The bus lurched to a stop, sending a wave of nausea through my pregnant body. I clutched the metal railing as the driver shouted for us to exit. Through the dusty windshield, I could see nothing but endless fields and a cluster of dilapidated buildings surrounded by barbed wire.
"Welcome to your new home, city girl," the guard sneered, yanking me from my seat. "You'll learn to love it here—or break trying."
I stepped off the bus into blistering heat. The sun beat down mercilessly as women in tattered clothes stopped their work to stare. Their eyes held no warmth, only suspicion and outright hostility.
"That's her," someone whispered. "The one who blew up the factory."
A rock whizzed past my ear, missing me by inches. "Murderer!" a woman screamed.
I backed away, instinctively protecting my stomach. "Please, I'm pregnant."
The facility supervisor—a thick-necked man with cold eyes—approached me. "Special treatment for special cases," he said, his voice dripping with contempt. "Marina Lopez personally requested we give you... appropriate accommodation."
My blood ran cold. Marina had been here. Of course she had.
"Follow me," he ordered, leading me past rows of women bent over in the fields, their hands bleeding as they harvested crops under the merciless sun.
The dormitory was little more than a shack with cots crammed together. My "bed" was a thin mattress stained with what looked like blood.
"You start work tomorrow," the supervisor said. "Six a.m. sharp. Field work."
"But I'm—"
"Save it," he cut me off. "Around here, everyone works. Even murderers."
---
Three days later, my hands were raw and bleeding. The supervisor had assigned me to the most grueling task—digging irrigation ditches under the direct sun. My pregnancy made every movement awkward and painful.
"Keep moving!" he shouted, cracking his whip nearby. "You think you can slack off because you're carrying a bastard?"
I bit my lip until I tasted blood. The child was innocent in all this. Anthony's child. The thought of him gave me both strength and agony.
At night, I huddled on my thin mattress, writing letters to Anthony by candlelight. I poured out my heart, begging him to investigate what really happened.
"Please," I whispered into the darkness. "Someone has to believe me."
---
Hundreds of miles away, Marina sat in her plush apartment, sipping wine as she opened another letter addressed to Anthony.
"Still trying to reach him?" she murmured, unfolding the pages covered in desperate handwriting.
My father's words spilled across the paper:
"Anthony, I beg you to look into what's happening to Cecelia. The rehabilitation facility is a nightmare. She's being treated worse than a criminal. She's pregnant with your child! The conditions there will kill them both. Please, if you ever loved her..."
Marina's perfectly manicured fingers traced over the words, a smile playing at her lips. She reached for a silver lighter and flicked it open.
"Such a shame," she said softly, setting the corner of the letter ablaze. "Family drama is so... messy."
She watched the flames consume my father's plea until nothing remained but ash.
When Anthony arrived at her apartment that evening, she greeted him with practiced concern.
"Any word from Cecelia?" he asked, his voice hollow.
Marina sighed dramatically. "Her family is furious with you. They've refused all contact."
"That's not possible," Anthony said, frowning. "Her father would never—"
"They blame you for sending her away," Marina interrupted smoothly. "They say she's better off without you."
---
The pain began at midnight.
I woke up gasping, a sharp agony tearing through my abdomen. Something warm trickled down my thighs.
"No," I whispered, reaching beneath me. My hands came back red with blood. "No, please, no."
I stumbled from my cot, crying out for help. Dr. Sarah Chen appeared in the doorway, her face grim in the dim light.
"Oh, Cecelia," she murmured, helping me to the small medical room. "I've been afraid of this."
The next hours passed in a blur of pain and terror. Dr. Chen worked tirelessly, her hands gentle but her eyes filled with anger.
"This is my fault," I sobbed. "I shouldn't have come here."
"No," Dr. Chen said firmly. "This is not your fault. The conditions here... the work they forced you to do... the malnutrition..."
She glanced toward the door and lowered her voice. "I'm documenting everything, Cecelia. The bruises, the neglect, what happened tonight."
"Why?" I asked through my tears.
Dr. Chen's eyes hardened. "Because someone needs to tell the truth."
As dawn broke, I lay empty and hollow on the narrow bed. My baby was gone. Anthony's baby was gone.
