement, and flagged three cases where the statute of limitations was uncomfortably close to expiring.

When she finished, the room was silent. Jessica Chen leaned forward. "That analysis of the Morrison case—you caught something our entire team missed. The chain of custody issue with the financial records."

"It's subtle," Emily admitted. "But a good defense attorney will spot it and move to suppress."

"Which would tank our entire case," Marcus added, looking impressed. "Nice work."

Emily's eyes went to Ethan. He was studying her presentation notes, his expression unreadable. Finally, he looked up. "The Henderson case. You recommended dismissal."

"Yes. The witness recanted, and without her testimony—"

"We have the forensic evidence."

"Which is circumstantial at best. Any jury would have reasonable doubt. We'd be wasting resources on a case we can't win."

Ethan's jaw tightened. "Henderson is a repeat offender. This is our chance to put him away."

"Our responsibility is to prosecute cases we can prove beyond reasonable doubt, not to punish people we think are guilty." Emily held his gaze. "Prosecuting a weak case just to get a conviction on the board isn't justice."

The room went very quiet. Ryan's eyes widened slightly—apparently, people didn't usually challenge Ethan Carter directly.

But Ethan surprised her. He leaned back and nodded slowly. "You're right. Refer Henderson back to the detective. If they can build a stronger case, we'll revisit it." He stood up. "Good work, Sullivan. Everyone else, out. Sullivan, stay."

The others filed out, Jessica throwing Emily a sympathetic look. When they were alone, Emily braced herself for whatever was coming.

Ethan walked to the window, hands in his pockets. "That was the most thorough case analysis I've seen from a junior ADA in five years."

Emily blinked. "Thank you?"

"Don't thank me. You did the work." He turned to face her. "I have a case for you. First chair."

"First chair?" Emily's heart jumped. Junior ADAs usually spent months doing second chair before leading a prosecution. "What's the case?"

"Financial fraud. Mid-level executive at a tech startup embezzled two million over three years. Evidence is solid—paper trail, witness testimony, the works. But the defense attorney is good. Very good."

"Who?"

"Olivia Bennett."

Emily knew that name. Bennett was a legend in Seattle defense circles—sharp, aggressive, and she ate inexperienced prosecutors for breakfast. "You're putting me up against Bennett on my first trial?"

"You defended white-collar criminals for three years. You know how they think, how their lawyers operate. Use that." Ethan pulled a file from his briefcase and handed it to her. "Trial starts in two weeks. Think you can handle it?"

It was another test, Emily realized. But this time, it came with an actual opportunity. "Yes."

"Good. Trial prep starts Monday. We'll work together on strategy." He headed for the door, then paused. "And Sullivan? You were right about Henderson. I appreciate people who aren't afraid to disagree with me when it matters."

Over the next two weeks, Emily lived and breathed the Marcus Hamilton fraud case. Marcus Hamilton, a CFO at TechVision Solutions, had systematically diverted funds through shell companies, thinking he was clever enough not to get caught. He wasn't.

Emily worked late every night, often finding Ethan still in his office when she looked up from her desk at midnight. Sometimes he'd appear with coffee and sit down to help her refine her cross-examination strategy. Other times, he'd challenge her arguments, playing devil's advocate until she wanted to throw her files at him.

"Bennett will attack the chain of custody on the financial records," Ethan said one evening, pacing in front of the whiteboard where they'd mapped out the case. "What's your response?"

"We have three separate witnesses who can authenticate the documents. Bennett can't challenge all of them without looking desperate."

"She'll try anyway. What else?"

"The IT specialist who traced the digital transfers. His credentials are impeccable—fifteen years at the FBI before going private sector. Bennett can't shake his expertise."

Ethan nodded. "Good. Now, Hamilton will probably testify. He's arrogant enough to think he can charm the jury. What's your strategy?"

Emily smiled. "Let him talk. Arrogant people always over-explain. I'll give him just enough rope to hang himself."

"Exactly." Ethan stopped pacing and looked at her. "You're ready."

The morning of trial, Emily arrived at the courthouse early. The King County Superior Courthouse was an imposing building, all marble columns and high ceilings, the weight of justice literally built into its architecture.

She found Ethan already in the courtroom, setting up their table. "Nervous?" he asked.

"Terrified," Emily admitted. "But ready."

"Good. Fear keeps you sharp. Overconfidence gets you destroyed."

