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The Perfect Marriage by Jeneva Rose – Book Summary, Review, Character List & End Explained

Hello, hello!

You know that old saying, “never judge a book by its cover”? Well, I’ve got another one: “never pick a book just because of the hype.” And yet… that’s exactly what I did. The Perfect Marriage by Jeneva Rose had been sitting on my TBR since January, thanks to all the buzz and its shiny 4-star Goodreads rating.

One weekend later, I closed the final page and thought: wow, I need to talk about this. So here we go, let’s dive in!

Spoiler-Free Zone
This section of the post is completely spoiler-free, no twists revealed, no key plot points given away. It’s safe to keep reading, even if you haven’t started the book yet.

Rating: 2 out of 5.

So, in the end, I would say this book is not for readers looking for an accurate legal thriller or deep, complex characters. This was my first book by Jeneva Rose, and while I might read the sequel out of curiosity, I would not recommend The Perfect Marriage if you want strong writing, believable characters, or a solid investigation.
Definitely a 2-star read!

The Perfect Marriage – Book Synopsis

The Perfect Marriage by Jeneva Rose

Published July 13, 2020

Sarah Morgan is a successful and powerful defense attorney in Washington D.C. At 33 years old, she is a named partner at her firm and life is going exactly how she planned.

The same cannot be said for her husband, Adam. He is a struggling writer who has had little success in his career. He begins to tire of his and Sarah’s relationship as she is constantly working.

Out in the secluded woods, at Adam and Sarah’s second home, Adam engages in a passionate affair with Kelly Summers.

Then, one morning everything changes. Adam is arrested for Kelly’s murder. She had been found stabbed to death in Adam and Sarah’s second home. Sarah soon finds herself playing the defender for her own husband, a man accused of murdering his mistress.


Goodreads Rating

Rating: 4 out of 5.

Title

The Perfect Marriage

Author

Jeneva Rose

Genre

Domestic Thriller, Psychological Thriller, Thriller

Format

352 pages, Paperback

Published

July 13, 2020, Orion

ISBN 10

1398723606

ASIN 13

978-1398723603

Language

English

Author’s Bio – Jeneva Rose

The Perfect Marriage – Quick Details

The Perfect Marriage – Trigger Warnings, Sensitive Topics and Age Rating

Before we go any further, I always like to include a quick note on sensitive content. Every reader is different, and some themes in this book might be difficult for certain people.

If you prefer to check content warnings before reading, just click below to reveal the list of trigger warnings, sensitive topics and age ratting.

Age Rating

18+ (Mature Readers Only)
Due to the intense subject matter, and mature themes, this book is best suited for adult readers. It may not be appropriate for younger teens.

Trigger Warnings / Sensitive Topics:

  • Infidelity/Cheating
  • Graphic Violence/Murder
  • Domestic Abuse
  • Sexual Content
  • Offensive Language/Slurs
  • Emotional Manipulation
  • Alcohol Abuse
  • Mental Health Struggles
  • Misogyny/Sexism
  • Legal and Ethical Violations

Notes

This book includes a range of sensitive topics that may be distressing for some readers. While the writing is literary and not overly graphic, the themes are emotionally heavy and complex.

Plot Overview

The Perfect Marriage is a domestic and psychological thriller with touches of legal drama.

The story follows Sarah Morgan, a highly successful defense attorney, and her husband Adam, a writer. At first, they seem to have it all, money, cars, a dream home, and even a lake house where Adam escapes to work on his books.

However, their picture-perfect life suddenly shatters when a brutal murder takes place at the lake house. The victim turns out to be Adam’s mistress, and as a result, all the evidence points directly to him.

Now, Sarah is forced into an impossible role: the only person who can defend her husband. Meanwhile, as the case unfolds, she must navigate betrayal, secrets, and lies, all while questioning how well she really knows the man she married. Ultimately, the line between truth and deception becomes dangerously blurred.

My Thoughts

Some Book Quotes

“I’ve always felt like Sarah was taking on the world, while I was just struggling to live in it.”

“She was perfect, something I could neither conceive, nor comprehend.”

“I’m always the first to pull away. Someday, we’ll be everything I always knew we would be but someday isn’t today.”

The Perfect Marriage – Full Spoilers Section

Contains Major Spoilers
If you haven’t finished the book yet, you might want to bookmark this page and come back later. I’ll be diving into important plot points, big twists, and key character details.
Read on only if you’re ready for the full story!

The Perfect Marriage – Character List

Character Name

Character Role

Adam Morgan

A struggling writer and Sarah’s husband; he is central to the plot as the accused in Kelly’s murder, dealing with infidelity, resentment, and his failing career.

