
He Locked Our Sick Daughter Away for His Mistress
Chapter 1
The Seattle winter had never felt so bitter. Outside our bedroom window, frost patterns crept like skeletal fingers across the glass while Emma's fever raged higher with each passing hour. Her small body trembled beneath three blankets on our living room sofa, her face flushed an angry red against the white pillowcase.
"Daniel, please," I begged, staring at my husband's cold face on the video call. "She's burning up. The medicine isn't working. We need to take her to the hospital now."
His eyes barely flickered toward me before returning to something on his desk. "Victoria, you're overreacting. It's just a cold. I'm in the middle of something important."
"Important?" My voice cracked. "More important than your daughter who's been asking for you for hours?"
Emma whimpered beside me, her tiny hand reaching for the phone. "Daddy, I don't feel good."
Daniel's jaw tightened. "I'll be home later. Just keep her hydrated. I can't drop everything for a fever."
Before I could respond, he ended the call. I clutched the phone so tightly my knuckles turned white, listening to Emma's labored breathing beside me.
Thirty minutes later, the front door slammed. Daniel stomped upstairs without even glancing at Emma or me. I followed him, desperation clawing at my chest.
"She needs a doctor," I said, standing in the doorway of our bedroom. "Her temperature is over 104."
"For God's sake, Victoria!" Daniel whirled around, his handsome face contorted with annoyance. "I have a conference call in five minutes that could make or break this deal. Can you handle this one thing without me?"
Emma's weak cry from downstairs interrupted us. "Mommy? Daddy?"
I watched in horror as Daniel marched down the hallway to Emma's room, his expensive shoes echoing against the hardwood. He returned moments later, scooping our daughter roughly from the sofa.
"You want to interrupt my call?" he hissed at her as she cried weakly against his shoulder. "You can stay in your room until you learn not to disrupt important business."
I lunged forward. "Daniel, no! She's sick!"
But he was already climbing the stairs, carrying our daughter away. I heard the decisive click of her bedroom lock engaging, followed by his cold voice: "You'll stay here until I'm done. Maybe then you'll learn some patience."
He brushed past me, straightening his tie. "I need to grab something for Sarah. The key's in my office. Don't let her out until I get back."
"She needs a doctor!" I screamed, clawing at his arm. "Not punishment!"
"What she needs is discipline," he snapped, shaking me off. "And what I need is for you to stop questioning me at every turn. I built this life for us, Victoria. The least you could do is show some respect."
I watched him grab his keys and coat, stunned into silence by the cruelty of the man I once loved beyond reason. Through the window, I saw him slide into his Mercedes and speed away – not to the pharmacy for our daughter, but to buy chocolates for his mistress.
For two hours, I paced outside Emma's door, listening to her weakening cries. I searched frantically for the key, tearing Daniel's office apart, but found nothing. I called him seventeen times. No answer.
Then, suddenly, the crying stopped.
The silence hit me like a physical blow.
"Emma?" I called, pressing my ear against the door. "Sweetheart?"
Nothing.
Panic surged through me. I ran downstairs, grabbed a screwdriver from the kitchen, and raced back up to pry desperately at the lock. When that failed, I threw myself against the door until my shoulder screamed in pain. Finally, behind a row of books in Daniel's study, I found a small box with spare keys.
My hands shook so badly I could barely fit the key in the lock. When the door swung open, time seemed to slow to an excruciating crawl.
Emma lay crumpled against the door, her stuffed bear clutched to her chest, her small fingers still wrapped around the doorknob. Her eyes were closed, her lips tinged blue.
"No," I whispered, dropping to my knees. "No, no, no."
I gathered her into my arms, her body already cooling, unnaturally still against my chest. I knew before I checked for a pulse, before I attempted CPR, before I screamed for help that would never come. My daughter was gone.
As I held her lifeless body, something inside me died too. The woman who had loved Daniel Crawford, who had given up everything for him, who had believed in him – she vanished in that moment, replaced by someone I didn't yet recognize.
I sat on the floor, cradling my child, until the tears stopped and a cold, crystalline clarity took their place. I stroked Emma's hair one last time and made a silent vow.
Daniel Crawford would pay for this. Not just with money or freedom, but with everything he valued. His success. His reputation. His very sanity. I would dismantle his world piece by methodical piece until nothing remained.
Outside, I heard the purr of his car returning. Soon he would walk through that door, chocolates in hand for another woman, oblivious to the devastation he had caused.
And I would be waiting.
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