
Betrayal Costs a Fortune
Chapter 1
The grocery bags slipped from my numb fingers as I stepped through the front door, plastic containers of ice cream and frozen vegetables scattering across the hardwood floor. The house hit me like a furnace blast—a wall of suffocating heat that made my lungs seize.
Something was wrong. Terribly wrong.
Our home never felt like this, not even during Seattle's worst summer days. The custom air conditioning system Adam had insisted we install last year—six powerful units strategically placed throughout our three-story house—should have kept every room at a perfect seventy-two degrees.
But now, the air hung thick and motionless, pressing against my skin like a wet blanket. Sweat immediately beaded on my forehead as I abandoned the scattered groceries and rushed toward the living room, my heart hammering against my ribs.
"Theo?" I called out, my voice cracking with sudden panic.
I found my eight-year-old son sprawled on the leather couch, his usually bright eyes glazed and unfocused. His cheeks blazed crimson, and his small chest rose and fell in rapid, shallow breaths that made my stomach clench with terror.
"Mommy," he whispered, his voice barely audible. "I'm so hot. The air stopped working."
My hands shook as I pressed my palm against his burning forehead. His skin felt like fire, and his dark hair clung to his scalp in damp curls. This wasn't just discomfort—this was dangerous.
"Where's Daddy?" I asked, trying to keep the rising hysteria from my voice as I grabbed a throw pillow to fan him. The movement stirred the stagnant air but provided no real relief.
Theo pointed weakly toward the kitchen. "He said the cold boxes went away. Said Aunt Jasmine needed them more."
The words hit me like a physical blow. I stared at my son's flushed face, certain I'd misunderstood. "What cold boxes, sweetheart?"
"The air things. In the walls." His small hand gestured vaguely around the room.
I spun around, my gaze flying to the wall where our main unit had been mounted just this morning. Empty brackets jutted from the wall like broken bones, and fresh holes in the drywall marked where screws had been hastily removed. The expensive copper refrigerant lines hung loose and capped, testament to a rushed removal job.
My legs nearly gave out as the reality crashed over me. All six units. Gone.
"Adam!" I screamed, my voice echoing through the sweltering house. "ADAM!"
Heavy footsteps thundered down the stairs, and my husband appeared in the doorway, looking perfectly comfortable despite the oppressive heat. His sandy hair showed no signs of perspiration, and his polo shirt remained crisp and dry. He must have been in his home office—the only room with a window unit he'd installed "for backup."
"What's all the shouting about?" he asked, his tone carrying that familiar note of irritation he'd developed whenever I interrupted his day.
"The air conditioning," I gasped, still fanning Theo frantically. "Where are our units? Theo's burning up, and the house is like an oven!"
Adam's expression didn't change. If anything, his jaw tightened with annoyance. "I told you yesterday I was helping Jasmine out. She needed them more than we do."
The casual way he said it—as if he'd mentioned picking up milk—made my vision blur with disbelief. "You gave away our air conditioning? All of it? In this heat?"
"Don't be so dramatic, Daniella." He crossed his arms, his voice taking on that condescending tone that always made me feel small. "It's just hot weather. People survived for thousands of years without air conditioning."
"Look at your son!" I shouted, my composure finally cracking. "Look at him, Adam! He can barely breathe!"
For a moment, Adam's gaze flickered to Theo's overheated form, and I saw something that might have been concern cross his features. But it vanished as quickly as it appeared, replaced by defensive anger.
"Stop being hysterical," he snapped. "Jasmine lost her husband six months ago. She's struggling to make ends meet, and those units were just sitting here most of the year anyway. She needed them more than we do."
"We paid twelve thousand dollars for those units!" My voice cracked with desperation. "They're custom-designed for this house! And the temperature is supposed to hit one hundred and ten degrees today!"
"Money isn't everything, Daniella." His words dripped with self-righteousness. "Family is what matters. Jasmine is family too."
The irony of his statement—delivered while his own son suffered from heat exhaustion—would have been laughable if it weren't so heartbreaking.
"Please," I begged, swallowing my pride. "Just get one back. One unit. For Theo's room. He's going to get sick."
Adam's face hardened into a mask of cold indifference. "Jasmine already has them installed. I'm not going to upset a grieving widow because you can't handle a little heat."
With that, he turned on his heel and strode toward the front door, leaving me kneeling beside our son in the suffocating heat, clutching a useless throw pillow as my only weapon against the merciless temperature that threatened to consume us both.
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