Anne

Sarah’s loyal assistant and friend; she helps with work tasks, travels with Sarah, and provides emotional support, occasionally involved in personal drama.

Bob Miller

Sarah’s law partner at the firm; envious of her success, he is unprofessional, argues with her, and plays a key role in the legal and personal twists.

Daniel

Adam’s literary agent; he pushes Adam for more writing progress and represents his professional struggles.

Eleanor

Adam’s over-protective mother (Sarah’s mother-in-law); she blames Sarah for Adam’s issues and sends passive-aggressive notes, adding family tension.

Jesse

Kelly’s friend; she texts Kelly with apologies and support, appearing briefly in communications related to Kelly’s personal life.

Kelly Summers

Adam’s mistress and a local waitress; her murder at the lake house drives the central mystery, revealing affairs and conflicts.

Kent

A senior partner at Sarah’s firm; mentioned as someone Sarah consults for time off, representing the professional hierarchy.

Matthew

Sarah’s sarcastic friend; he provides comic relief with quips, insults others, and offers commentary on relationships.

Rebecca

A reporter enlisted by Adam; she helps investigate his case, becomes romantically involved briefly, and pushes for a tell-all story.

Sarah Morgan

A successful defense attorney and Adam’s wife; she defends him in court despite his betrayal, embodying ambition and marital strain.

Scott Summers

Kelly’s abusive husband and a deputy sheriff; jealous and violent, he is involved in the investigation and has motives tied to the murder.

Sheriff Stevens

The lead investigator in Kelly’s murder; he handles the case with conflicts of interest, interacts aggressively with suspects, and uncovers evidence.

Summer

Sarah and Bob’s daughter in the epilogue; named symbolically after Kelly Summers, representing the story’s twisted resolution.

The Perfect Marriage – Book Summary

The story begins with Adam describing Kelly, the woman he’s having an affair with. His feelings for her are intense and complicated. Right away, the big question is clear: did Adam kill her?

We then meet Sarah Morgan, Adam’s wife. She’s a sharp and successful defense attorney, completely consumed by her work. Even on their tenth wedding anniversary, she barely makes time for Adam, giving him a fancy watch but not much attention.

Adam, feeling ignored, escapes to their lake house. There, he reflects on how far he’s fallen from his dreams of being a writer. He thinks about how Sarah used to inspire him, but now he just feels small next to her success.

At the lake house, we see Adam’s secret life. He’s in a passionate, reckless affair with Kelly. Their relationship is fiery and dangerous. Meanwhile, he keeps texting Sarah, pretending everything is normal.

Back in the city, Sarah is laser-focused on her job. Her assistant Anne looks up to her, and they share a bond that feels like friendship. At work, Sarah faces friction with a coworker named Bob, but she continues to shine as the firm’s top attorney. When Adam sends her a rare sweet message, Sarah feels a wave of guilt and nostalgia. Needing a break, she agrees to grab drinks with Anne.

The next morning, Adam wakes up beside Kelly and checks her phone. He finds threatening messages from her husband, Scott. Alarmed but still attached to her, Adam leaves a loving note and returns home.

To his surprise, Sarah tells him she wants to try for a baby. For the first time in a long while, Adam feels hopeful that maybe their marriage can be saved.

But Sarah’s thoughts reveal something deeper. She thinks to herself that Adam “deserves this,” hinting that her decision might not be just about love. At work, she defends Anne from Bob and reconnects with her friend Matthew. Sarah admits she’s scared of motherhood, but part of her wants something more than courtroom victories.

Then everything unravels.

Adam wakes up feeling lighter, excited about the idea of starting a family. But that same day, police show up at the door. Sheriff Stevens and Deputy Hudson arrest him without warning. Adam is dragged to the station and learns the unthinkable, Kelly has been found murdered in the bed at the lake house.

While Sarah is in court, delivering a powerful closing statement in a senator’s trial, she gets the shocking news: Adam has been arrested for murder. Back at the sheriff’s station, Adam panics. He tries calling Sarah, but she doesn’t answer. In desperation, he reaches out to his mother, Eleanor.

Sarah, still out celebrating her legal win, finally hears from Eleanor. Alarmed, she rushes to Virginia. Sheriff Stevens questions her and shows her gruesome crime scene photos. The truth hits her hard.
Despite everything, Sarah makes a bold decision: no matter what Adam has done, she’s going to defend him.

Adam is shown the crime scene photos of Kelly, and the horror finally hits him. Every piece of evidence seems to point directly at him, his fingerprints, his DNA, even the romantic note he left behind. Shaken to his core, Adam insists that Scott, Kelly’s abusive husband, must be responsible. But the evidence feels overwhelming, and Adam breaks down completely in the interrogation room, crying out desperately for his lawyer.

