
After My Wronged Wife Became a Prisoner
Chapter 3
The sound of children's shoes against concrete should have been innocent. Instead, it felt like nails scraping against my soul.
Rohan appeared at my cell door, but he wasn't alone. A small boy with Antonella's eyes clutched his hand, staring at me with curious suspicion.
"Alaia," Rohan said, his voice carrying that familiar military precision, "I've brought someone special to meet you."
The boy—no more than four years old—pressed closer to Rohan's leg. His expensive clothes and perfectly styled hair made my prison uniform feel even more degrading.
"This is James," Rohan continued, placing his hand on the child's shoulder. "Antonella's son. He'll be carrying on the Stone family legacy."
The words hit like physical blows. I gripped the bars to steady myself, my knuckles turning white. The child who would replace my lost baby. The legacy that should have been ours.
"Hello," I managed, my voice barely above a whisper.
James stepped forward, his rehearsed words flowing too smoothly for a child his age. "Daddy Rohan says you're a bad person who tried to hurt our country."
I saw Antonella's coaching in every syllable, every calculated pause. The boy's eyes darted to Rohan for approval after each phrase.
"He says you were going to hurt Mommy Antonella too, but he caught you in time." James's voice took on a dramatic tone that no four-year-old could naturally produce. "He's a hero, and heroes catch bad people."
Rohan's jaw tightened with satisfaction. "James understands more than most adults about loyalty and betrayal."
I looked at the child—this innocent pawn in Antonella's game—and felt something unexpected break inside me. Not anger, but a profound sadness.
"James," I said softly, "someday you deserve to know the truth."
The boy's practiced smile faltered. For a moment, genuine confusion crossed his face before Rohan pulled him away.
"That's enough," Rohan said sharply. "You've said your piece, Alaia."
As they walked away, James looked back once, his small face serious with thoughts too heavy for his years.
The moment they disappeared around the corner, my legs gave out. I collapsed onto the concrete floor, my entire body shaking with sobs that tore from somewhere deep and primal. I screamed until my voice gave out, clawing at my own skin as if I could physically remove the pain.
No one came. No one cared. I cried until I had no voice left, no tears left, nothing but hollow emptiness where my heart had once been.
---
"Prisoner Martin," the guard announced six months later, "you've been charged with possession of contraband."
I stared at the stolen jewelry they'd "found" in my laundry basket—pieces I'd never seen before. "That's not mine."
"The evidence suggests otherwise," he replied mechanically.
Two days later: "Prisoner Martin, you've been accused of threatening another inmate."
The woman who claimed I'd threatened her had been paid by Antonella. I could see it in her eyes.
A week after that: "Prisoner Martin, your release date has been extended six months due to continued criminal behavior."
Each time, Rohan's signature appeared on the paperwork without question. Each time, Antonella's smile grew wider in the newspaper photos that somehow found their way to my cell.
"General Stone has approved additional restrictions on your activities," the prison administrator informed me. "No more library privileges. No more outdoor time."
I stood silently as they stripped away what little freedom I had left. Antonella had orchestrated it all—every false charge, every fabricated incident. And Rohan believed every word.
---
"Prisoner Martin," the guard called one morning, "you have a visitor."
I expected another cruel display from Antonella. Instead, Captain Sarah Hayes stood outside my cell, her military uniform impeccable as always.
"Alaia," she said, her voice carrying just enough for the monitoring devices to pick up. "I'm here to document your case for military records."
Behind her, a guard hovered, listening to every word. But Sarah's eyes spoke volumes.
As she asked me standard questions about my treatment and living conditions, her hands moved in subtle patterns—military signals we'd used in the field. *Some people still believe in you. Not everyone has forgotten.*
"I need to note your medical condition," she said loudly, then added in a whisper as she checked my vitals, "We're still here."
Three simple words. Not hope—I was beyond hope now—but something equally powerful. Determination.
"They'll pay for this," Sarah murmured, so quietly I almost didn't hear it. "All of them."
As she left, she saluted—a gesture no prison visitor would normally make. The guard frowned but said nothing.
I watched her walk away, her back straight as steel. For the first time in years, something stirred inside me.
Not hope. Something far more dangerous.
Determination to survive. Determination to see justice done.
No matter what it cost.
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