
Failed Bet Costs Hayes Couple
Chapter 3
The market fell silent as everyone waited for my response. I met Tiffany's gaze steadily, my mind already several steps ahead, calculating precisely how this equation would resolve itself.
I reached into my bag and pulled out a small notepad—a habit from years of laboratory work. With methodical precision, I wrote out a formal demand letter, detailing the exact damages to David Henderson's property and livelihood. My handwriting was neat, precise—just like everything else in my life.
"One hundred thousand dollars," I stated, holding out the paper. "Payable within one hour."
Tiffany snatched the paper from my hand, her crimson nails a stark contrast against the white sheet. She scanned it, her expression morphing from confusion to incredulous amusement.
"Oh my God," she laughed, waving the paper at Brandon. "She actually wrote a little demand letter! Like we're in small claims court or something!"
Brandon took the paper, his eyes skimming it before he crumpled it into a ball. "Always the bureaucrat, aren't you, Sarah?"
Tiffany's eyes gleamed with malice as she stepped closer, the scent of her expensive perfume washing over me. The crowd around us had grown, several people holding up phones, recording the confrontation.
"You know what? Let's make this really interesting," she announced, her voice pitched to carry. "Since you're so concerned about money, I'll give you a real challenge."
She placed her manicured hand on her hip, the other still clutching her phone that continued to livestream. "If you can produce ten million dollars in cash within the next five minutes, I'll not only pay your farmer friend, I'll get down on my knees and clean that watermelon with my tongue."
A collective gasp rippled through the crowd. I remained still, my face betraying nothing as I processed her proposition.
"And if I can't?" I asked, my voice steady despite the tension building in my chest.
Tiffany's smile widened, predatory and confident. "If you can't, you strip naked. Right here. Right now. In front of everyone."
The crowd's murmurs grew louder. David Henderson stepped forward, his face pale. "Miss, you don't have to do this. It's just produce—"
"It's not just produce," I cut him off gently. "It's principle."
I turned back to Tiffany, who was practically vibrating with anticipatory triumph. "Five minutes to produce ten million dollars. Those are your terms?"
"Exactly," she purred. "Tick tock, scientist."
Brandon folded his arms across his chest, his expression a mixture of amusement and contempt. "You know she can't possibly do it, Tiff. She's just a government worker. Probably makes what, seventy thousand a year? Living in some sad little apartment?"
"I accept your terms," I said calmly.
Tiffany's eyebrows shot up in surprise before her face settled back into smug certainty. "Start the timer, babe," she said to Brandon, who pulled out his phone with theatrical flourish.
"Five minutes starting... now," he announced, tapping his screen.
I pulled out my own phone—not the latest model, nothing flashy—and dialed a number I rarely used. The line connected after two rings.
"General Peterson," I said, my voice shifting subtly to a more formal cadence. "Authentication code Delta-7. I require emergency funds at my current location. Ten million. Cash."
There was a brief pause on the other end. "Understood, Dr. Mitchell. ETA four minutes. Verification?"
"Watermelon," I replied simply.
"Confirmed," the voice responded, and the line went dead.
I slipped my phone back into my pocket and faced Tiffany and Brandon, whose expressions had shifted from mockery to confusion.
"Did you just pretend to order up ten million dollars?" Tiffany laughed, though there was a new note of uncertainty in her voice. "What is this, some kind of joke?"
"Four minutes and counting," Brandon reminded her, though his smirk had faltered slightly. "Better start preparing for your public debut, Sarah."
I said nothing, simply checking my watch—a practical timepiece, nothing ostentatious. The seconds ticked by with mathematical precision, each one bringing us closer to the resolution of this particular equation.
Tiffany and Brandon exchanged glances, their confidence visibly wavering as I made no further attempts to plead or negotiate. The crowd around us had grown larger, the confrontation now drawing attention from passersby and market vendors alike.
"Three minutes," Brandon announced, his voice slightly less certain. "Want to back out now, Sarah? We could be... reasonable."
"The terms were clear," I replied evenly. "I have accepted them."
In the distance, a faint rhythmic thumping began to echo across the market. A sound I recognized immediately, but one that meant nothing to Tiffany and Brandon.
Not yet, anyway.
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