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He Bought the City, Not My Forgiveness. A Later-in-Life Billionaire Marriage-in-Crisis Romance of Betrayal, Divorce, Revenge, Grovel, and the Second Chance He Must Earn
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- Nombre de pages199
- FormatePub
- ISBN8259607828
- EAN9798259607828
- Date de parution07/07/2026
- Protection num.pas de protection
- Taille850 Ko
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurChiify
Résumé
They took her license. They took her name. And the man she married stood in the atrium and said nothing while they did it.
Dr. Iris Kemp built her whole life on one vow: to be the doctor who listens, the one her own mother never had. She was the best in the city for it, until a patient died, an institution needed someone to blame, and her husband's family name needed protecting more than her career did.
Everett Vane watched them call his wife a killer. He knew the truth. He stayed silent anyway. Two years later, Iris has rebuilt something quiet and true: stitching up patients on a secondhand crash cart in a free clinic, no name, no title, just her hands and the work she was always meant to do. She has made her peace with the wound. She has closed it. Then a confession on a rain-soaked clinic floor rips it back open: the truth about what really happened to Dana Pell, who covered it, and who let Iris take the fall. Everett Vane has spent two years learning the one lesson his whole gilded, silent upbringing never taught him: that a name kept clean by silence isn't clean at all.
Now he has to do the one thing he's never done in his life: stand up in the light, in front of everyone who matters, and say the true thing out loud, at the price of everything he has left. This isn't a story about romantic gestures. It's about the far harder kind of love: the one that costs a reputation, a mentor, a family name, and asks a man to finally, publicly, choose his wife over his silence. He Let Them Call Me Guilty is a slow-burn, later-in-life second-chance romance about false accusation, institutional betrayal, and a marriage mended not by grand gestures, but by the courage to finally speak. A note on content: There is no infidelity in this book and no sexual content on the page.
The marriage at its center is broken by a lie told against the wife and a husband's silence, and it is mended, slowly, from within the marriage. Contains a false professional accusation, the death of a patient and the grief around it, public humiliation, a medical-board proceeding, an institutional cover-up, a cold divorce, and themes of illness and mortality. If you love second-chance marriage romance, quiet devastating grovels, and heroines who never stop being the best version of themselves even when the world lies about who they are, this one's for you.
Everett Vane watched them call his wife a killer. He knew the truth. He stayed silent anyway. Two years later, Iris has rebuilt something quiet and true: stitching up patients on a secondhand crash cart in a free clinic, no name, no title, just her hands and the work she was always meant to do. She has made her peace with the wound. She has closed it. Then a confession on a rain-soaked clinic floor rips it back open: the truth about what really happened to Dana Pell, who covered it, and who let Iris take the fall. Everett Vane has spent two years learning the one lesson his whole gilded, silent upbringing never taught him: that a name kept clean by silence isn't clean at all.
Now he has to do the one thing he's never done in his life: stand up in the light, in front of everyone who matters, and say the true thing out loud, at the price of everything he has left. This isn't a story about romantic gestures. It's about the far harder kind of love: the one that costs a reputation, a mentor, a family name, and asks a man to finally, publicly, choose his wife over his silence. He Let Them Call Me Guilty is a slow-burn, later-in-life second-chance romance about false accusation, institutional betrayal, and a marriage mended not by grand gestures, but by the courage to finally speak. A note on content: There is no infidelity in this book and no sexual content on the page.
The marriage at its center is broken by a lie told against the wife and a husband's silence, and it is mended, slowly, from within the marriage. Contains a false professional accusation, the death of a patient and the grief around it, public humiliation, a medical-board proceeding, an institutional cover-up, a cold divorce, and themes of illness and mortality. If you love second-chance marriage romance, quiet devastating grovels, and heroines who never stop being the best version of themselves even when the world lies about who they are, this one's for you.