Meanwhile, Sarah meets with Sheriff Stevens and learns the brutal details of Kelly’s death, 37 stab wounds, drugs in her system, and several DNA samples. She’s disgusted by the violence but forces herself to stay composed. When she sees Adam falling apart, she can’t help but wonder if he might actually be capable of such a crime. Yet Sarah draws a hard line with herself: she will handle Adam as his lawyer, not his wife.

When Sarah finally sits down with Adam, he admits the affair and pleads with her to believe he didn’t kill Kelly. Sarah listens coldly, making it clear that she’s not here as his wife but as his attorney. She demands full honesty, warning him that if she’s going to defend him, she needs the entire truth, no matter how painful.

Adam then remembers the night he first met Kelly at Seth’s Coffee. She was beautiful, carefree, and completely different from Sarah. They connected almost instantly over their loneliness, and by that same night, Kelly had gone home with him to the lake house. Their connection turned physical right away, and Adam quickly became hooked, unable to stay away from her.

Sarah listens to his confession, her face calm but her heart burning with rage. Inside, she wonders if she’ll ever be able to separate her role as a lawyer from her pain as a wife. Tension boils over when Scott, Kelly’s husband, suddenly attacks Adam during questioning, beating him brutally. Sarah rushes in to intervene and ends up hurt herself. Sheriff Stevens steps in to stop the fight and apologizes afterward, showing a protective concern for Sarah that feels surprisingly personal.

Adam wakes up cuffed to a hospital bed, bruised and aching from Scott’s attack. It terrifies him to realize that Kelly’s abusive husband is also a cop, and possibly the real killer. Sheriff Stevens visits and, surprisingly, shows sympathy. He admits he has never trusted Scott and promises to look deeper into him. Still, Adam remains the prime suspect.

At home, Sarah feels crushed by the weight of it all, her broken marriage, the media attention, and the impossible case ahead. Sheriff Stevens, whose first name is Ryan, calls to check on her. His tone is warm, more like a friend than a police officer, which leaves Sarah conflicted. At the same time, her friend Matthew sends her an apologetic text, reminding her he’s there if she needs support. Sarah knows she’ll need all the help she can get.

Lying in the hospital, Adam is swallowed by guilt. He thinks about everything, his affair, the betrayal of Sarah, and the mess he’s created. He wonders if Sarah should even bother defending him. Deep down, he admits a painful truth: he loved Sarah, but he also loved Kelly, and that only makes the weight of it all harder to bear.

Two weeks earlier, Kelly showed up at the lake house, beaten and bruised after another fight with Scott. That night, she revealed her real name: Jenna Way. She confessed that years ago she had been accused of killing her first husband, Greg, but escaped conviction when evidence mysteriously disappeared. Scott knew her secret and used it to control her. Trapped and hopeless, Kelly told Adam she felt the only way out was death. Adam swore he would protect her, binding himself to her even more deeply than before.

Sarah tries to stay composed at work while covering her bruises and avoiding gossip. She asks Anne to research Kelly and Scott Summers, hoping for something useful in Adam’s defense. Tension rises when Adam’s mother, Eleanor, arrives and immediately blames Sarah for everything. Later, Sarah meets Sheriff Stevens at the lake house. He reveals shocking evidence: Kelly was pregnant with Adam’s baby, Adam’s DNA was found, and two other male DNA profiles were present. Together, they uncover a hidden envelope with a photo of Adam and Kelly, plus a threatening note that reads, “End it or I will.”

When Sarah visits Adam in jail, she presses him about the night of the murder. Adam admits to drinking, having rough sex with Kelly, and leaving her a note before heading home. He also confesses he once considered leaving Sarah for Kelly but changed his mind. Sarah delivers the devastating news that Kelly was pregnant, which leaves Adam shattered. Despite her heartbreak, Sarah builds a defense, focusing on Scott and the unknown third DNA. The case grows more serious when the district attorney announces he will pursue the death penalty, calling it a double homicide.

Confiding in Anne, Sarah shares what she’s learned about the DNA and the threatening note. Though Sheriff Stevens’ friendliness unsettles her, Anne encourages Sarah to stay strong. Soon, Anne discovers the truth: Kelly Summers was really Jenna Way, a woman once accused of stabbing her first husband. She was acquitted only because evidence disappeared. Even more shocking, the officer in that case was Scott Summers — the same man who later became her second husband.

