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Fiancé's Crime, My Freedom Novel Cover

Fiancé's Crime, My Freedom

The crystal chandeliers cast warm golden light across Adrian's flagship restaurant, their gentle glow reflecting off polished silverware and pristine white tablecloths. I adjusted my grip on the cryogenic case's handle, feeling its familiar weight as I navigated between tables of elegantly dressed diners. Tonight was supposed to be perfect—our rehearsal dinner, the final celebration before Adrian and I became husband and wife. The case hummed softly beside me, its temperature-controlled interior maintaining the delicate biological specimens at precisely negative eighty degrees Celsius. Three years of research, countless late nights in the lab, and specimens that could revolutionize environmental protection—all secured within this unassuming metal container. I'd grown so accustomed to its presence that it felt like an extension of myself. "Excuse me." A sharp voice cut through the restaurant's ambient chatter. "Ma'am, I need to speak with you." I turned to find a young woman in the restaurant's signature black uniform approaching me with purposeful strides. Her name tag read 'Hayley Foster,' and something about her confident demeanor made my stomach tighten. The way she moved through the dining room suggested this was her territory, her domain.
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Chapter 2

My fingers hovered over Adrian's contact when I noticed Hayley reaching into her apron pocket. The soft glow of a phone screen illuminated her face as she angled it toward us, and my blood turned to ice.

"Hey everyone, Hayley here with another live update from Williamson's!" Her voice transformed, becoming bright and conspiratorial as she addressed her phone's camera. "You guys are not going to believe what I'm dealing with right now."

The phone was pointed directly at me. I could see myself in the reflection of her screen—disheveled, clutching the cryogenic case like a lifeline, my face flushed with humiliation. Around us, diners craned their necks to see what was happening, some pulling out their own phones.

"So there's this woman here," Hayley continued, her voice dripping with false concern, "and she's been stealing food from our kitchen. Twelve premium king prawns, guys. That's like, sixty dollars worth of seafood."

Comments began flooding the screen. I caught glimpses of laughing emojis, angry faces, words like "entitled" and "rich bitch" scrolling past in a blur of digital hatred.

"And get this—when I asked her to pay for what she stole, she got all defensive and started clutching this mysterious case." Hayley turned the camera toward the cryogenic container. "She won't even tell me what's inside. Super suspicious, right?"

My throat constricted. Each comment felt like a physical blow. Strangers were judging me, mocking me, calling for my arrest based on nothing but Hayley's performance. The elegant restaurant had become a digital colosseum, and I was the entertainment.

"I need some air," I managed to whisper, pushing past her toward the restaurant's back exit.

"Oh, look at that! She's running away!" Hayley's voice followed me, amplified by the phone's speaker. "Classic guilty behavior, guys. What do you think—should I call the police?"

The garden doors couldn't come fast enough. I burst through them into the cool night air, my lungs burning as I gasped for breath. The outdoor dining area was mercifully empty, string lights casting soft pools of yellow across empty tables and chairs.

I sank onto a wrought-iron bench, setting the cryogenic case carefully beside me. My hands shook as I tried to process what had just happened. In less than five minutes, I'd gone from respected scientist to public spectacle, my reputation shredded by a server with a smartphone and a talent for manipulation.

The garden's tranquility began to settle my nerves, until I noticed something that made my blood run cold again. Along the garden's perimeter, elegant planters displayed what looked like exotic garnishes and decorative plants. But my trained eye recognized them immediately.

*Welwitschia mirabilis*. *Dendrobium nobile*. Species that shouldn't exist outside protected habitats, let alone as restaurant décor.

I stood slowly, moving closer to examine the plants. My heart hammered as I confirmed my worst fears. These weren't replicas or common varieties—these were genuine endangered specimens, some so rare they belonged in federal preservation programs.

Pulling out my phone, I began photographing everything. Each image felt like evidence of a crime I could barely comprehend. How had Adrian's restaurant acquired these plants? Who had authorized their use as menu garnishes?

Voices drifted from the kitchen's service window, and I crept closer, straining to listen.

"—shipment from Myanmar came in yesterday," a voice was saying. "Boss wants the orchid petals ready for tomorrow's tasting menu."

"What about the customs paperwork?" another voice asked.

"What paperwork?" The first voice laughed. "Half these plants don't officially exist, remember? That's what makes them so valuable."

My stomach dropped. This wasn't just environmental negligence—this was active trafficking of endangered species. The very plants I'd dedicated my career to protecting were being harvested and served as luxury food items.

I continued photographing, documenting each specimen with the methodical precision my training had instilled. But even as I gathered evidence, a terrible realization was dawning. If Adrian's restaurant was involved in this kind of illegal trade, what did that say about Adrian himself?

The sound of approaching footsteps made me look up. Through the garden doors, I could see Hayley still livestreaming, her phone now pointed at my abandoned table inside. But she wasn't just talking to her audience anymore—she was reaching for my cryogenic case.

"So while our little thief is hiding outside," she was saying to her camera, "let's see what she was really trying to steal."

Horror flooded through me as I watched her fingers work at the case's security latches. She had no idea what she was tampering with, no understanding of the protocols required to handle classified biological materials. One wrong move, one breach of the containment system, and months of irreplaceable research could be destroyed.

Worse still, her livestream was broadcasting the attempted breach to hundreds of viewers, creating a potential security incident that could jeopardize not just my career, but national environmental protection efforts.

I ran toward the doors, my evidence-gathering forgotten in the face of this new crisis. But I was too far away, and Hayley's fingers were already working at the final latch.

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