
Fiancé's Crime, My Freedom
Chapter 3
I burst through the garden doors just as Hayley's fingers found the final latch on my cryogenic case. "Stop!" The word tore from my throat, raw and desperate.
But it was too late. She'd already triggered the security breach alarm—a soft but insistent beeping that made my blood turn to ice. The case's display screen flashed red warnings about temperature fluctuation and containment compromise.
"What the hell is wrong with you?" I lunged forward, my hands shaking as I carefully resealed the latches. The specimens inside were still secure, but the breach had been recorded. There would be questions, investigations, reports to file with federal oversight.
"Ladies and gentlemen," Hayley announced to her livestream audience, her voice dripping with theatrical satisfaction, "looks like our little thief just confirmed she's hiding something big. Why else would she be so panicked?"
The comments on her screen exploded with speculation. *Government secrets! Corporate espionage! Call the FBI!* Each notification ping felt like another nail in my professional coffin.
"Adrian!" I called out, scanning the dining room for my fiancé. "Adrian, I need you!"
He emerged from the kitchen's swinging doors, his chef's jacket pristine white, his expression already hardening as he took in the scene. Behind him trailed two sous chefs and the restaurant manager, all wearing the same look of barely concealed annoyance.
"Evangeline, what's all this commotion?" His voice carried the tone he used with difficult suppliers—polite but strained. "Hayley says there's been some kind of misunderstanding."
"Misunderstanding?" I gestured toward the garden, my voice rising. "Adrian, your restaurant is serving endangered species as food. I just photographed *Welwitschia mirabilis* being used as garnish. Do you have any idea what that means?"
His jaw tightened. "I mean you're making wild accusations to deflect from your own behavior."
The words hit me like a physical blow. "My behavior?"
"You stole food from my kitchen," he said, his voice carrying across the dining room with devastating clarity. "Hayley caught you red-handed, and now you're trying to sabotage my business because you're jealous."
"Jealous?" The word came out as a whisper. Around us, the elegant diners had abandoned all pretense of polite disinterest. This was dinner theater now, and I was the tragic protagonist.
"Of Hayley," Adrian continued, and something in his tone made my stomach drop. "You've always been insecure about my past with her. Now you're lashing out like some kind of—"
"Like what?" My voice cracked.
His eyes swept over me with cold assessment. "Like a country bumpkin who doesn't understand how civilized people behave."
The silence that followed was deafening. Even Hayley's livestream seemed to pause, waiting for my response. But I couldn't speak. Couldn't breathe. The man I'd planned to marry had just stripped away every shred of dignity I had left.
"Adrian," I managed finally, "those specimens in my case are classified federal property. They're part of a conservation program that could—"
"Enough." He cut me off with a sharp gesture. "Hayley, what would make this right?"
She pretended to consider, but I could see the calculation in her eyes. "Well, she did steal from us. And she's been so secretive about that case. Maybe if she faced some consequences for her actions..."
Adrian nodded grimly and reached for my cryogenic case. "If you want to act like a criminal, you'll be treated like one."
"Don't you dare—" I clutched the handle, but he was stronger, more determined.
"You want justice?" he called to Hayley's camera, his voice taking on a performative quality that chilled me. "Here's justice."
He strode toward the kitchen, my case in his grip, and I followed in horrified disbelief. The industrial kitchen was all gleaming steel and controlled chaos, but Adrian moved with purpose toward the massive convection oven.
"Adrian, no!" I grabbed his arm. "Those specimens are irreplaceable! They're part of a federal conservation program!"
"Should have thought of that before you decided to steal from me." His voice was ice-cold as he opened the oven door. The heat that billowed out made the air shimmer.
"This is what happens," he announced to the growing crowd of staff and diners who had followed us, "when someone tries to make a fool of the Williamson family."
The cryogenic case looked impossibly small in his hands as he moved it toward the oven's gaping maw. Three years of research. Specimens that could unlock new methods of environmental protection. My entire career, my life's work, about to be incinerated because of a lie about twelve prawns.
"Please," I whispered, but Adrian's face showed no mercy.
Behind us, I could hear the elegant diners beginning to laugh—soft, cultured chuckles that cut deeper than screams.
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