
Stealing Back My Life
Chapter 1
I couldn't breathe. The spotlight that had once felt warm now burned against my skin as I stood frozen on the stage of the Seattle Convention Center. The room of five hundred scientists and academics had fallen into a shocked silence that pressed against my eardrums like water at crushing depths.
"My wife, Cecilia Bennett, did not create this research," Jericho's voice rang out, clear and confident, from the third row. My husband—the man who had kissed me good luck this morning—now stood with perfect posture, his blue eyes cold as he addressed the audience rather than me. "I regret to inform you all that the work being celebrated today was stolen from Dr. Gabriella Wright, a brilliant young researcher whose trust was betrayed."
The microphone in my hand suddenly weighed a thousand pounds. I watched as Gabriella—my former student, the woman I had mentored for three years—rose slowly beside my husband, her expression a perfect mask of reluctant vindication.
"That's not true," I finally managed, my voice barely audible even through the microphone. The room swam before my eyes as Jericho approached the stage, a manila folder in his hand.
"I have evidence," he announced, opening the folder and displaying what appeared to be email correspondence and research notes. "Original timestamps showing Gabriella's work predating my wife's publications. Formulas in Gabriella's handwriting that mysteriously appeared in Cecilia's submissions."
My heart hammered against my ribs as Dr. Hammond, the head of the awards committee, took the documents from Jericho's hands, his face grave as he scanned them.
"These are serious allegations, Dr. Ford," he said, using Jericho's title rather than mine. I noticed how he already stepped away from me, creating physical distance.
"I know," Jericho replied, his voice softening to convey regret. "And as Cecilia's husband, this breaks my heart. But science must be protected from fraud, no matter the personal cost."
I tried to speak again, but my throat closed around the words. The Young Scientist Award—recognition for five years of eighteen-hour days, of missed holidays and postponed dreams—was being stripped away before I'd even touched it. And worse, my reputation, the only currency that truly mattered in my world, was disintegrating in real time.
I stumbled off the stage as cameras flashed. The whispers had started now, rising like flood waters around me. I caught fragments—"always suspected," "too good to be true," "shame"—as I pushed through the crowd, my vision tunneling.
My car keys slipped twice from my trembling fingers in the parking garage. I needed to get home—to my mother, whose heart condition had worsened last week, who had insisted I attend today despite her pain because she was so proud.
The twenty-minute drive passed in a blur of tears and panic. When I burst through our front door, I found her in her wheelchair, facing the television where a breaking news banner scrolled across the bottom of the screen: "PROMINENT SCIENTIST ACCUSED OF PLAGIARISM AT AWARDS CEREMONY."
"Mom," I gasped, falling to my knees beside her. "It's not true. I swear it's not true."
The color had drained from her face, her breathing shallow as she clutched at her chest. "I know, baby," she whispered, but her eyes were filled with fear. "I know you wouldn't."
I fumbled for her medication, but her condition was deteriorating rapidly. "I need to call an ambulance," I said, reaching for my phone. "And then Jericho—he'll explain this was all a mistake."
"No," she said weakly, pushing away the pills. "No hospital. Not now."
"Mom, please—" I begged as she grew paler. In desperation, I called Jericho.
"Please," I sobbed when he answered. "Mom's having an episode. She saw the news. I need you to come home and help me get her to the hospital. And we need to fix this—tell them you made a mistake—"
"Cecilia," he cut me off, his voice eerily calm. "Your mother's condition is not my concern right now. And there was no mistake. You're getting exactly what you deserve."
The line went dead. I stared at the phone in disbelief as my mother's breathing grew more labored, her refusal of treatment now firm despite my pleas. The woman who had raised me alone, who had worked two jobs to fund my education, was slipping away—another casualty of Jericho's betrayal.
I was still trying to convince her to let me call an ambulance when the doorbell rang. Through the peephole, I saw Jericho standing there with Gabriella and two men in suits carrying document boxes.
They had come to collect the evidence of my innocence.
You may also like





