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Worst Fear 55

Worst Fear 55

Chapter 55 

Lydia 

He moved to the bed and picked up my hands

I moved 

my 

hands away this time

Fine.I wasn’t going to leave

He tried to smile but failed. Then he stood, moved to the side, poured water from a jug into an empty glass, and brought it to me

Have some.” 

I looked at him with curious eyes, reluctant to take the water

I didn’t poison it.” 

I don’t trust you.His lips pressed together as if he were trying to hold back the disappointment he felt that I doubted him

Fine.He lifted the glass to his lips and took slow sips. See, I’m fine.he handed me the glass, and I didn’t reject it this time

I took slow sips at first and then large gulps

Mason just stares at me. I wiped my mouth with the back of my hands, feeling a bit energized from the water

I attempted to place the glass on the table, but he stopped me and took it from me so I didn’t have to stretch

Do you remember this place?he asked

I tried not to allow my eyes to wander. Of course, I remember, why won’t!? 

This is a place that holds many memories of us

It has so many memories of us,He continued. I rested my head on the pillow and closed my eyes

I don’t want to remember those times which I once thought were the good times

But I do

However, I couldn’t separate the memories from the naive girl. I still have nightmares of that day, the day his stepfather died

I closed my eyes, and I could picture everything. The shock in Zoe’s eyes when she pulled the trigger

The splatter of blood on me

And Mason’s face. How they held so much disappointment. How it killed me that he refused to believe me

Then, my mind diverted to the time I spent in prison. I can still hear Mason’s voice in the background, but I couldn’t comprehend the words he spilled

My mind was on a journey of its own 

The picture of him seated across from me in the visitor’s room. His cold gaze, his harsh words

1/3 

Chapter 55 

He wants me to remember the good times we had in this perithouse, but i can no longer saperate these memor 

The good times went with the bad

This fueled my resolve

He had used and dumped me. Dating another woman behind my back

He cheated on me

He shouldn’t be reminding me of these memories

The armchair was your favorite part of this room then,he said. I opened my eyes at that moment

“Did you bring me here to rekindle memories?My voice is flat when I speak. He looked stunned for a bit

Typical of Mason, how didn’t I notice this selfish side all along

All he cared about was himself. He must love listening to his voice, seeing how he kept on speaking, knowing fully well that I didn’t 

want to listen

No, I was justI adjusted on the bed, staring right at him with one brow raised and my hands crossed over my chest

You were just what?He tried to speak but couldn’t form a coherent word

Why didn’t you take me to the hospital? What’s your true plan in bringing me here?I pinned him down with my gaze, shifting the conversation away from the parts of me I was running from 

It was refreshing seeing this. The proud and confident Mason, simmering under my gaze

He pressed his lips together. He was now seated on the stool close to me. He sat straight. I figured he was trying to intimidate me 

with his size

I didn’t break contact with him, I had your pills here in the penthouse. I fed it to you, just like you always take it.” 

He had my pills. I looked around; maybe he found them in my bag

Your bag isn’t here.” He said, and I stopped looking around

I’ll have my P.A. bring it to you.He went ahead and told me how he had taken me out in a hurry, which was the reason he had forgotten the purse

I wonder where Marcus had been at that time

But wait. My thoughts came to a stop

Does this mean he had my pills here

Why would he have them? True, we kept à bottle of the pills here in the penthouse, but that was over five years ago

The last one would have expired. This means one thing, he kept renewing them. But why

That’s the least of my concerns currently, sot pushed my questions back

2/3 

Chapter 55 

The cool air from the air conditioning hit my skin, mingling with the breeze from the window at the sides the cum slightly in the wind

Tinhaled sharply, trying to gather my thoughts. The air is cold and damp

My phone isn’t here, so I can’t send a text to Mom. She must be worried sick right now

I thought about borrowing his phone, but then decided against it since I’d want to speak to the twins as well

The room was silent. But it didn’t last as Mason’s voice cut right through it, I’ve been meaning to ask. I raised my head, wondering if this was how the night would go

I turned to him; his eyes were lowered, and my dress had gone down. He swallowed

He didn’t meet my eyes, and when his eyes rested on my stomach, I had the urge to wrap my hand around my stomach to protect it from his piercing gaze

No. He won’t be asking what I thought. There’s no way he’d do that, right

I have been curious,I shook my head, knowing fully well that he could see me

The baby, your pregnancy, howwherehe held my gaze briefly, What about the baby?” 

AD 

Worst Fear

Worst Fear

Score 9.9
Status: Ongoing Type: Native Language: English
Worst Fear Synopsis : Worst Fear

Lydia’s world was already a crumbling ruin long before she collapsed on the cold, bleach-slick tiles of Westgate Prison. She had been serving her sentence with quiet endurance, forcing herself to survive each monotonous day. Cleaning floors, enduring the harsh routine, and trying to numb her thoughts had become her way of life. But as she gripped the mop handle, her body betrayed her — dizziness washed over her, and before she could steady herself, the world went black.

