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Worst Fear 130

Worst Fear 130

Chapter 130 

Mason 

I didn’t know how bad Mr. Everett’s pulling out of our deal would be. No, I knew, but I never expected it to be that bad. I had no idea until Daniel told me about the impact last night. It was one of the reasons why I needed this collaboration to work out. 

Lydia didn’t like him at all. I could tell she was not comfortable and couldn’t wait to leave. Right now, Mr Gladdins had the upper hand, so I had to play it safe. 

This is the reason why I had agreed to all he said and avoided Lydia’s gaze, although her glare threatened to put a hole through my head. Immediately after we agreed to take a ten-minute break, I left the room. 

After ending the call I was on with Daniel, I walked back to the room. With Mr. Gladdin’s reputation, it was not a good idea to leave her with him for long. 

Inhaling sharply, I pushed open the door, not expecting the scene that revealed before me. Mr. Gladdins had his hand over Lydia, trying to press himself on her. 

Anger rushed into my stomach, and I fist my palm before marching towards them. I reached towards him, but just then, Lydia wiggled out of his hold and turned, her hand immediately colliding with his face. 

A loud slap echoed in the room. Mr. Gladdin’s face fell to the side, and just as he straightened it, another slap landed on the same cheeks. “How dare you, filthy bastard, lay your hand on me?” Her vein popped up in her head as she spoke. 

She looked feral, nothing like the soft girl who could be pushed around. She was now a grown woman who could stand up for herself whenever she had to. 

She raised her hand again, ready to deliver another slap on his cheeks, but Mr. Gladdins caught her hand this time and pushed her to the side. She steadied herself by holding a wall. He walked towards her to reach her, and that was when I decided I had done enough standing by the sidelines. 

Two large strides were enough to cover the space between us, “you Motherfucker.” I held on to his hand before it reached her. He paused and turned. I relieved his hand and grabbed hold of his collar. I balled my palm and landed a heavy blow on his face, followed quickly by another. 

Crack! 

Blood tickled down his nose, but that was not enough to satisfy me. He tried to punch me, but I dodged it easily. Holding his collar placed me at an advantage over him. 

One more blow and he was on the floor. “You rotten bastard, how dare you try to put your hand on her?” I grind my teeth, releasing his collar, and I kick him, sending him to the end of the room. He crashed into a chair. I want those hands cut off. 

Lydia was by the side, one hand on her chest as though trying to settle herself. That was enough to traumatise her. Seeing her like that fueled my anger towards Gladdins, and I matched his. 

I will fucking kill him. He dared to touch my woman. He was trying to get on his feet. A pair of hands wrapped around my waist to stop me from getting closer to him. She shook her head, holding me in place with her hand. 

“No, please. Let’s just leave.” Lydia’s voice is soft enough to calm me. Maybe it was the friction, her hand around my waist holding me back. I gritted my teeth as I slowly turned around. 

+15 

Chapter 130 

I know this hug meant nothing, and that given this situation, I shouldn’t be feeling anything, but I had no control over my body. “You won’t get away with this. Both of you.” 

“That would be from behind bars.” She released me and walked to the table to pick up her purse. Although Mr. Gladdins was standing, he looked weak, his big body wasn’t enough to protect him from the fall or hurt. 

“We’ll see about that.” His voice strained as he spoke. Lydia entwined her hand in mine, and we started walking towards the door, ignoring his remark. “And forget about this deal, you’ve ruined it, just watch me destroy your stupid company. I won’t forgive you even if you come begging.” 

This made Lydia halt on her step. She turned back, “I’d love to see you try to lift a finger towards my sweat.” She began, “Although I’d advise you to project that energy towards your company, cause you may go bankrupt.” It wasn’t an empty threat, not with the intensity her voice carried. 

I pulled her forward, and together we walked out through the door. I didn’t stop walking, not when Daniel and Mia rushed towards us, probably after seeing the look on our faces. 

I opened the car’s door for Lydia, and she stepped in. Walking around it, I sat behind the steering wheel, ignited my engine and drove off. The ride was quiet. I don’t know about Lydia, but I had to teach Mr Gladdins a lesson. I’d be damned if I allowed him to go around as though he didn’t do anything. 

I pulled up in front of a dessert cafe. Lydia looked around and then turned to me, “Why are we here?” She asked. I unlocked my belt. “Nothing is better than sugar for a sour mood.” The truth is that I felt I didn’t know her as well as I did before, so I didn’t know 

where to take her. 

She didn’t argue or agree; instead, she did the same with her seatbelt, and I took that as an agreement to eat ice cream with me. 

We walked into the cafe together, her in front of me. The sound of laughter from the closest table mixed with the sound of the fridge. 

We soon got a cup of a different flavor and found a table. I placed a spoon in my mouth and held it there. Lydia still hasn’t said a word. Her head was down. I brought her here to lift her mood. This was her signature cafe when we were together; she loved the ice cream from here. 

I couldn’t help but wonder if she still remembers coming here with me and all the time we spent here. How would it look if I began reminiscing about things with her? Too direct? 

No, she hates walking down memory lane, in her words. It wouldn’t be nice to talk about what just happened either. While I was conternplating how to start a conversation with her, she broke the uncomfortable silence between us. 

“You’re still the same, you still like strawberry flavor.” She said. I have never been grateful to her for speaking the way she was right now. “What… yes, I mean…” she smiled, taking a spoon from her vanilla-flavoured ice-cream. 

We sat in front of a glass floor-to-ceiling window. “I guess some things never change,” I added, not wanting to return to that 

uncomfortable silence. 

“About earlier, I’m sorry for leaving. If I hadn’t left, then that would never have happened,” I admitted. 

She didn’t lift her head. She took another spoon and spoke slowly, “It’s fine. Men tend to be stupid all the time, they just need a little reminder to put them back in place. After today, he won’t be doing this to any other woman.” 

Why did she sound like she was used to this? “Lydia,” I called softly, “I’m sorry.” I apologized, and she raised a brow. I honestly don’t even know what I was apologizing for. I just felt the need to apologize to her. To make her know that someone was behind her. 

2/3 

12:08 Sun, 24 Aug 

Chapter 130 

“What are you apologizing for?” She asked. 

སཾ ཏྟཱི, 55% 

+15 

“Everything you’ve gone through,” I said, for leaving her life. Yes, my absence made her the woman she is today, but that didn’t change the fact that life may have thrown some curve balls at her, been shitty, and she had to handle it alone. 

I wish I was with her. It’s actually too late to wish. If I couldn’t do it then, nothing is stopping me now. 

I reached out to hold her hand before I could stop myself, “You won’t have to face anything alone now.” I’m back in her life, and as I squeezed her hand gently, I hoped she got the reassurance I was trying to pass. 

She slipped her hand away from my hold. “I don’t know what you are thinking, but…” she inhaled sharply, staring at her ice-cream cup and then at me, “I have forgiven you, but I don’t know what I want from you yet.” 

She has forgiven me. That is what mattered more to me. Warmth spread all over my stomach, and I had to stop myself from hugging her and turning her around. 

“I’m willing to wait till you figure that out.” 

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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