
Betrayal Costs a Fortune
Chapter 3
The words came out before I could stop them, raw and desperate in the suffocating heat of the parking lot.
"I want a divorce."
Adam's face went slack with shock, but it lasted only a moment before twisting into something ugly. "You don't mean that."
"I do." My voice grew stronger, fueled by the sight of my mother's shattered bracelet scattered across the asphalt. "I can't do this anymore, Adam. I won't let you destroy our son for her."
Jasmine's laugh cut through the air like broken glass. "Oh, please. You're nothing without Adam, Daniella. Nothing." She stepped closer, her designer heel grinding another sapphire fragment into dust. "You should be grateful for what you have instead of throwing tantrums like a spoiled child."
"Grateful?" The word tasted bitter on my tongue. "Grateful that my husband gave away our air conditioning while our son suffers? Grateful that you stole my mother's bracelet and destroyed it?"
"I didn't steal anything," Jasmine said smoothly. "Adam gave me access to the house. I saw something pretty and borrowed it. Not my fault you're so careless with your things."
Adam nodded, his face hardening with familiar stubbornness. "Daniella, you're being hysterical. Threatening divorce over some jewelry and air conditioning? You don't mean it."
"Watch me." I stood slowly, my legs shaking but my resolve crystallizing like ice. "I'll file the papers tomorrow."
"No, you won't." Adam's voice carried that condescending certainty that had worn me down for years. "You need me. What would you do without me? You've never worked a day in your life."
Jasmine smirked, crossing her arms. "Exactly. You're just a housewife with no skills and no money. Good luck surviving on your own."
Their words should have cut deep, should have made me doubt myself the way they always had. Instead, they felt like the final stones thrown at glass already shattered beyond repair.
"We'll see," I whispered, turning away from them both.
I drove home in a haze of rage and determination, my hands trembling on the steering wheel. But when I pushed through our front door, the wall of heat that greeted me drove all other thoughts from my mind.
The house felt like a tomb—airless, stifling, dangerous.
"Theo?" I called out, my voice echoing in the oppressive silence.
No answer.
Panic clawed at my chest as I raced toward the living room. The leather couch where I'd left him sat empty, the throw pillows scattered on the floor. Ice water from the bowl I'd left had evaporated, leaving only a ring of moisture on the coffee table.
"Theo!" I screamed, my voice cracking with terror.
I found him in his bedroom, collapsed on the hardwood floor beside his bed. His small body lay motionless, his face flushed a dangerous crimson that made my heart stop. When I dropped to my knees beside him, his skin burned like fire beneath my palms.
"Baby, wake up," I whispered, gathering his limp form against my chest. "Please, wake up."
His eyelids fluttered, and he made a soft whimpering sound that broke my heart. "Mommy? I feel sick."
"I know, sweetheart. I'm going to fix this."
I tried calling Adam seventeen times during the frantic drive to the hospital. Each call went straight to voicemail, his phone deliberately turned off. He was probably still with Jasmine, celebrating their victory over the hysterical housewife.
The emergency room staff moved with practiced efficiency when they saw Theo's condition. Words like "heat stroke" and "dangerously dehydrated" floated around me as they hooked my son up to IV lines and monitors that beeped with mechanical urgency.
"His core temperature is 104.2," the doctor explained, her voice professional but kind. "We need to cool him down gradually and restore his fluid levels. You got him here just in time."
Just in time. The words echoed in my head as I sat beside Theo's hospital bed, watching clear fluids drip into his tiny arm. Just in time because I'd finally stopped believing Adam's lies. Just in time because I'd finally chosen my son over my marriage.
My phone buzzed with Adam's name, but I declined the call. Then again. And again. Finally, I turned it off.
But there was one call I needed to make.
My father answered on the second ring, his voice sharp with concern. "Daniella? It's late. Is everything all right?"
"No." The word came out as a sob. "Dad, I... I need help."
Silence stretched between us, filled with ten years of unspoken truths and carefully maintained pretenses.
"Where are you?" His voice gentled, becoming the father I remembered from childhood rather than the distant businessman he'd been forced to become.
"Seattle Children's Hospital. Theo's sick. Heat stroke." I pressed my free hand against my mouth, trying to hold back the flood of tears threatening to break free. "Adam gave away our air conditioning. All of it. And I... I can't protect him anymore, Dad. I can't do this."
Another pause, and when he spoke again, his voice carried a weight of understanding that made my chest ache.
"The ten years are over, sweetheart. You've learned what you needed to learn."
"I failed your test," I whispered. "I married him anyway."
"No," he said firmly. "You passed it. You chose your son. You chose yourself. That's all I ever wanted."
As I sat there in the sterile hospital room, watching my son's chest rise and fall with steady breaths while machines monitored his recovery, I felt something shift inside me. The scared, apologetic woman who had begged for scraps of her husband's attention was dissolving, replaced by someone I barely recognized.
Someone who would never again allow her child to suffer for another person's greed.
Someone who was done being nothing.
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