And somewhere far away, Marina slept peacefully beside the man who had once promised to love me forever.
The first time Marina appeared at Anthony's office as his "assistant," I would have laughed if I'd been there. The woman who had orchestrated my downfall, now playing the role of devoted helper. But I wasn't there—I was hundreds of miles away, my hands raw from digging ditches, my body still aching from the loss of our child.
"She's just helping temporarily," Anthony told his secretary when she raised an eyebrow at Marina's sudden appearance. "With Cecelia gone, I need someone who understands the business."
Marina smiled demurely, her perfectly manicured hands already organizing his desk—my desk, where I used to sit during lunch breaks, where I'd left little notes for him in his drawer.
"I'm just grateful to be useful," she said, her voice honeyed with false modesty. "After what Cecelia did..."
The secretary—who had always been kind to me—flinched slightly at the name.
---
Two months into my exile, Marina had moved into an apartment three blocks from Anthony's house. "For convenience," she explained when James Morrison questioned the arrangement. "The early meetings require preparation."
What started as "professional convenience" quickly became something more. Anthony would return home to find her in his kitchen, cooking his favorite meals—the ones I had taught her to make during those awful dinners where she'd smile at me across the table while her eyes said she was watching, waiting.
"You don't have to do this," Anthony would protest weakly.
"I want to," Marina would insist, placing a plate of perfectly prepared food before him. "You're going through so much. You shouldn't have to come home to an empty house."
Empty house. As if I'd never existed there.
---
"Anthony, you look exhausted," Marina observed one evening, her hand resting on his shoulder as they reviewed factory reports. "Let me make you some tea."
The touch lingered longer than necessary. When he didn't pull away, she moved closer.
"You've been so strong through all this," she murmured. "Most men would have crumbled under the betrayal."
"I trusted her," Anthony said, his voice hollow. "We were trying for a baby..."
Marina's eyes gleamed with calculated sympathy. "Perhaps it's better this way. A child deserves stability, not... instability."
She let the word hang between them, a reminder of the "unstable" behavior that had led to my exile.
---
"I have something to show you," Anthony said one spring morning, his voice oddly nervous as he drove Marina through the city's wealthiest district.
They pulled up to an elegant villa surrounded by high walls. Marina's breath caught as they walked through wrought iron gates into a garden filled with blooming white flowers.
"Gardenias," Anthony explained, watching her face carefully. "I remembered how much you loved them."
Marina's heart skipped—not with love for the flowers, but with triumph. Gardenias had been my favorite flower. Our wedding bouquet had been made of them.
"They're beautiful," she lied smoothly, reaching out to touch a pristine white petal. "How did you know they were my favorite?"
"I pay attention," Anthony said, clearly pleased with himself.
Marina turned to him, her eyes wide with practiced wonder. "Is this... for me?"
"It's yours," he confirmed. "A place where you can feel safe. After everything you've done for me..."
She threw her arms around him, burying her face in his chest—the chest that had once belonged to me.
---
The call came at midnight. Marina's phone rang shrilly in her new gardenia-scented bedroom.
"Marina Lopez?" A man's desperate voice. "This is Robert Meyer, Cecelia's father."
Marina sat up slowly, a smile playing at her lips. "Mr. Meyer. What a surprise."
"Please," he begged, his voice cracking. "My wife—Cecelia's mother—is dying. Pneumonia. The hospital needs five hundred dollars for treatment."
Five hundred dollars. Such a small sum for someone with access to Anthony's accounts.
"I'm sorry to hear that," Marina said, her voice dripping with false sympathy. "But surely you understand... Cecelia's actions have consequences."
"What are you talking about?" Robert demanded. "This is her mother's life!"
"And the explosion nearly cost Anthony his life," Marina countered coldly. "Your family needs to face the consequences of your daughter's criminal actions."
She heard his sharp intake of breath, the sound of a man whose world was collapsing.
"Please," he whispered. "She's innocent."
"Innocent people don't need five hundred dollars to save their lives," Marina replied, echoing Anthony's cruel words to me months earlier.
She ended the call and slid back under her silk sheets, surrounded by the scent of gardenias—my gardenias—smiling into the darkness.
Three days later, my mother died in a charity ward, alone except for my grief-stricken father.
And Anthony never knew.