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Betrayal Costs a Fortune Novel Cover

Betrayal Costs a Fortune

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.
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Chapter 2

Twenty minutes later, I sat in my car outside Jasmine's apartment complex, my hands gripping the steering wheel so tightly my knuckles had gone white. The engine idled as I stared at the modest two-story building, trying to convince myself that Adam was telling the truth—that those expensive units were really helping a grieving widow, not funding some scheme I couldn't yet imagine.

The heat radiating through my windshield made my skin prickle with sweat, and I thought of Theo back home, still sprawled on that leather couch with his flushed cheeks and labored breathing. I'd left him with a bowl of ice water and every fan in the house pointed his direction, but it wasn't enough. Nothing would be enough until I got those units back.

I was about to drive away when movement in the parking lot caught my eye. Jasmine emerged from the building's side entrance, her perfectly styled blonde hair catching the harsh sunlight. She wore a flowing sundress that looked expensive—too expensive for someone supposedly struggling financially—and her makeup remained flawless despite the oppressive heat.

But it wasn't her appearance that made my blood run cold. It was what she was doing.

Jasmine stood beside a white pickup truck, gesturing animatedly at one of our custom air conditioning units sitting in the truck bed. The distinctive brushed steel casing and digital display were unmistakable—I'd watched the installation crew mount that exact unit in our master bedroom just fourteen months ago.

A middle-aged man in work clothes handed her a thick roll of cash, which she counted with practiced efficiency before tucking it into her purse. The casual way she conducted the transaction, the satisfied smile playing at her lips—this wasn't desperation. This was business.

"One is really enough for my little place," I heard her say as I rolled down my window, her voice carrying across the parking lot. "These babies are top-of-the-line. You're getting a steal at fifteen hundred."

Fifteen hundred dollars. For a unit that had cost us four thousand.

Rage flooded through me like molten steel. I threw the car door open and strode across the asphalt, my sandals slapping against the heated pavement.

"Jasmine!"

She spun around, her blue eyes widening with what looked like genuine surprise. The man with the truck glanced between us nervously, clearly sensing the tension crackling in the air.

"Daniella! What are you doing here?" Her voice pitched higher, taking on that breathy quality she always used when caught off-guard.

"What am I doing here?" I stopped just feet from her, close enough to see the guilt flickering behind her carefully applied mascara. "I'm watching you sell my family's air conditioning units to strangers while my son is home suffering from heat exhaustion!"

The man with the truck took a step back. "Look, lady, I don't want any trouble. She said these were hers to sell."

"They're not," I said, my voice deadly quiet. "Those units belong to my family. She has no right to sell them."

Jasmine's expression shifted, the fake sweetness melting away to reveal something harder underneath. "Actually, they were given to me. By my brother-in-law. Freely given." She emphasized the last two words like they were weapons.

"Given to help you, not to profit from!" My voice cracked with desperation. "Jasmine, please. My son is sick. The temperature is going to hit one hundred and ten degrees today. Just give us back one unit. Just one."

For a moment, something that might have been shame flickered across her features. But then she pulled out her phone, her fingers flying across the screen.

"Adam? Yes, it's me. Your wife is here harassing me and trying to steal back the air conditioners you gave me. She's making a scene in front of my neighbors."

I watched in horror as she painted me as the villain, her voice taking on that trembling quality that made her sound like a victim. Within minutes, Adam's familiar sedan screeched into the parking lot, and he emerged looking thunderous.

"Daniella, what the hell do you think you're doing?" He strode over to us, immediately positioning himself between Jasmine and me like I was the threat.

"I'm trying to save our son from heat stroke!" I shouted, no longer caring who heard. "She's selling our units, Adam! Selling them!"

"So what if she is?" His words hit me like a slap. "They're hers now. She can do whatever she wants with them."

"Our son is sick!" Tears of frustration burned my eyes. "He's burning up, and you're defending her right to profit from his suffering?"

"You're being hysterical," Adam said coldly. "Apologize to Jasmine right now, or I'm calling the police for harassment."

The casual cruelty in his voice—the complete dismissal of our child's wellbeing—left me speechless. But as I stared at him, something else caught my eye. Something that made my heart stop.

There, glinting on Jasmine's wrist, was my mother's bracelet.

The delicate silver chain with its antique sapphire pendant had been my mother's most treasured piece, passed down through three generations of women in my family. I'd kept it in my jewelry box, taking it out only on special occasions to feel close to her memory.

"That's my bracelet," I whispered, the words barely audible.

Jasmine's hand instinctively moved to cover the jewelry. "I don't know what you're talking about."

"My mother's bracelet. You took it from my jewelry box." The violation felt even worse than the stolen air conditioning. This was personal. Sacred.

I lunged forward, reaching for the clasp, but Jasmine jerked her arm away. In the struggle, the delicate chain snapped, and the bracelet fell to the scorching asphalt with a tiny, heartbreaking chime.

For a moment, we all stared at it lying there—three generations of love and memory reduced to broken metal on hot pavement.

Then Jasmine smiled. A cold, calculating smile that revealed her true nature.

And she lifted her designer heel and crushed my mother's bracelet beneath it.

The sapphire shattered with a sound like breaking glass, scattering blue fragments across the parking lot like tears.

"Oops," she said, her voice dripping with false sweetness. "How clumsy of me."

I dropped to my knees, frantically trying to gather the pieces, but they were too small, too scattered. Destroyed.

"Jasmine didn't mean to do that," Adam said, his voice mechanical. "You startled her. This is your fault, Daniella."

I looked up at my husband—this man I'd loved, married, built a life with—and saw a stranger. Someone who could watch his wife's most precious possession be deliberately destroyed and still defend the destroyer.

Something inside me broke then, as surely as my mother's bracelet had broken. Something that had been holding me together through years of small betrayals and mounting indifference.

I stood slowly, my hands still clutching the worthless fragments, and met Adam's eyes.

"Get away from me," I whispered. "Both of you. Just... get away from me."

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