Olivia Bennett swept in fifteen minutes later—a tall woman in her forties with perfectly styled auburn hair and a suit that probably cost more than Emily's monthly rent. She gave Emily an appraising look and a cool smile. "Emily Sullivan. I heard you'd jumped to the other side. How's it feel to be a do-gooder?"

"Feels like justice," Emily replied evenly.

Bennett laughed. "We'll see how self-righteous you feel after I tear apart your case."

The jury selection took all morning. By afternoon, they were ready for opening statements. Emily stood, her notes in hand but her eyes on the jury—six women, six men, diverse ages and backgrounds. These twelve people would decide Marcus Hamilton's fate.

"Ladies and gentlemen," Emily began, her voice steady despite her racing heart, "this case is about betrayal. Marcus Hamilton was trusted with his company's finances, trusted by his colleagues and employees. And he betrayed that trust systematically, deliberately, and without remorse. Over the next few days, we'll show you exactly how he stole two million dollars, and we'll prove it beyond any reasonable doubt."

She walked them through the evidence, making it clear and simple. No legal jargon, no confusing financial terms—just a straightforward story of theft and deception.

When she sat down, Ethan leaned over. "Excellent. You had them."

Bennett's opening was smooth and polished, arguing that Hamilton was a scapegoat for a failing company, that the real fraud was being committed by the people who'd turned on him to save themselves. It was a good strategy—shift blame, create confusion.

The trial lasted four days. Emily called her witnesses one by one, building her case brick by brick. The company's auditor, the IT specialist, Hamilton's former assistant who'd noticed the irregularities and reported them. Each one solid, each one credible.

Bennett fought hard, but Emily was ready for every tactic. When Bennett tried to confuse the jury with complex financial terms, Emily objected and had the witness explain in simple language. When Bennett attacked the assistant's credibility, Emily had documentation showing the woman had nothing to gain by lying.

On day three, Hamilton took the stand. Just as Emily had predicted, his arrogance showed. He dismissed concerns, over-explained simple questions, and gradually painted himself as someone who thought the rules didn't apply to him.

Emily's cross-examination was surgical. "Mr. Hamilton, you testified that you didn't know these transfers were improper. Is that correct?"

"That's right."

"But you did know that you needed board approval for any transfer over fifty thousand dollars?"

"Well, yes, but—"

"And these transfers—" Emily pulled up the financial records on the screen, "—were each over two hundred thousand dollars. Correct?"

Hamilton shifted. "The timing was difficult. I was going to inform the board—"

"After you'd moved the money through three shell companies and into your personal account?"

"It wasn't personal—"

"The account is in your name, registered to your home address, and the withdrawals were used to purchase a vacation home in the San Juan Islands. Is that correct?"

Hamilton's lawyer objected, but the damage was done. The jury had seen it—the moment when his story fell apart.

Closing arguments came on day four. Emily stood before the jury one last time. "Marcus Hamilton bet that he was smarter than everyone else. He bet that he could steal two million dollars and no one would notice. He bet wrong. The evidence is clear, the facts are undeniable. We're asking you to hold him accountable for his betrayal of trust. Thank you."

The jury deliberated for three hours. When they returned, the foreman stood. "We find the defendant guilty on all counts."

Emily felt Ethan's hand briefly squeeze her shoulder—the closest thing to praise she'd ever gotten from him. Across the room, Bennett packed up her briefcase with a grudging nod of respect.

Outside the courtroom, Emily let herself lean against the wall for just a moment, the adrenaline finally draining away.

"You did good work in there," Ethan said, emerging from the courtroom. "Really good."

"I had a good teacher."

Something flickered in his eyes—surprise, maybe, or something else she couldn't quite identify. "Come on. The team's waiting to celebrate. First round's on me."

As they walked out of the courthouse together, Emily realized something had shifted between them. The adversarial tension from her first day had transformed into something else—mutual respect, professional partnership, maybe even the beginning of friendship.

She had no idea how much more it would become.

