
Firefighter Overcomes Betrayal
Firefighter Overcomes Betrayal Chapter 1
The alarm's shrill cry cut through the Seattle morning like a blade, sending my pulse racing before my feet even hit the firehouse floor. Another day, another emergency. I grabbed my gear with practiced efficiency, the weight of my helmet familiar and comforting in my hands.
"Kitchen fire at the Emerald Bay Hotel," Captain Rodriguez called out as we loaded into the truck. "Looks contained, but we need full evacuation protocol."
I nodded, checking my equipment one final time. The Emerald Bay was one of Seattle's most luxurious hotels—all marble floors and crystal chandeliers. Rich people problems, I thought, but fire didn't discriminate between the wealthy and the working class.
The truck's siren wailed as we wove through traffic, and I found myself absently twisting my engagement ring. Five days. In five days, I'd be walking down the aisle to marry Deandre West. The thought should have filled me with joy, but lately, something felt off. He'd been distant, working late, taking mysterious phone calls. I pushed the doubts away. Wedding jitters, that's all.
At the hotel, smoke billowed from the kitchen windows, but the fire seemed manageable. I led my team through the evacuation procedures, systematically clearing floors while other crews tackled the blaze. The guests were cooperative—mostly business travelers and tourists who followed our directions without complaint.
"Simpson, take the eighth floor," Rodriguez ordered. "Use your master key for any locked rooms. We need to be sure everyone's out."
I climbed the stairs two at a time, my breathing steady despite the gear's weight. The eighth floor was eerily quiet, most guests having already evacuated. I moved methodically from door to door, knocking and calling out before using my key to check empty rooms.
Room 847 was at the end of the hallway. I knocked hard. "Fire department! Anyone inside?"
Silence.
I slid the master key into the lock and pushed the door open, stepping into what should have been an empty suite. Instead, I froze in the doorway, my brain struggling to process what I was seeing.
Deandre. My fiancé. Handcuffed to the king-sized bed.
And straddling him, wearing nothing but black lace lingerie, was a woman I recognized from the society pages—Mckenna Grant, the cosmetics heiress.
Time stopped. The sound of my own heartbeat thundered in my ears, drowning out everything else. My engagement ring suddenly felt like it weighed a thousand pounds, cutting into my finger with its sharp edges. Five days. We were supposed to be married in five days.
Mckenna noticed me first, her lips curving into a satisfied smirk that made my stomach lurch. She didn't even attempt to cover herself, instead leaning down to whisper something in Deandre's ear.
"Oh," she said, her voice dripping with false sweetness, "looks like we have company." She turned those calculating green eyes on me. "So when are you going to tell your little placeholder about us?"
Placeholder. The word hit me like a physical blow.
Deandre's head turned toward the door, and our eyes met. For a split second, I saw something that might have been guilt flicker across his face. But then his expression hardened, and he spoke words that would haunt me forever.
"She's just a placeholder until I figure out what I really want. The wedding's just a formality—keeps my mother happy and gives me respectability."
The room tilted. My training, years of emergency response, was the only thing keeping me upright. I forced my voice to remain steady, professional, even as my world crumbled around me.
"There's a fire in the building," I said, my words clipped and precise. "You need to evacuate immediately. Use the stairs, not the elevator."
I turned and walked away before either of them could respond, my legs moving on autopilot while my mind reeled. In the hallway, I pressed my back against the wall and stared down at my left hand. The diamond engagement ring caught the emergency lighting, throwing tiny rainbows across the carpet.
With trembling fingers, I worked the ring off my finger. It came away easily—too easily, as if it had never really belonged there. I closed my fist around it, the metal cutting into my palm.
Placeholder. Just a placeholder.
I finished checking the remaining rooms with mechanical precision, my body moving through the motions while my heart shattered into a thousand pieces. By the time I rejoined my team downstairs, I had rebuilt my walls, brick by brick. No one would see me break. Not here. Not now.
But tonight... tonight, everything would change.
Firefighter Overcomes Betrayal of Contents
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