
After My Husband Framed Me for His Crimes
Chapter 2
The indictment papers trembled in my hands as I stared at them in the holding cell. Each word was a foreign symbol, meaningless to my eyes. I traced my finger over the bold title, trying desperately to decipher even one sentence.
"Mrs. Armstrong," the court-appointed lawyer had said just hours ago, "your husband's legal team has filed a motion to freeze all joint assets pending investigation." His voice had been clinical, detached. "You'll need to arrange for your own counsel if you wish to contest these charges."
My own counsel. The words echoed hollowly in my mind. Edward had made sure I couldn't even afford a bus ticket, let alone a lawyer. My credit cards were canceled, my bank accounts inaccessible. The few personal items I'd been allowed to keep—my wedding ring, my mother's locket—were worthless in this concrete wasteland.
"Time's up," the guard barked, snatching the papers from my hands. "Court's ready."
I was led into a courtroom that blurred together with all the others I'd passed through in the past week. Faces stared down at me from elevated benches—judges, prosecutors, court reporters—all strangers who held my fate in their hands.
"Mrs. Magnolia Clark-Armstrong," the judge intoned, "you are charged with multiple counts of corporate fraud, embezzlement, and conspiracy. How do you plead?"
"I didn't do it," I whispered, my voice barely audible. "I don't even know what those papers said."
A murmur rippled through the courtroom. The prosecutor approached, his expression a mixture of pity and disdain.
"Your Honor, the defendant has declined legal counsel and refuses to acknowledge the evidence against her. We request immediate sentencing."
The judge's gavel came down with finality. "Six months in state penitentiary, effective immediately."
---
The bus to Blackwater State Penitentiary reeked of diesel fuel and disinfectant. I huddled in the back seat, my orange jumpsuit scratching against my skin. Through the barred windows, I watched Manhattan's skyline fade into the distance, taking with it everything I'd known for the past five years.
"First timer?" A guard sneered as she secured my handcuffs to the seat. "You'll learn quick enough."
Blackwater rose from the horizon like a fortress—concrete walls topped with razor wire, watchtowers looming at each corner. My heart hammered against my ribs as we passed through heavy gates that clanged shut behind us.
Processing was a blur of strip searches, delousing showers, and humiliating procedures. They took my clothes, my dignity, and whatever remained of my hope.
"Cell block D," the classification officer announced, thrusting a thin mattress and bundle of gray clothing into my arms. "Stay out of trouble."
Trouble found me anyway.
The cafeteria was a cavernous room filled with long tables and the clatter of plastic trays. I stood in line, clutching my meal ticket like a lifeline.
"Fresh meat," someone whispered as I passed.
I found an empty seat at the far end of a table, keeping my eyes down as I unpacked my tray. The food was barely recognizable—gray meat, limp vegetables, stale bread.
"Look at this," a voice said directly above me. "The rich bitch can't even eat proper prison food."
I looked up to see three women surrounding me, their faces twisted with contempt. The tallest one had a tattoo crawling up her neck—a spiderweb that seemed to capture my reflection in its threads.
"I don't want any trouble," I said quietly.
"Too late for that." The woman knocked my tray to the floor with one swift motion. My meager dinner scattered across the concrete.
They circled me as I knelt to gather the scattered food. A boot connected with my ribs, driving the air from my lungs.
"That's from Natasha," the spiderweb woman hissed in my ear as she yanked me upright by my hair. "She sends her regards."
Fists and feet found every vulnerable spot on my body. I curled into myself, trying to protect my head as pain exploded through me. No one intervened—not the guards, not the other inmates. I was on my own in this nightmare.
---
"Contagious rash," the prison medic declared after examining the bruises that covered my body. "We need to isolate her."
Solitary confinement was a windowless cell barely large enough for a cot. The door slammed shut behind me with a finality that made my bones ache.
"Roll up your sleeve," the medic instructed during his "daily checkups." His face was never visible behind his surgical mask.
"What are you giving me?" I asked as he prepared a syringe filled with clear liquid.
"Vitamin supplement," he replied mechanically. "Standard procedure."
The needle pierced my arm, sending fire through my veins. Within minutes, my body began to burn from the inside out. I writhed on the thin mattress, sheet twisting beneath me as waves of agony crashed through every nerve ending.
"Please," I begged when he returned hours later. "Whatever that was—stop."
He ignored my pleas, preparing another injection. "Subject is responsive to treatment protocol," he noted on his clipboard. "Continue dosage as directed."
As he administered the second injection, I realized with horrifying clarity that I wasn't just a prisoner—I was an experiment. And somewhere beyond these walls, Natasha was watching my suffering with satisfaction.
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