
My Fiancé Stole Our Wedding Fund for His Mistress
Chapter 3
The first thing I heard was the klaxon. The second was boots on marble—heavy, running, purposeful.
I tried to open my eyes, but my lids weighed a thousand pounds each. My lungs pulled at air that finally, finally flowed again, though each breath felt like swallowing broken glass. The vault door stood open. Red emergency lights painted everything the color of warning.
"Jesus Christ." A man's voice, close. Hands on my shoulders, rolling me onto my back. "We need a medic down here now!"
I forced my eyes open. A security guard's face swam above me—dark skin, close-cropped hair, name tag reading WEBB. Behind him, firefighters in yellow gear poured into the vault. Beyond them, in the corridor, I caught a flash of movement.
Dominic and Tessa. Running.
"Wait," I tried to say, but it came out as a rasp that didn't carry past my own ears.
Marcus Webb followed my gaze. His jaw tightened. "Don't move," he told me, then shouted over his shoulder: "Stop those two! They're not going anywhere!"
Two firefighters broke away, chasing the figures disappearing down the corridor. I heard Tessa's voice, high and panicked: "Oh my God, is she okay? We tried to get help—the door locked, we couldn't—"
Liars. The word formed in my mind with perfect clarity even as my vision tunneled again. I felt myself being lifted onto a stretcher, the ceiling tiles passing overhead in a blur of white and red. The last thing I saw before darkness took me was the shattered ruby case, gems scattered across marble like drops of frozen blood.
Two days evaporated.
I woke to the steady beep of a heart monitor and light so bright it hurt. My throat felt raw, scraped hollow. An IV line snaked into my left arm. Oxygen prongs sat in my nose, each breath arriving with a faint medicinal hiss.
"Easy." A woman's voice, professional and kind. I turned my head—slowly, because the room tilted—and found a doctor standing beside my bed. Asian, early forties, with tired eyes that had seen too many emergencies. Her badge read DR. SARAH CHEN, EMERGENCY MEDICINE. "You're at Mount Sinai. You've been unconscious for forty-eight hours. Severe hypoxia and drug exposure. Do you remember what happened?"
I opened my mouth. Closed it. Tried again. "Dominic."
"Your fiancé is in police custody," Dr. Chen said, and something in my chest unknotted. "Along with Tessa Parker. The security footage and emergency protocols saved your life, Ms. Shaw. Another ten minutes and—" She stopped herself. "You're safe now."
Safe. The word felt foreign.
I closed my eyes, trying to anchor myself to the present—the hospital bed beneath me, the antiseptic smell, the distant sound of a PA system calling for Dr. Patel. But my mind kept sliding back to the vault. The coffee. Dominic's face through the glass. Tessa's smile as she held up that pregnancy test.
The door slammed open.
I jerked, and pain lanced through my ribs. Dr. Chen spun toward the noise, her hand already reaching for the call button, but two figures pushed past the threshold before she could react.
Mrs. Evans stormed in first, her face twisted with rage that made her almost unrecognizable. Behind her, Mr. Evans followed with the defeated shuffle of a man who'd lost every argument for the past forty-eight hours.
"You," Mrs. Evans spat, jabbing a finger at me. "You destroyed my son's career!"
Dr. Chen stepped between us. "Ma'am, you can't be in here. This patient needs—"
"She needs to take responsibility!" Mrs. Evans's voice climbed to a shriek. "Do you know what she's done? Five million dollars in damage! A psychotic break over a little jealousy, and now my Dominic is sitting in a cell because she couldn't handle the truth!"
I stared at her. At the genuine conviction in her eyes. She actually believed it.
"Your son tried to kill me," I said. My voice came out as a whisper, but it carried.
"Lies!" Mrs. Evans lunged forward. Dr. Chen caught her arm, and suddenly two nurses appeared in the doorway, summoned by some silent alarm. "He was trying to help you! You locked yourself in that vault, you destroyed company property, and now you're trying to destroy him with these—these accusations!"
Mr. Evans finally spoke, his voice weary. "The firm is demanding compensation, Scarlett. The vault repairs alone are going to cost hundreds of thousands. The rubies—" He shook his head. "We're talking millions. You'll be lucky if they don't press criminal charges."
"Get out." Dr. Chen's voice cut through the chaos like a scalpel. "Security!"
But Mrs. Evans wasn't finished. She leaned around the doctor, her face inches from mine, and I saw it then—the same cold calculation I'd seen in Dominic's eyes through the vault glass. The same absolute certainty that she was right, that I was the villain, that truth was whatever story served her family best.
"You're going to pay for this," she hissed. "Every penny. We'll sue you for everything you have. And when we're done, everyone will know exactly what kind of person you really are."
Security guards appeared, gently but firmly escorting the Evanses toward the door. Mrs. Evans's threats echoed down the hallway even after they'd disappeared from view.
Dr. Chen turned back to me, her professional mask cracking just enough to show anger underneath. "I'm so sorry. That should never have happened."
I lay back against the pillows, staring at the ceiling tiles. My chest ached. My throat burned. And somewhere deep in my core, where shock and trauma had been keeping everything frozen, something began to thaw.
Not grief. Not yet.
Rage.
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