While in jail, Adam is visited by his mother, Eleanor, who smothers him with affection but also criticizes Sarah. Eleanor blames Sarah’s career and her refusal to have children for Adam’s affair. When Sarah arrives to update Adam on the charges, Eleanor openly questions her ability as his lawyer. Pressured, Sarah agrees to join Eleanor for dinner to “discuss next steps.”

At dinner, Eleanor unleashes her bitterness. She blames Sarah for Adam’s mistakes, criticizes her for not giving Adam children, and cruelly reminds her of her painful childhood. Sarah stays calm, never letting Eleanor see her break. By the end, she assures Eleanor she’ll fight for Adam, leaving Eleanor satisfied while secretly hiding her own anger.

Back in jail, Adam comes face-to-face with Scott. Scott denies ever abusing Kelly and claims she lied about her injuries, while Adam accuses him of violence. Scott offers an alibi backed by Deputy Hudson, further complicating things. The tension escalates until Sarah, Anne, and Matthew walk in, furious to find Scott confronting Adam.

Later, Sarah presses Adam about why he never told her Kelly’s real identity or her past murder trial. Adam brushes it off, saying he “forgot.” Sarah then prepares him for arraignment, laying out his choices: plead guilty and face 25 years, or plead not guilty and risk the death penalty. Adam refuses to admit guilt and chooses to fight the charges, pushing the case toward a dangerous trial.

The morning of Adam’s arraignment begins with Sarah meeting Anne and Matthew at a café. They go over the plan and possible witnesses, but Sarah keeps repeating one thing to herself: she is Adam’s lawyer first, and his wife second. This is the only way she can keep her emotions in check.

When they arrive at the courthouse, Adam looks nervous in handcuffs. His mother, Eleanor, hovers close, praising him but constantly criticizing Sarah. Just before the hearing starts, Sarah suddenly feels sick and has to rush away. Whether it’s stress or exhaustion, the timing couldn’t be worse. Of course, Eleanor seizes the moment to suggest Adam should get a different lawyer.

After pulling herself together, Sarah runs into the D.A., who offers a deal, 20 years in prison without parole. When Adam asks for her advice, Sarah finds herself torn. On one hand, as his lawyer, she knows he should take it. On the other, as his wife, she tells him to fight. In the end, Adam chooses to fight and pleads not guilty. The judge sets bail at $500,000 and orders house arrest at the lake house. Later, Sheriff Stevens reveals more details: Rohypnol was found in the scotch at the crime scene, but not in Adam’s system, and the third DNA profile still doesn’t match anyone. This makes Scott’s alibi, backed only by Deputy Hudson, even shakier.

Once Adam begins house arrest, things only grow more tense. Eleanor makes herself comfortable at the lake house, drinking and constantly belittling Sarah. At the same time, Stevens continues to involve himself, and his overly friendly behavior toward Sarah doesn’t go unnoticed. As a result, Adam grows suspicious and jealous, convinced there might be something between them. Their tension finally spills over during a coffee meeting that ends awkwardly, with Sarah leaving upset and Eleanor quick to mock her again.

Still determined to find answers, Sarah visits the café where Kelly used to work. There, she meets a barista named Brenda, who tells her about Jesse Hook, a strange man who often watched Kelly and made her uncomfortable. Brenda even provides a receipt with Jesse’s name on it, giving Sarah something concrete to follow. Right away, Sarah sends the lead to Anne, asking her to dig deeper.

Meanwhile, Adam grows restless and desperate. His marriage feels broken, Sarah is distant, and he doesn’t trust Stevens. When a reporter named Rebecca Sanford shows up, claiming to be a fan and a former student, Adam takes a risky chance. He offers her $5,000 and an exclusive story if she’ll investigate Kelly’s past. He even reveals Kelly’s real identity as Jenna Way and her first husband’s suspicious death. To pay her, he hides the cash inside a Folgers coffee can, clinging to any hope of clearing his name.

Back at the law firm, Sarah faces trouble of her own. Kent, her boss, scolds her for neglecting her duties and damaging the firm’s reputation. He allows her to stay on Adam’s case but suspends her profit-sharing until the trial ends. Drained and angry, Sarah later goes to the lake house with food, scotch, and files. For once, Adam thanks her sincerely, and the moment turns emotional. They share tears and almost reconnect, but Sarah pulls away at the last second. She still can’t forgive him, and the weight of everything sends her leaving the house in turmoil.

Adam gets a call from his agent, Daniel, who sees the trial as a money-making opportunity. At first, Adam refuses, but then he realizes that writing down his side of the story could help both his case and his sanity. So, he begins jotting everything down, imagining it as both a defense tool and maybe even a future bestseller.

