Cristina stumbled backward, her hands flying up to grab her broken pearl necklace that was no longer there.
Annetta caught her mother-in-law before she hit the concrete. Annetta's head snapped up. She locked eyes with the tattooed woman. Annetta didn't say a word, but the raw, homicidal promise in her stare made the larger woman pause, mutter a curse, and back away.
Annetta guided Cristina to a relatively dry patch of concrete in the corner. She took off the woolen scarf she had picked up earlier and laid it on the floor for Clara to sit on.
A sharp, nasal laugh echoed from the shadows near the toilet.
"Look who decided to slum it with the rest of us."
Hayley Wiley stepped into the dim light. She was Alek's former administrative assistant and a distant cousin of the Crane family. She wore a designer trench coat that was now stained with grime. She had been arrested the day before on conspiracy charges.
Hayley crossed her arms, a vicious smirk on her face. "How the mighty have fallen. The great Senator's wife, sleeping on the floor with the junkies."
Cristina's spine stiffened. She lifted her chin, falling back on decades of conditioned authority.
"Mind your tone, Hayley," Cristina snapped. "Remember who you are speaking to."
Hayley threw her head back and laughed. "There is no matriarch here, Cristina! Your golden boy Alek ruined us! He stole millions and got himself blown up like a coward, and now we're all going to rot in the mountains because of him!"
Clara, who had been sitting quietly on the shawl, suddenly jumped up. Her small fists were clenched.
"My daddy is not a coward!" Clara yelled, her voice echoing in the damp cell. "He's a hero!"
Hayley's face twisted in ugly rage. She took a step forward and raised her hand. "Shut your mouth, you little brat-"
Annetta moved faster than thought.
She lunged forward, her hand shooting out like a striking snake. Her fingers clamped around Hayley's raised wrist. Annetta didn't try to break the bone. Instead, her thumb found the precise cluster of nerves running along the radial artery. She pressed her nail inward with surgical, paralyzing precision. A violent, electric shock of pain shot up Hayley's arm. Her fingers went instantly numb, her knees buckling as the sudden agony robbed her of breath. Hayley gasped, dropping to the dirty concrete, unable to make a sound.
Annetta leaned down, her face inches from Hayley's ear.
"If you ever look at my daughter again," Annetta whispered, her voice a dead, flat calm, leaning in so only Hayley could hear. "I know thirty-seven different ways to induce a fatal cardiac arrest using nothing but the cleaning chemicals they leave in these cell blocks. They will write it off as a panic attack. Do you understand me?"
Hayley whimpered, tears streaming down her face, and nodded frantically. Annetta released her wrist in disgust. Hayley scrambled backward into the shadows.
The rest of the cell went completely quiet. The inmates watched Annetta with wary, calculating eyes. The corner belonged to her now.
Annetta walked back and sat beside Cristina.
Cristina was trembling. The facade of the strong matriarch was cracking. She leaned her head against the cold concrete wall, staring blankly at the ceiling.
"Is it true, Annetta?" Cristina whispered, her voice broken. "Did he do it? Did my son betray us?"
Annetta reached out and grabbed Cristina's freezing hands. She squeezed them tightly, forcing the older woman to look at her.
"Alek was framed," Annetta said, her voice burning with absolute conviction. "This is a political hit. Issac Rocha set him up."
Cristina closed her eyes, a tear slipping down her cheek. "We are going to die out there, Annetta. We have nothing."
"We are going to live," Annetta said, her thumb instinctively rubbing the bare skin of her ring finger. "We are going to survive the exile. And when we do, we are going to find the proof, and we are going to burn Issac Rocha to the ground."
Cristina opened her eyes. She looked at the fierce, unyielding fire in her daughter-in-law's face. Slowly, Cristina's fingers curled around Annetta's hand, squeezing back.
The heavy iron door at the front of the cell block clanged open.
Two guards shoved a new group of prisoners into the cell. Among them was a young girl with pink hair, wearing a thin clubbing dress. Kenzie Wiley. Hayley's daughter.
Kenzie spotted her mother and immediately started sobbing. "Mom! It smells like piss in here! Call the lawyers! Get me out!"
Hayley shushed her, whispering frantically about the frozen assets.
Kenzie's eyes darted around the cell in panic. They landed on Annetta sitting in the corner. Kenzie's face hardened into a mask of spoiled entitlement. She marched over.
"Annetta," Kenzie demanded, pointing a manicured finger at a metal bench occupied by a sleeping inmate. "Go tell that woman to move. I need a place to sleep."