
When My Husband Framed Me to Save Her
Chapter 3
The silence in the room wasn’t peaceful; it was heavy, pressurized, like the air before a thunderstorm. I stared at the ceiling tiles, counting the perforations. One hundred and twelve. One hundred and thirteen. It was better than looking at him.
Kingsley was pacing the length of the private hospital suite. The rhythmic *click-clack* of his dress shoes against the linoleum was a drill into my skull. He was on the phone, his voice tight, stripped of its usual smooth command.
"I don't care what the summary said, Marcus. I want the raw files," Kingsley snapped, turning his back to me. His hand gripped the back of his neck, fingers digging into the muscle. "The original surveillance reports from the PI. The Bronx location. Everything we didn't look at because we thought we knew the truth."
A pause. He listened, his shoulders rising with tension.
"Just get it done," he barked, ending the call.
He turned. His eyes found mine, and for a moment, he looked like a man waking up in a burning house. He took a step toward the bed, his hand reaching out instinctively, as if to brush a stray hair from my forehead.
I didn't scream. I didn't cry. I simply flinched—a sharp, involuntary recoil that pressed my spine into the mattress. My body remembered his betrayal even when my mind was too tired to process it. To me, his hand wasn't a comfort; it was the gavel that had sentenced me to hell.
Kingsley froze. His hand hovered in the air, trembling slightly, before he pulled it back as if burned. The hurt in his eyes was raw, pathetic.
"Blake," he whispered, the name sounding foreign in his mouth. "I need you to know—"
"I want a lawyer," I said. My voice was a rusted hinge, scraping and dry.
He blinked, the hurt hardening into desperation. "You don't need a lawyer. I'm handling this. I'm going to fix it."
"I want a divorce lawyer," I clarified, closing my eyes. "Get out."
He didn't leave. He sank into the armchair in the corner, a sentinel guarding a ruin he had created.
Hours bled into one another. The nurses came and went, checking the IV that pumped antibiotics into my withered arm. Kingsley watched them like a hawk, as if his vigilance now could make up for three years of blindness.
His phone buzzed again. The sound was distinct in the quiet room. Kingsley snatched it up, his eyes darting to me before he answered. He didn't leave the room; he seemed terrified that if he walked out the door, I would vanish.
"Talk to me, Marcus," he said.
I kept my eyes closed, feigning sleep, but my ears strained against the hum of the machines.
"A discrepancy?" Kingsley’s voice dropped an octave. "What kind of discrepancy?"
Silence stretched. I heard Kingsley’s breath hitch—a sharp intake of air that signaled catastrophe.
"One million dollars," he repeated, the words hollow. "Wired to a shell company in the Caymans... the week before the trial."
I opened my eyes. Kingsley was standing by the window, his reflection ghostly in the glass. He looked sick.
"Trace the shell," he ordered, his voice trembling with a suppressed rage I had never heard before. "Who owns it?"
A beat of silence. Then, Kingsley staggered back a step, bracing himself against the windowsill. "Dr. Crane? Jolene’s oncologist?"
The phone slipped from his ear, his arm falling to his side. He stared out at the city lights, the realization washing over him in a visible wave. The leukemia. The terminal diagnosis that had guilted him into the engagement, that had kept him tethered to Jolene while I rotted in a cell. Bought and paid for.
He turned to look at me. I held his gaze, my expression blank. I saw the nausea rise in his throat. He knew. Finally, he knew.
But the night wasn't over.
Sometime later, the door opened. I expected a nurse, but the heavy, deliberate tread was different.
"Mr. Ryan," a woman’s voice said. It was rough, laced with the smoke of cheap cigarettes. "You paid a lot of money to get me down here on a Tuesday night."
I stiffened. I knew that voice. Officer Osei. Daria. The guard who had looked the other way when the shower beatings happened, but who had occasionally slipped me an extra packet of ibuprofen.
"I need to understand," Kingsley said. He was standing at the foot of my bed now, blocking me from her view, or perhaps blocking her from mine. "Jolene... she told me Blake was in protective custody. That she was safe. That she was just serving time."
Daria let out a short, harsh laugh. "Safe? In maximum security? With a 'snitch' label on her file?"
"Why?" Kingsley asked, his voice cracking. "Why was she targeted?"
"Because you abandoned her," Daria said, her tone devoid of sympathy. "In prison, you're only as safe as your outside support. Everyone knew the billionaire husband had moved on. You made her prey."
Kingsley flinched, his shoulders hunching.
"And it wasn't just neglect," Daria continued, stepping closer. I could smell the cold air clinging to her uniform. "A woman came to visit. High class. Cried a lot. Looked like the one on the news with you."
"Jolene," Kingsley breathed.
"She didn't visit your wife," Daria said. "She visited the commissary kiosk. Deposited five grand into the accounts of two inmates. The same two who held your wife down while—"
"Stop," Kingsley gasped. It was a plea.
"You wanted the truth," Daria said, relentless. "You bought the ticket, Mr. Ryan. Take the ride."
I lay still, listening to the sound of Kingsley’s world finally, irrevocably shattering. He sank to his knees, his forehead resting against the metal rail of my bed. He was weeping—ugly, jagged sobs that shook his entire frame.
I watched him cry. I felt the vibration of his grief through the mattress.
I felt absolutely nothing.
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