Meanwhile, Sarah is drowning in pressure. The case has become national news, and her firm is furious about the bad publicity. To make things worse, Bob storms into her office, threatening her job. Later, Anne delivers a background check on Jesse Hook, a reclusive man obsessed with Kelly. His number matches calls and messages on her phone, including a chilling “I’m sorry” text from the night she died. Sarah knows she has to push this lead with Sheriff Stevens.

At the lake house, Adam meets with Rebecca, the reporter he hired. She confirms Kelly’s real identity as Jenna Way and reveals that her first husband, Greg, was murdered. Evidence disappeared during the case, and of course, Scott Summers played a role in helping Jenna escape conviction. Rebecca also tells Adam that Greg had a brother named Nicholas, and she hands over a list of Miller family contacts. Adam immediately starts dialing, desperate to find him.

Next, Sarah storms into Stevens’ office, demanding that Jesse Hook be taken seriously as a suspect. At first, Stevens brushes her off, but she pushes hard until he reluctantly agrees to bring Jesse in for questioning. Sarah insists on being there to watch.

Meanwhile, Adam spirals. He drinks too much, leaves desperate voicemails, and keeps calling the endless list of Millers. Eleanor stops by with groceries and childhood snacks, still undermining Sarah, but this time admitting that other lawyers believe Sarah is competent. Adam, torn between gratitude and bitterness, throws himself back into his phone calls, determined not to give up.

During Jesse’s interrogation, Sarah watches from behind the glass. Jesse denies stalking Kelly but admits she often avoided him. When confronted with the “I’m sorry” text, he slips and reveals something shocking: he saw Scott abusing Kelly. Just as things get intense, Deputy Hudson barges in, raising Sarah’s suspicions that he’s covering for Scott. In the end, Stevens agrees to test Jesse’s DNA, leaving Sarah both anxious and hopeful.

Not long after, Sarah storms into the lake house to confront Adam. She’s furious about him working with Rebecca, spending thousands, and making endless phone calls. Adam insists he’s just trying to help, but Sarah snaps that Jesse’s DNA test is the real lead. Their fight explodes, she accuses him of ruining his own defense, while he lashes back that she’s lost faith in him. Then Adam drops another bomb: his agent has set up a bidding war for his book. Sarah accuses him of turning his trial into a media circus and storms out.

Frustrated and exhausted, Sarah vents to Anne about Adam’s drinking, his recklessness, and his obsession with Rebecca. She even orders Anne to disconnect the lake house phone to stop his distractions. Later, Sarah has dinner with Matthew, confiding in him about the chaos. He warns her not to rush the trial, but Sarah explains her plan, use Kelly’s past, the third DNA, and the threatening photo to create doubt before public opinion turns. That night, Sarah has an intimate but ambiguous encounter at home, showing her need for escape. Still, she decides that once the trial is over, she will divorce Adam, no matter the outcome.

But the next morning, Stevens calls with crushing news: Jesse Hook’s DNA doesn’t match. Sarah is left reeling, realizing her strongest lead has just collapsed.

Adam keeps trying to reach Nicholas Miller but gets nowhere. Then, suddenly, the lake house phone goes dead, Sarah had it disconnected to stop his obsessive calls. Not long after, Rebecca shows up with files on possible suspects from Kelly’s past. When Adam sees Nicholas’s photo, he is convinced they have spoken before. But then something even more chilling hits him, the threatening note matches Anne’s handwriting.

At the same time, Sarah reviews Jesse Hook’s interrogation and begins forming a new theory. She suspects the third DNA sample might belong to Deputy Marcus Hudson, Scott’s partner. Maybe he was having an affair with Kelly, using a burner phone to keep it hidden. But when she takes the idea to Stevens, he shuts her down immediately. Frustrated, Sarah vents to Anne and then decides to try another tactic, slipping Hudson’s name into discovery to trick the D.A. into investigating him.

Meanwhile, Adam shares his suspicions with Rebecca, telling her he believes Anne wrote the threatening note because she is dangerously obsessed with Sarah. Rebecca points out that even if Anne is not the killer, her handwriting could still be useful for reasonable doubt. Fueled by anger and desperation, Adam snaps. He steals Rebecca’s car keys and flees house arrest, setting off his ankle monitor as he makes a reckless escape.

At the firm, Sarah sits down with the D.A. and Matthew for a discovery meeting. She tries to push Peters toward alternate leads, hoping to take the heat off Adam. But before she gets far, chaos erupts, Adam bursts in, causing a scene.