When she regained consciousness, Lydia found herself lying on a thin mattress in the prison hospital. The sterile smell of disinfectant filled her lungs, and her head ached violently. A familiar figure stood by her bedside — Nurse Gloria, a kind-hearted woman often whispered about by the inmates for her compassion. Lydia had never personally interacted with her before; she preferred keeping her distance from everyone. But this time, she had no choice.

Gloria spoke softly, her voice calm and motherly. “You fainted during your shift,” she explained. Lydia, groggy and disoriented, nodded faintly. Fainting wasn’t unusual for prisoners — malnutrition, exhaustion, and stress were daily realities in Westgate. But Gloria’s next words didn’t fit the routine explanation. She leaned in, her tone serious and almost secretive. “I ran some tests to see why you collapsed.”

Lydia’s brows furrowed. Tests? The nurse’s expression made her heart race. Something was wrong. And then Gloria said it — words that hit Lydia like a lightning strike.

“You’re three months pregnant.”

For a moment, Lydia’s world went silent. The walls, the lights, the nurse — everything faded into a blur of disbelief. Pregnant? That couldn’t be right. Her throat went dry as she tried to process the impossible. Three months. Her hands instinctively flew to her stomach, pressing against the rough fabric of her prison uniform. There was nothing — no bump, no sign of life — yet Gloria’s certainty left no room for denial.

Lydia’s first reaction was refusal. “No,” she whispered. Her voice trembled. “That can’t be right.” But Gloria simply nodded, her expression heavy with empathy. “It’s right, Lydia. I double-checked the results myself.”

The truth settled like a stone in Lydia’s gut. The symptoms she’d ignored — the morning dizziness, the fevers, the missed periods — suddenly made sense. Deep down, she knew this was no mistake. Panic clawed at her chest as she realized what this meant. Her past — the one she’d buried so carefully since the day she was arrested — came rushing back. The man she had loved, the night she had tried to forget, the betrayal that had shattered her life.

Tears burned in her eyes, but she refused to let them fall in front of Gloria. She couldn’t afford weakness here. Her voice was barely a whisper when she pleaded, “Please… you can’t tell anyone. No one can know about this.”

Gloria studied her for a long moment. Lydia could see the internal conflict behind the nurse’s eyes — between her duty to report and her compassion for the broken woman before her. Finally, Gloria sighed softly and nodded. “I won’t say a word,” she promised. Relief washed over Lydia like a wave, but it was fleeting. Gloria wasn’t finished. “But you have to promise me something too. You’ll come back for regular checkups. No skipping, no excuses. You and the baby need to be monitored. Do you understand?”

Lydia nodded mutely, emotion choking her voice. She didn’t trust herself to speak. The nurse gave her hand a gentle squeeze before stepping away to inform the guards that Lydia needed rest.

The walk back to her cell felt endless. Two guards flanked her on either side, but she barely noticed them. Her mind was spinning, replaying Gloria’s words over and over — three months pregnant. Each repetition felt like a hammer blow. She stumbled into her cell, collapsing onto the thin, creaky cot. The metal door slammed shut behind her, sealing her inside with the suffocating truth.

She stared at the ceiling for a long time before curling up on her side. Her trembling hands hovered over her stomach, fear twisting in her chest. She could barely keep herself alive in this place — how could she protect an unborn child? Westgate wasn’t meant for fragile things. It was a graveyard of hope, a place that crushed even the strongest spirits. What kind of life could she possibly give her baby behind these bars?

The tears she had fought earlier now spilled freely, sliding down her cheeks as silent sobs wracked her body. She wrapped her arms tightly around herself, as if she could shield the tiny life inside her from the cruelty of the world beyond her cell walls.

For the first time in years, Lydia prayed. Not for freedom, not for revenge — just for strength. For the chance to protect this unexpected child growing inside her.

As she turned her hand, the faint glint of her wedding band caught her eye. The ring mocked her, its shine a cruel reminder of the life she had lost. Three months ago, everything had been perfect — or so she thought. Her marriage had felt like a fairy tale. Even though her in-laws despised her, she had still believed love could conquer everything. Her husband had been her safe haven, her anchor.

Until the night everything fell apart.

The memory was sharp and unforgiving — flashing lights, police sirens, his face twisted in disgust as she was dragged away in handcuffs. The betrayal in his eyes had hurt worse than the accusation itself. That image haunted her still, burned into her mind like a scar that would never fade.

Now, lying in that cold, dim cell, Lydia finally understood how deep her despair ran. The baby inside her was both a curse and a fragile glimmer of hope. A connection to the man she once loved — and the life she could never return to.

As exhaustion finally claimed her, her last thoughts were of him — the man she’d once trusted more than anyone. His expression, full of hatred and disbelief, was the last thing she saw before the darkness took her again.

And for the first time, Lydia realized she wasn’t just a prisoner anymore. She was a mother — trapped in a place where love and life were luxuries no one could afford. But no matter what, she silently vowed: she would find a way to protect her baby, even if it meant fighting the entire world from behind these bars.

 

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