
My Fiancé Stole Our Wedding Fund for His Mistress
Chapter 2
An hour crawled by like a dying thing.
I lay on the marble floor, cheek pressed against stone that had gone from cool to cold to matching my body temperature. Each breath came shallow now, the air in the vault thinning with every rise and fall of my chest. My lungs worked harder for less return, like drowning in reverse.
The drug had settled into a nauseating haze that made the room tilt and spin. But I was conscious. Still conscious. And that meant I could see them through the reinforced glass—Dominic pacing, checking his watch. Tessa scrolling through her phone, bored.
I crawled to the door. My palms left sweat prints on the glass.
"Dom." My voice cracked. "Please. I can't... I can't breathe."
He glanced up. For a moment—just a flash—something flickered across his face. Regret? Doubt? Then Tessa's hand found his arm and whatever I'd seen died.
"How much longer?" Her voice carried through the intercom, clinical. "The livestream's getting good traffic, but I have dinner plans."
"Soon," Dominic said. Not to me. Never to me again.
Tessa pressed something against the glass. A white plastic stick. Two pink lines stark against the white background. She held it there long enough for me to understand, then smiled—that same helpful smile she'd given me a thousand times across conference tables.
"Twelve weeks," she said. "Your wedding fund bought us the cutest little apartment in Williamsburg. Two bedrooms. One for us, one for the baby."
The words hit harder than the oxygen deprivation. Our joint account. The $200,000 we'd saved together, dollar by dollar, sacrifice by sacrifice. The brownstone fund. The future we'd planned.
Gone. All of it. Feeding his mistress and their child.
"Scarlett." Dominic's voice through the speaker, almost gentle. "It's nothing personal. You were always going to be a stepping stone. I just... I needed more than you were giving me."
Something crystallized in my chest. Not heartbreak—that would come later, in the after, if there was an after. This was colder. Sharper. The absolute clarity that comes when you realize the person you loved never existed at all.
I pushed myself to my knees. Then my feet. The room swam, but I locked my legs and breathed—thin, insufficient air that tasted like metal and desperation.
The rubies gleamed in their case ten feet away.
Five million dollars. The Heart of Siam collection. Burmese stones that had survived wars and revolutions and the collapse of empires. The firm's prize acquisition. Dominic had spent six months negotiating the purchase, his career advancement riding on their successful integration into our archive.
I stumbled toward the display. My hip caught the corner of a filing cabinet and pain flared bright and clarifying. On the desk beside the case sat the archive stamp—solid brass, heavy as a weapon, used for embossing authenticity certificates.
I picked it up. The weight felt good in my hand.
Through the glass, I saw Dominic straighten. "Scarlett? What are you doing?"
I held the stamp over the ruby case. Looked directly into the camera Tessa had positioned to capture my death. Then at Dominic's face beyond the vault door—his eyes wide now, calculating.
"Open it," I said. "Or I destroy everything."
"You won't." But his voice had gone tight. "That's five million dollars. Your career. Criminal charges."
"I'm dying anyway." I raised the stamp higher. "What's a lawsuit to a corpse?"
Tessa grabbed his arm. "She's bluffing. Look at her—she can barely stand."
Maybe she was right. Maybe I was bluffing. Maybe thirty seconds ago I would have been.
I brought the stamp down.
Bulletproof glass spiderwebbed under the impact. The largest ruby—a stone the size of a quail's egg—cracked straight through its center. Alarms should have triggered. But Dominic had disabled them, hadn't he? For his perfect crime.
I hit it again. Again. Glass gave way with a sound like the world breaking.
"Stop!" Dominic's shout through the intercom, raw now. "Jesus Christ, Scarlett, stop!"
But I was past stopping. Past him. Past everything but the animal need to survive.
I grabbed a shard of the display frame—jagged metal and broken glass—and drove it into the temperature control panel on the wall. Sparks erupted. I swung again, this time at the fire suppression sensors embedded in the ceiling. The metal connected with a crunch that I felt in my shoulders.
The building screamed to life.
Klaxons wailed. Red emergency lights strobed. And beneath it all, a computerized voice, calm and absolute: "Chemical hazard detected. Initiating emergency protocols. All vault doors will open in thirty seconds."
I collapsed against the wall, the metal shard falling from my fingers. Through the chaos of lights and sound, I saw Dominic's face—pale, horrified, finally understanding that he'd miscalculated.
The vault door's locks disengaged with a series of heavy clicks.
I closed my eyes and waited for air.
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