
Chapter 1 of Walking Away from Bestie's Deception
The concrete floor bit into my knees like frozen teeth, each scrub of the brush sending shockwaves of pain up my spine.
My uniform—if the tattered gray rags could even be called that—hung loose on my shrinking frame, the number 47 sewn crudely across my chest in red thread that looked disturbingly like dried blood.
"Faster!" The guard's voice cracked like a whip behind me. "Those tiles better shine, or you'll get another reminder."
I pressed the brush harder against the stained concrete, my bloodied knuckles screaming in protest.
The industrial soap burned the open cuts on my hands, but I didn't dare slow down. Not after what happened to the girl in cell 23 yesterday. Her screams still echoed in my ears.
The exhibition hall stretched endlessly before me, a grotesque parody of the art galleries I once loved to visit.
Marble pedestals stood like tombstones, waiting for their next display. But I knew what would be displayed here wasn't art—it was people.
People like me.
My breath came in short, ragged gasps as I moved to the next section.
The chemical smell of the cleaning solution mixed with the metallic taste of fear in my mouth. Every muscle in my body ached from weeks of this routine: scrub, move props, arrange displays, endure the whip when I wasn't fast enough.
But I held onto one thought that kept me sane: Clara.
She had to be here somewhere, in another wing of this compound. Maybe they had her doing kitchen work, or maybe she was in the 'upper levels' I'd heard whispered about.
Clara, with her delicate hands and soft voice, couldn't possibly handle this kind of manual labor.
I wished they had given her something easier.
The image of her tear-streaked face from that last phone call flashed through my mind. "Lydia, I can't take it anymore. Ethan hit me again last night. I think... I think we need to get away. Both of us."
That was when I completely felt her. Knowing that we were both victims, both broken by the men who were supposed to love us.
I felt her pain, just like she did for me. That was why when she suggested the healing retreat, the 'art therapy program' overseas, it sounded like salvation to me.
"Move those crates to the platform!" Another guard barked, pointing to a stack of wooden boxes near the wall.
I struggled to my feet, my knees wobbling like a newborn colt's. The first crate felt like it was filled with concrete blocks, but I hefted it anyway, staggering toward the raised platform at the center of the hall. The platform where—no. I couldn't think about what happened on that platform.
As I arranged the crates according to the guard's shouted instructions, my mind drifted back to Clara.
She was probably wondering where I was right now. Maybe she'd managed to escape and was trying to find me. Yes, that had to be it.
Clara would never abandon me. We'd promised each other we'd stick together through everything.
The crack of the whip across my back sent me sprawling forward, my face smashing into the wooden crate.
"I said arrange them in a circle, not a line!" The guard's boot connected with my ribs, forcing the air from my lungs. "Are you deaf and stupid?"
Blood trickled from my split lip as I gasped for breath. The taste was copper and salt, mixing with the tears I refused to let fall. I couldn't break. Not when Clara needed me to be strong.
"Please," I whispered, pushing myself back to my knees. "I'll fix it."
The guard laughed, a sound like breaking glass. "Please? You think please means anything here?"
I rearranged the crates with shaking hands, forming the circle he demanded. Each movement sent fresh waves of pain through my battered body, but I bit down on my tongue to keep from crying out. The other workers—I couldn't think of them as prisoners, not yet—moved around me like ghosts, their eyes carefully averted. We'd all learned that showing sympathy only brought punishment.
The afternoon shift stretched on endlessly. More scrubbing, more arranging, more orders barked in languages I didn't recognize.
My world had shrunk to this: the burn of chemicals on raw skin, the ache of muscles pushed beyond endurance, the constant fear of the next blow.
But underneath it all, hope flickered like a candle in a storm. Clara and I had survived our divorces. We'd survived the heartbreak and humiliation. We could survive this too, together.
When the dinner bell finally rang—a harsh clang that made my teeth ache—I stumbled toward the dormitory with the others. The narrow hallway smelled of unwashed bodies and despair, but I barely noticed anymore. It had become my normal.
The dormitory was a converted warehouse space lined with metal bunk beds, each one claiming two souls who'd lost everything. I collapsed onto my thin mattress, every bone in my body screaming.
Around me, hushed conversations began in a dozen different languages.
"Did you hear?" The woman in the bunk next to mine—Anna, I thought her name was—leaned closer. Her English was heavily accented, maybe Eastern European. "They're preparing for another auction."
My blood turned to ice. "Auction?"
"You haven't been here long enough," Anna whispered, glancing nervously toward the guards stationed by the door. "Every few weeks, they bring buyers. Rich people who want... special purchases."
The room seemed to spin around me. "What kind of purchases?"
Anna's eyes were hollow, ancient despite her young face. "Us. They sell us."
The words hit me like a physical blow. I pressed my hand to my mouth to keep from retching. "That's not... they can't..."
"The pretty ones go to private collectors," Anna continued, her voice barely audible. "The rest... I don't know what happens to the rest."
I shook my head violently. This couldn't be real. This was some kind of nightmare, some horrible mistake. Clara and I had signed up for an art therapy retreat. We had passports, tickets, legitimate documentation.
But as I lay there in the darkness, listening to the quiet sobs and whispered prayers around me, the truth began to seep in like poison. The compound walls topped with razor wire. The guards with their electric prods and cruel smiles. The way they talked about us like inventory.
No. I squeezed my eyes shut, forcing the thoughts away. Clara was here somewhere. She was probably in a different section, maybe even planning our escape right now. She wouldn't have brought me here if she'd known.
I had to believe that. Because if Clara had betrayed me—if my best friend, my sister in all but blood, had sold me into this hell—then I truly had nothing left to live for.
The lights went out with a mechanical click, plunging us into darkness. But sleep wouldn't come. Instead, I stared at the ceiling and planned. Tomorrow, I would find a way to escape. I would find Clara, and together we would get out of this place.
I had to believe in tomorrow. It was all I had left.
Read the Full Novel on













![[ENG DUB] My Ex-husband Can't Stop Chasing Me After Divorce](https://v.pinedrama.com/b1265344voduse1318177724/bb0995b65145403727619987865/PL2Tc37qsHMA.webp!15491.webp)



