For the third time, my husband and his COO framed me for cheating. They handed me divorce papers designed to strip me of everything: my shares, my home, and even my son, Bailey. But as I held the pen, my phone rang. My mother was on a hospital rooftop, threatening to jump after they leaked the news of our divorce to her. My husband called it another one of my pathetic tricks. He dragged me into the master closet, taped my mouth shut, and forced me to listen as he and his mistress celebrated on our bed. All while my mother died alone. Even my five-year-old son, twisted by their lies, had already spat in my face. "You're a bad woman!" he shrieked. "You don't deserve to be my mommy!" They thought they had finally broken me. They expected tears. They expected a fight. They got a signature instead. This wasn't surrender. It was a declaration of war.
For the third time, my husband and his COO framed me for cheating. They handed me divorce papers designed to strip me of everything: my shares, my home, and even my son, Bailey.
But as I held the pen, my phone rang. My mother was on a hospital rooftop, threatening to jump after they leaked the news of our divorce to her.
My husband called it another one of my pathetic tricks.
He dragged me into the master closet, taped my mouth shut, and forced me to listen as he and his mistress celebrated on our bed. All while my mother died alone.
Even my five-year-old son, twisted by their lies, had already spat in my face.
"You're a bad woman!" he shrieked. "You don't deserve to be my mommy!"
They thought they had finally broken me. They expected tears. They expected a fight.
They got a signature instead. This wasn't surrender. It was a declaration of war.
Chapter 1
Blake Solis POV:
My husband, Courtney Jordan, and his COO, Celine Hensley, burst into the room for the third time. They found me in a compromising situation, staged to look like infidelity. Their faces were grim, filled with a familiar anger. I did not panic. My heart did not race. I looked at the divorce agreement Celine held, recognizing her precise legal language. This document, like all the others in my marriage, was an instrument of Courtney's control and Celine's silent power.
"Third time," I thought. "First time I cried. Second time I called the police. This time, I give them nothing."
Celine stepped forward, her expensive suit rustling. She held the document with a professional grip. Her gaze swept over me, betraying no emotion. Courtney stood behind her, his jaw tight. He looked at me with cold fury.
"Blake, we are doing this again," Celine stated, her voice flat. "This time, the terms are non-negotiable."
She knew they never were. She drafted them. She planned them.
"The agreement states you relinquish all your shares in Jordan Innovations," Celine read from the papers, her voice clear and precise. "You forfeit any claim to marital assets beyond a modest settlement, already detailed."
The words hit me, but I felt nothing. My mind was clear, focused. This was just paperwork. The real game was yet to begin.
"Furthermore," Celine continued, her eyes briefly meeting Courtney's, "you agree to surrender all custody rights to your son, Bailey Jordan."
That line used to crush me. It used to shatter my world. Today, it was just another clause. A necessary sacrifice. A step in a larger plan. Courtney watched me, his expression stony. He expected tears. He expected a fight. He always did.
His eyes narrowed as I remained silent. He leaned against the doorframe, crossing his arms. He waited for me to break. My silence frustrated him. Courtney wanted my emotional collapse. He thrived on it.
He pushed off the doorframe, taking two steps forward. He slammed the divorce agreement onto the coffee table. The pen clattered beside it.
"Don't tell me you're going to deny it again, Blake," Courtney said, his voice low and dangerous. "The first time, you swore it was a misunderstanding. A setup. You cried, you begged."
He paced then. He walked to the window and back.
"The second time, you claimed you were drugged, framed. You called the police. You made a scene." Courtney stopped in front of me. "What's your excuse this time? No tears? No dramatic accusations?"
He stared, trying to find a flicker of the old Blake. He found nothing.
I looked at the pen on the table. It was a simple black ballpoint. I picked it up. My hand was steady. My grip was firm. I signed the document. My pen moved across the page, each stroke a deliberate act. I detached my name from his, from his company, from our son, from everything I once cherished.
The signature was clear. It was precise. It was final. This was the first step. The first cut.
Celine quickly scooped up the signed papers. She glanced at Courtney, a faint, almost imperceptible nod passing between them.
"It's signed, Courtney," Celine stated, her voice a little too triumphant.
Courtney stared at me. His brows pulled together. He had expected an outburst. He had expected resistance. My quiet compliance derailed him.
I capped the pen. I placed it back on the table.
"I need to arrange for my belongings to be moved out," I said, my voice flat. "And what about visitation with Bailey?"
Courtney's eyes flashed. He slammed his hand on the table. "Visitation? After this? You think you deserve to see him? You won't see him, Blake. Not ever again."
A small, quiet laugh escaped me. Dry. Humorless.
"Fine," I said. "I relinquish all visitation rights too. Just add it to the agreement."
Courtney froze. His eyes went wide. He stared at me, searching for something. What kind of mother gives up her child so easily? He didn't understand. I saw the confusion in his eyes.
I thought about Bailey. My son. Five years old. For four years, I fought to be his mother. For four years, I endured Courtney's cruelty. For four years, I watched Celine poison Bailey against me. Now, the pain was a dull ache. The boy who was once my heart now saw me as a stranger.
Courtney let out a cold laugh. "So, you're finally showing your true colors, aren't you? Running off to your new lover, abandoning your own child. You never cared. You just wanted the Jordan name, the Jordan money."
I remained silent. I did not defend myself. There was no point.
My silence was not an admission of guilt. It was a declaration of war.
He would learn the devastating cost of shattering a woman who once loved him.
The woman they broke was now free.
They thought they had won. They had no idea this was only the beginning.
Framed Three Times: A Wife's Fury
Temple Madison
Modern
Chapter 1
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Chapter 2
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Chapter 3
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Chapter 4
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Chapter 5
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Chapter 6
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Chapter 7
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Chapter 8
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Chapter 9
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Chapter 10
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Chapter 11
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Chapter 12
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Chapter 13
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Chapter 14
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Chapter 15
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Chapter 16
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