Adam storms straight at Anne, accusing her of killing Kelly. He waves the note and photo as proof. Anne admits she wrote the note but insists it was not a death threat, only a desperate attempt to force Adam to confess his affair to Sarah. Then the situation explodes again when Adam recognizes Sarah’s rival, Bob, as Nicholas Robert Miller, the brother of Kelly’s murdered first husband. Bob admits the connection but denies involvement. Before anyone can process it, Scott Summers attacks Bob, and the office descends into chaos. Stevens rushes in, arrests Adam for breaking house arrest, and takes Anne and Bob in for questioning.

Back at the station, Adam is rebooked and humiliated. Stevens tears into him, saying he has only made things worse. Adam insists he escaped because no one was listening to him, but his pleas go ignored, leaving him defeated.

Soon after, Sarah, Matthew, Bob, and Anne wait tensely at the station when Eleanor barges in. As always, she goes straight for Sarah, even cruelly bringing up her late mother. Finally, Sarah snaps, telling Eleanor she should “take note from mine and kill yourself.” Eleanor slaps her hard across the face, leaving her bleeding. Stevens intervenes just in time, splitting everyone up for questioning. Sarah, still seething, demands a handwriting analysis on the threatening note despite Anne already admitting she wrote it.

While in custody, Adam gets an unexpected visitor, Scott. For the first time, Scott admits he does not believe Adam killed Kelly. He presses him for details, and Adam reluctantly tells him about Rebecca Sanford and her investigation. Scott leaves abruptly, promising to “be in touch.”

Meanwhile, Sarah watches Anne’s interrogation. Anne admits she saw Adam with Kelly and that she sent the threatening note, but insists it was not meant as a threat, only to push Adam into telling Sarah the truth. Sarah is so furious she imagines attacking Anne, but Matthew calms her down, reminding her that Anne idolizes her and acted out of misplaced loyalty. Stevens agrees Anne seems “clean” but will still order handwriting tests. Sarah accepts, but she knows Bob’s interrogation is still coming, and she is not convinced the truth has surfaced yet.

Adam wrestles with doubts about Scott. On one hand, Scott suddenly seems willing to help, but on the other, Adam wonders if he is being manipulated. Darker thoughts creep in as he considers that Scott might actually be the killer, which would make him even more dangerous.

At the station, Sarah and Matthew watch as Stevens questions Bob, Kelly’s former brother-in-law. Bob admits he knew Kelly but avoids saying anything useful. When Deputy Hudson barges into the observation room acting smug, Sarah’s suspicions grow stronger. Stevens pushes too hard, bringing up Bob’s brother’s death, and Bob snaps. He storms out, furious, leaving Sarah frustrated and scolding Stevens for ruining the chance to learn more.

Later, Sarah reflects on her painful past. After her father’s death, her mother spiraled into addiction, leaving Sarah to survive on her own. By sixteen, she found her mother dead of an overdose and swore never to be weak or dependent again. She compares her own resilience to Eleanor’s suffocating control over Adam, realizing how differently their lives shaped them.

Meanwhile, Adam seizes another chance to escape. After a tense talk with Scott, he notices his interrogation room door left open. He slips past the receptionist and sneaks out of the station undetected, desperate to find Rebecca.

The next morning, Sarah tries to regain control. Anne shows up apologizing for hiding secrets, and although Sarah is still cautious, she decides to keep her close. She orders Anne to set up a meeting with D.A. Peters. At the same time, Eleanor sends yet another bitter message, but Sarah finally blocks her and feels a renewed sense of focus.

Adam, on the run again, spends a miserable night in the rain. He imagines himself as an ant with purpose, something he feels he has lost. He convinces himself that the killer had to be someone close, maybe Scott, maybe Anne, maybe even Bob. The next day, he sneaks into a truck stop, steals clothes, and barely avoids being caught by two truckers. Exhausted and paranoid, he keeps moving.

Sarah meets with D.A. Peters in a café, trying to pry into his strategy. Peters is confident, calling Adam’s conviction a sure thing. When Sarah pushes about the third DNA and Bob’s ties to Kelly, he dismisses both as meaningless. Frustrated, Sarah secretly enlists Matthew to gather DNA samples from every man linked to Kelly, even though it is illegal.

That night, Adam sneaks into a gas station, steals a map, and keeps trying to reach Rebecca. When she doesn’t answer, he calls his agent Daniel, who refuses to help, and then Eleanor, who promises him money. Eventually, he tracks down Rebecca’s house. She panics when she sees him, admitting she feels watched. When Adam tries to comfort her with a kiss, she pushes him away. Moments later, police storm the house, Rebecca had called them. Adam is arrested again, and just before being dragged out, he spots a shadow outside, making his paranoia even worse.

