
When My Husband Framed Me to Save Her
When My Husband Framed Me to Save Her Chapter 1
The buzzer was a physical blow, a harsh, grinding vibration that rattled the heavy iron gate before it groaned open. I stepped out of the upstate correctional facility and into a world that felt too large, too loud, and biting cold.
The gray morning air hit my lungs like swallowed glass. Three years. One thousand and ninety-five days of breathing stale, recycled air that smelled of bleach and despair. Now, the wind whipped through the thin, ill-fitting gray sweats they’d released me in, cutting straight to the bone. I clutched the clear plastic bag against my chest—my release papers and a cheap, spiral-bound notebook filled with sketches of clothes no one would ever wear. It was all I had left.
I took a step, and the familiar, jagged spike of pain shot up my right leg. I gritted my teeth, forcing my weight onto the heel. *Step. Drag. Step. Drag.* The rhythm of my new life. The shattered tibia, held together by metal pins and scar tissue, screamed in the damp cold, a permanent souvenir from the arrest Kingsley had orchestrated.
And there he was.
Leaning against a sleek black SUV, Kingsley Ryan looked like a cutout from a magazine superimposed onto a wasteland. His charcoal wool coat was tailored to perfection, his posture rigid. He checked his watch, a quick, dismissive flick of the wrist, before his eyes landed on me. There was no softening. No relief. His gaze swept over my hollow cheeks and the gray fabric hanging off my frame with clinical disdain, as if I were a stain on his schedule.
"Get in," he said. His voice was flat, stripped of the warmth that used to whisper promises against my neck. "We’re running late."
He didn't open the door for me. He didn't offer a hand as I struggled to maneuver my stiff, aching leg into the backseat. He just got behind the wheel, the heavy thud of his door sealing us in a vacuum of silence and leather.
"Where are we going?" My voice was raspy, unused.
"Home," he said, meeting my eyes in the rearview mirror. The word sounded like a threat. "You have an hour to make yourself presentable. Then we have a schedule to keep."
The drive to Manhattan was a blur of gray highway and motion sickness. I stared at the back of his head, tracing the familiar line of his haircut, remembering how my fingers used to tangle there. That man was dead. The stranger driving this car was just the executioner who hadn't finished the job.
When the elevator doors opened into the penthouse, I stopped breathing.
This wasn't my home. My eclectic, vibrant space—the throw pillows I’d hand-stitched, the chaotic gallery wall of art school sketches, the deep blue velvet sofa—was gone. In its place was a sterile, beige mausoleum. Cream carpets. Glass tables. Abstract art that meant nothing. It smelled of vanilla and expensive lilies—Jolene’s scent.
I limped down the hall, my heart thudding a slow, heavy rhythm against my ribs. I pushed open the door to what used to be my design studio.
A guest bedroom.
The drafting table, the dress forms, the fabric swatches—erased. As if I had never existed.
"You have forty minutes," Kingsley’s voice cut from the doorway. He didn't step inside. He wouldn't cross the threshold into the room that proved how thoroughly he had replaced me. "Shower. There’s a dress on the bed. Put it on."
I stood under the scalding spray of the shower, watching the gray water swirl down the drain. I scrubbed my skin until it turned raw, trying to wash away the phantom sensation of prison guard hands and the humiliation of strip searches. But when I stepped out and wiped the steam from the mirror, the woman staring back was a stranger. My eyes were too big for my face. My collarbones were sharp ridges beneath pale, translucent skin.
The dress Kingsley had laid out was a navy sheath from four years ago. It used to hug my curves. Now, it hung loosely, the fabric pooling slightly at the waist. I looked like a child playing dress-up in her mother’s clothes.
When I emerged, Kingsley was waiting by the door, tapping a message on his phone. He looked up, and for a second, his mask slipped. His eyes widened slightly at the sight of the dress hanging off my malnourished frame. But the moment passed, swallowed by his resolve.
He grabbed my upper arm, his grip tight enough to bruise. "Let's go."
Back in the SUV, the city outside shifted from the polished avenues of Manhattan to the gritty, industrial sprawl of the Bronx. My stomach tightened.
"We aren't going to the Vargas estate," I murmured, recognizing the route.
"Not yet," Kingsley said, merging onto the expressway with aggressive precision. "Jolene and Aubree are waiting for your apology, but I won’t bring you to them until I know you’re ready to be honest."
He turned to look at me, the car idling at a red light. His eyes were hard, burning with a self-righteous fury that made my blood run cold.
"We’re going to the warehouse, Blake. The one where you hurt her," he spat the words out. "You’re going to walk me through exactly what you did to a five-year-old child. You’re going to confess to my face. Then, and only then, will I let you apologize to them."
He accelerated, the engine growling beneath us. "And if you don't? I make one call, and your parole officer finds a violation. You’ll be back in a cell by sunset."
I turned my head to the window, watching the blur of concrete and graffiti. My hand drifted down to rest on my knee, the metal pins aching in the damp air. He wanted a confession for a crime that didn't happen, at a crime scene that didn't exist.
I said nothing. I just let the silence stretch, heavy and suffocating, as he drove us toward a truth he wasn't ready to survive.
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