
Auction Betrayal
Chapter 1
The sound of shattering porcelain cut through our family dinner like a blade.
Thomas's father, William Kennedy, had been mid-sentence, discussing the upcoming auction season with his characteristic enthusiasm, when his face suddenly contorted. The antique teacup slipped from his fingers, exploding against the hardwood floor as he clutched his chest.
"Dad!" Thomas shot up from his chair, but William was already collapsing, his body hitting the dining room floor with a sickening thud.
I dropped to my knees beside him, my hands trembling as I checked for a pulse. His skin had turned an alarming shade of gray, and his breathing came in shallow, desperate gasps. "Call 911," I commanded Thomas, who stood frozen in shock. "Now!"
The next twenty minutes blurred together in a nightmare of sirens, paramedics, and urgent medical jargon I barely understood. I held Thomas's hand in the hospital waiting room, watching him pace like a caged animal while we waited for news.
Dr. Martinez emerged from the emergency room with the kind of expression that made my stomach drop. "Mr. Kennedy has suffered a massive myocardial infarction," she explained, her voice clinical but not unkind. "The damage is extensive. We need to perform an experimental cardiac procedure immediately, but I have to be honest with you about the cost."
"Cost?" Thomas's voice cracked. "What does that matter?"
"The surgery costs two hundred thousand dollars. His insurance won't cover experimental procedures, and we need payment authorization before we can proceed."
The number hit me like a physical blow. Two hundred thousand dollars. Thomas and I had savings, but nowhere near that amount. The auction house was doing well, but most of our assets were tied up in inventory and overhead.
"How long do we have?" I asked, my mind already racing through possibilities.
Dr. Martinez glanced at her watch. "Six hours, maybe eight at the outside. After that..." She didn't need to finish the sentence.
Thomas sank into a plastic chair, his head in his hands. "I don't know what to do, Gabrielle. I can't lose him."
My heart ached watching my husband's despair, but my mind was already working through solutions. There was only one option, really. One asset valuable enough to raise that kind of money quickly.
"I need to make a phone call," I said, squeezing Thomas's shoulder before stepping into the hallway.
My father answered on the second ring, his voice warm with evening contentment. "Gabrielle, sweetheart. How was dinner?"
"Dad, I need your help." The words tumbled out in a rush—William's heart attack, the experimental surgery, the impossible cost. "The Song Dynasty vase," I finally said, my voice barely above a whisper. "We need to sell it. Tonight."
Silence stretched between us. That vase had been in our family for three generations, passed down from my great-grandfather who'd acquired it during his diplomatic service in China. It was worth far more than the surgery would cost, but it was also irreplaceable.
"Of course," my father said without hesitation. "I'll arrange secure transport to Thomas's auction house immediately. How quickly can he organize a sale?"
Relief flooded through me so intensely I had to lean against the wall for support. "Thank you, Dad. I know what this means to you—to our family."
"Family takes care of family, Gabrielle. That vase is just an object. William is irreplaceable."
I returned to the waiting room where Thomas was staring blankly at the floor. "It's handled," I told him. "My father is sending the Ru kiln vase to your auction house. You can organize an emergency sale tonight."
Thomas looked up, confusion clouding his features. "The Ru kiln? Gabrielle, that's worth—"
"More than enough," I finished. "Call Peyton. She can handle the authentication while you contact your premium buyers. We can have the money within hours."
For the first time since his father collapsed, hope flickered in Thomas's eyes. He pulled out his phone with shaking hands. "Peyton? It's Thomas. I need you at the auction house immediately. Emergency sale."
As he spoke to his protégé, explaining the situation and the urgency, I felt a strange mixture of relief and foreboding. Everything was falling into place too easily. But William's life hung in the balance, and I pushed my unease aside.
Thomas ended the call and pulled me into his arms. "Thank you," he whispered against my hair. "I don't know what I'd do without you."
I held him close, breathing in his familiar scent, trying to ignore the small voice in my head that wondered why Peyton's name always seemed to be the first one on his lips in any crisis.
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