Back at the firm, Bob approaches Sarah. He tells her he has been cleared, with proof he was in Wisconsin at the time of Kelly’s murder. He also insists Anne seems clear and reminds Sarah that they are on the same team. Though he defends her to Kent and softens their tension, Sarah remains wary. Just as he leaves, Stevens calls to inform her that Adam has been caught again.

Adam is dragged back to the station in chains, this time shackled more tightly. Officers mock him for escaping and warn he will face more charges. When Sarah arrives, she is furious. She accuses him of destroying his own defense and then reveals a devastating truth, Rebecca was never a reporter, she was a private investigator hired by Scott. Adam realizes he has been manipulated all along, leaving him crushed. Sarah warns him coldly that even if she manages to beat the murder charge, he will still face time for escaping. Exhausted, she tells him that only a miracle can save him now, because even she cannot.

Late one night, Sarah opens the envelope containing the DNA results Matthew had obtained illegally. Her hands shake as she flips through the pages until she sees what she was hoping for, the third DNA is a match. For the first time in weeks, she feels relief and triumph, whispering to herself that she knew it all along. She is convinced this discovery could finally turn the case in Adam’s favor.

When the trial begins, Adam walks into the courtroom clean-shaven, dressed in a suit, and trying to appear calm. Sarah greets him with a small smile before stepping forward to deliver her opening statement. She lays out every piece of evidence with precision, from Scott’s threats to Kelly’s past as Jenna Way, from the multiple men in her life to her stalker Jesse Hook. Finally, she declares to the jury that Adam Morgan did not kill Kelly Summers. The room hangs on her words, but Adam can sense that beneath her performance, Sarah’s personal resentment toward him still lingers.

Not long after, Anne rushes into Sarah’s hotel room with shocking news, the jury has reached a verdict far sooner than expected. Together, they hurry to the courthouse where tension fills the air. Adam is brought in, pale and terrified, as the jury takes their seats. Judge Dionne asks if they have reached a decision, and the foreperson rises. Adam grips Sarah’s hand, his heart racing, but the verdict is not revealed to the reader, leaving the moment heavy with dread.

The story then jumps forward eleven years. Sarah narrates from the future, explaining that Adam has been on death row since his conviction. She stopped visiting him a decade ago when his mind began to unravel. Now, on the day of his execution, she returns one last time, still his wife on paper but already preparing to remarry the next day. For Sarah, this visit is closure, the final step before she fully moves on with the new life she has built.

When Adam sees her, he is overwhelmed, but Sarah is cold and distant. She squeezes his hand once every minute, like a silent countdown. Their conversation grows tense, and at one point she hints that she knows he did not kill Kelly. Adam is left reeling, desperate for clarity, but she offers none. As the guards escort her away, her chilling words echo in his mind. Soon after, Adam is strapped to the gurney for lethal injection. His death is painful, not peaceful, and in his final moments he thinks only of Sarah.

In the final chapter, the truth is revealed. Sarah confesses that she orchestrated everything, working with Bob, Nicholas Miller, to plan Kelly’s murder and frame Adam. On the night of the crime, she drugged Adam’s scotch with Rohypnol and stabbed Kelly thirty-seven times while he lay unconscious. Stevens’ careless handling of the evidence only helped her plan. Rebecca was never a real journalist but Bob’s private investigator, planted to mislead Adam and feed his paranoia. Sarah even admits her darker past, revealing that she let her mother overdose rather than be pulled into weakness. Now, she lives happily with Bob and their daughter, Summer, at the lake house, satisfied that, as always, her timing was perfect.

The Perfect Marriage – Legal, Forensic, and Plot Mistakes

This is something I almost never do, but this time I couldn’t ignore it. While reading The Perfect Marriage, I found so many flaws and far-fetched details that it made me believe the author didn’t do proper research. Since the whole story depends on a trial, a murder investigation, and courtroom drama, these mistakes stand out even more. Below I’ll go through the main issues that broke the book’s credibility for me.

Legal and Procedural Problems

  • Sarah representing Adam is court is completely unrealistic. I find really hard a good judge who would ever allow a wife to defend her husband in a capital murder case. The conflict of interest is obvious.
  • The trial happened way too fast. In reality, a case like this would probably drag on for years, not wrap up in just a few weeks.
  • Sarah also manages to hide the third DNA profile. That would never happen. Lab reports go to both sides, and any missing evidence would be a huge violation.
  • Another detail that shows lack of research is how the book calls it the “State of Virginia.” In court, it’s always the Commonwealth of Virginia.
  • And then there’s Sheriff Stevens. He sleeps with the victim, ignores basic tests on Adam, and overlooks obvious suspects. He feels more like a prop for the plot than a real investigator.
  • Adam is never tested for drugs, even though that’s a basic step in any homicide case.
  • And the little hints of flirtation between Stevens and Sarah? Completely unrealistic and unethical.
  • Sarah even sits in on interrogations and influences the questioning. I taught that defense lawyers are only allowed to be there when their own client is being questioned, not when police are talking to other witnesses.