You may also like

After He Chose Her Sister, I Became His Boss Novel Cover
9.7
At the charity auction, my ex-boyfriend Beckham George bid fifty million dollars on a gemstone necklace symbolizing eternal love. In front of everyone, he held up the necklace and proposed to me. The room erupted with applause; everyone was certain I would nod and say yes. After all, I fell for him the day I was welcomed back into the Simmons family and pursued him passionately throughout our four years in college. But they all seemed to forget. Back then, when I was suffering from a heart condition and needed urgent surgery, he cut off all my credit cards because of something Ruby Simmons said. He even went public, accusing me of faking illness and forging medical records for attention. During that time, I endured brutal online abuse. My parents despised me, friends distanced themselves, and without money, I was expelled from the hospital. Disheartened, I left the Simmons family and returned to my adoptive parents.
After the divorce, she became a female billionaire Novel Cover
8.4
In everyone's eyes, Bertha and Derek had the wrong marriage. Bertha was married for three years and thought she would melt Derek's icy heart, but she was wrong. Derek's heart only goes out to Laura, his ex-girlfriend. Derek treats Bertha poorly. One day, she saw her husband having an affair with Laura. Unable to continue anymore, she decided to divorce Derek. She will not waste her youth on a heartless man, someone who has trampled on her heart many times. After the divorce, Bertha returned to her parents' home, becoming the heir to the fortune left by her parents. No one knows her true identity. A life like a queen awaits her. As for Derek, he thought that after the divorce, Bertha's life would be miserable until one day, he found Bertha and said. “I want to remarry you. What are conditions?" Hearing Derek's words, Bertha just smirked, looking at him with disdain.
Chasing His Divorced Wife  Novel Cover
8.5
Elara spent three years invisible in her marriage to billionaire Damien Cross. When he hands her divorce papers, she disappears without a fight. Six months later, an accident steals Damien's memory of the past five years. He doesn't remember his ex-wife, but he can't stop searching for the woman with sad eyes who haunts his dreams. When he finds Elara thriving in Seattle, she refuses to let him back in. But this Damien is nothing like the cold husband she remembers, and as he uncovers their past, devastating secrets emerge. Can you forgive someone who doesn't remember breaking you?
Ex-Husband, You Don't Own Me Novel Cover
8.4
“I'll never love him again!" Dexie Hansley was the stunning and loving wife of Luke Huxley Dawson, the young, attractive, and successful head of a billion-dollar company. Despite Dexie's commitment to Luke Huxley Dawson, she never received the affection and attention she sorely needed from him before his untimely and tragic passing. After getting a second chance at life, Dexie completes the divorce and ends her one-sided relationship with Luke Huxley Dawson. However, this decision triggers a change in Luke Huxley Dawson, who now openly defies his previous behavior. Will Dexie ever consider giving Luke Huxley Dawson another chance to win her back? What will happen when Luke Huxley Dawson tries to win her back?
Husband's Shocking Betrayal: The Affair with the Secretary Novel Cover
9.4
The fluorescent lights in the boardroom cast harsh shadows across the mahogany table as I clicked to the final slide of my presentation. Fifteen faces stared back at me—board members, department heads, and Bradley seated at the head of the table with that familiar smile that once made my heart skip but now felt like a mask. "And that concludes our proposal for the new cardiac wing," I said, my voice steady despite the adrenaline coursing through my veins. "With the combined sponsorship commitments from MedTech Solutions, CardioVascular Innovations, and Apex Medical Systems, we've secured fifteen million dollars in funding—five million more than our initial target." A murmur of approval rippled through the room. Dr. Harrison, the chief of internal medicine, leaned forward with raised eyebrows. "Fifteen million? That's... exceptional work, Dr. Carroll." I allowed myself a small smile, my fingers unconsciously touching the portfolio that contained months of research, late-night calls, and carefully crafted proposals.
My Beta Mate Never Touched Me: He Marked My Half-Sister Instead Novel Cover
7.9
"Touching her unawakened flesh makes my skin crawl." Those were the words I found in my husband’s desk on our third anniversary. I stood there clutching his gift, reading his letters to my sister. They weren't just lovers; they were conspirators planning to steal my inheritance and dump me in the rogue lands. I didn't even get the chance to run. That night, under the glare of a thousand spotlights, Gavin didn't just leave me—he executed my soul. He knelt before my pregnant sister, slid my mother’s heirloom ring onto her finger, and sneered at me in front of the entire pack. "You are defective," he laughed, while my father stripped me of my name. "Melody carries my heir. You are nothing but a barren human." Thrown into the mud, bleeding and nameless, I waited to die. Until a black Maybach purred to a stop. The window rolled down, revealing the woman who was supposed to be rotting in a psych ward—my mother. She wasn't sick. She was the secret owner of a fifty-billion-dollar empire. "They think you’re weak because you never shifted," she whispered, pulling me into a world of gold and vengeance. "But I didn't hide your wolf because you were broken, Valerie. I sealed it because you are a Moon Priestess." She pressed an ancient silver dagger to my forehead. "Gavin wanted a weak wife? He just unleashed a goddess."