Plot Holes in the Framing Scheme

  • The murder night doesn’t add up at all. Sarah drugs Adam and Kelly, drives to the lake house, stabs Kelly thirty-seven times, and somehow returns to her alibi without anyone noticing she was gone for hours?
  • And the blood? A stabbing that violent would leave the whole room soaked. Adam lying unconscious under a tarp would not stay clean. There would be blood on him, no matter what.
  • Bob’s motive is also weak. He wants revenge for his brother’s death but instead of going after Kelly or Scott, he helps Sarah frame Adam. It doesn’t make sense.
  • Adam’s execution happens only eleven years later. That’s unusually fast for a death penalty case.
  • Sarah also somehow gets DNA results before the prosecution. She constantly uncovers key details that the police and the DA supposedly miss, which just makes them look incompetent.

Characters Acting Out of Character

  • Sarah’s change from ambitious lawyer to cold-blooded killer feels way too sudden. There’s no real buildup, and then suddenly in the epilogue she’s even confessing to killing her mother.
  • Adam, who is supposed to be observant as a writer, misses everything about Sarah. He doesn’t notice a thing, which makes him look unbelievably naive.
  • And Scott, Kelly’s abusive husband, threatens her and then disappears, with no real effort from the police to investigate or chase him down.

Narrative and Pacing Issues

  • The last chapter just dumps all the answers at once. Instead of dropping clues along the way, the book explains everything at the end, which feels super rushed and lazy.
  • Rebecca, the fake journalist, doesn’t really add anything. Adam could have found those same “clues” without her.

Character Description Slip

And here’s a smaller but still annoying one. The book can’t even keep Kelly’s eye color straight.
At one point, Adam describes her like this:

“…her brown doe eyes are lit up—filled with hope and joy.”

But later, Sheriff Stevens shows Sarah a photo and suddenly Kelly looks completely different:

“…a picture of a beautiful girl with long brown hair and sparkling blue eyes.”

The Perfect Marriage – End Explained

You must be questioning yourself: how does The Perfect Marriage by Jeneva Rose end?

Well, let me break it down. All through the book, you’re led to believe Adam is the guilty one, he’s the unfaithful husband, caught up in an affair with Kelly, and then accused of her brutal murder. His brilliant wife, Sarah, steps in as his defense attorney, and you think she’s fighting tooth and nail to save him.

But here’s the truth: Adam didn’t kill Kelly. Sarah did.

Sarah discovered Adam’s affair long before the murder. Around the same time, her colleague Bob came to her with the information. Years earlier, Kelly had been accused of killing Bob’s brother, Greg. She was acquitted due to lack of evidence, but Bob never forgave her. When he found proof of her affair with Adam, he saw an opportunity for revenge and brought it straight to Sarah.

Instead of falling apart, Sarah and Bob joined forces. Together, they devised the ultimate plan: kill Kelly and frame Adam. On the night of the murder, Sarah slipped roofies into the scotch to drug both Adam and Kelly. When they were unconscious, she drove to the lake house, laid a plastic tarp over Adam, and stabbed Kelly thirty-seven times right next to him. Adam was too drugged to move, forced to “watch” in a dazed state as Sarah carried out the attack.

She staged everything perfectly, the evidence, the alibis, the courtroom performance. Even the mysterious “third DNA” that showed up didn’t matter, Sarah kept it out of the trial to protect herself, because it actually belonged to Sheriff Stevens. In the end, Adam was convicted and sentenced to death.

And Sarah’s reasoning? She saw Kelly not just as “the other woman,” but as a casualty in her war against Adam. Divorce would have cost her half of everything she worked for, and Sarah refused to give him that. Killing Kelly and framing Adam gave her both revenge and freedom.

The most chilling part comes in Sarah’s private confession: she admits she also killed her own mother. Her mother was slowly destroying herself with heroin, and Sarah “helped speed up the process” by injecting her with extra doses. To Sarah, it wasn’t murder, it was control.

By the epilogue, Sarah has moved on, remarried Bob, and is raising their daughter at the same lake house where it all happened.

Let’s Chat!

What about you? Have you read The Perfect Marriage? Were you influenced by the reviews, or did you pick it up for another reason?

I’d love to know your thoughts, so drop a comment below and let’s chat!

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