Chapter 3
Elara spent the night on a bench in Riverside Park. She couldn't afford a hotel. Her credit cards had been declined when she tried, frozen probably, pending some kind of fraud investigation Marcus had no doubt initiated.
When dawn broke gray and cold over the city, she walked to the nearest coffee shop. She used the last of her cash to buy a small black coffee and sat in the corner booth with her phone.
The news had exploded overnight.
"Disgraced Scientist's Meltdown at Golden Gala" was trending on three different platforms. The videos had been viewed millions of times. Someone had created a hashtag: #AethelgardMeltdown.
She scrolled through the coverage with a kind of detached horror.
Then she saw it.
A new article, posted two hours ago.
"Medical Records Reveal Troubled History of Researcher Who Disrupted Gala."
A low, involuntary sound, a ragged gasp, escaped her. Her hands went numb.
She clicked the link.
The article, loaded with images of medical documents, patient records, psychiatric evaluations.
Her name was on every single one.
"Patient: Dr. Elara Vance
Diagnosis: Clinical psychosis with paranoid delusions
Treatment: Recommended inpatient psychiatric care
Physician: Dr. Raymond Cortez, MD"
The date on the evaluation was from eight months ago.
Elara stared at the screen. She'd never seen these documents before in her life, or met any Dr. Raymond Cortez and certainly never had been diagnosed with psychosis.
The documents were fake.
But they looked real. Official letterhead, stamped signatures, case numbers that probably checked out in whatever database Marcus had paid someone to insert them into.
The article continued below the images.
"Sources close to Dr. Vance report that she has been receiving treatment for mental health issues for nearly a year. Her ex-partner, Dr. Marcus Sterling, attempted to support her through this difficult period but ultimately ended their relationship when her behavior became too erratic to manage.
'I wanted to protect her privacy,' Sterling told reporters this morning. 'But given her public accusations last night, I feel I have a responsibility to share the truth. Elara is sick. She needs help, not a platform to spread these delusions.'
A wave of sudden, violent nausea hit Elara, forcing her to clutch the edge of the cheap formica table. The casual, concerned lie was more sickening than the forged documents.
There were more documents below. Security footage from Aethelgard Pharmaceuticals showing Elara in the lab late at night. The timestamp read 3:47 AM.
The caption: "Vance was frequently found in the laboratory during unauthorized hours, exhibiting erratic behavior and paranoia about her colleagues."
Another footage showed her arguing with someone in a hallway. The other person's face was blurred for privacy, but Elara recognized Isabella's red coat.
The caption: "Confrontation between Vance and Dr. Isabella Cross, six weeks prior to the Golden Gala incident."
Elara's hands shook as she scrolled.
Every piece of evidence looked real. Every document, every video, every testimony from unnamed sources.
It was a masterpiece of character assassination.
And it had clearly been planned for months.
She thought about the security footage of her in the lab at 3 AM. Marcus hadn't been supporting her career; he'd been encouraging the late nights, pushing the deadlines, and gently manufacturing a crime scene. Every "I believe in you" had been a lie designed to get a high-quality, incriminating timestamp on a security tape.
He'd been setting her up.
The footage of her arguing with Isabella in the hallway, that had been the day Isabella first arrived at Aethelgard and walked into Elara's lab uninvited to go through her notes. Elara had confronted her about it, and Marcus, standing right there, had told Elara she was overreacting, that Isabella was just eager to contribute. He'd been manufacturing evidence even then, positioning her outrage as paranoia for the camera.
The medical documents from Dr. Cortez were the final piece. Completely fabricated, but impossible to disprove without access to sealed medical records that didn't exist.
It was perfect.
Elara set her phone down on the table then subtly observed her surroundings
Around her, morning customers ordered lattes and pastries. Someone's laptop played a news program at low volume. She heard her own voice shouting from the speakers.
"That's my research! You know I did, Marcus! Tell them!"
A woman at the next table glanced at Elara, then quickly looked away.
Did she recognize her?
Elara pulled the hood of her jacket up and hunched lower in the booth.
Her phone buzzed. An email from Aethelgard Pharmaceuticals.
"Dr. Vance,
In light of recent events and the serious allegations regarding your conduct, Aethelgard Pharmaceuticals is conducting a formal investigation into your employment history and research contributions. Effective immediately, your building access has been revoked and your credentials are under review.
You are required to appear before the Ethics Committee on Friday, June 14th at 9:00 AM to address these concerns. Failure to appear will result in immediate termination and potential legal action.
Regards,
Human Resources Department
Aethelgard Pharmaceuticals"
Friday was tomorrow. Less than twenty-four hours to prepare for her professional execution.
Elara closed her email. She opened her banking app.
Account balance: $247.83
Her savings account was empty. The joint account she'd shared with Marcus showed a balance of $0.00 with a note: "Account closed by primary holder."
He'd taken everything.
She pulled up her research files from the cloud storage. Her fingers moved across the screen, navigating to the folder where she kept her lab notebooks, her synthesis protocols, her trial data.
Access denied.
She tried again.
Access denied.
Marcus had her login credentials. He'd had them since they moved in together, back when sharing passwords seemed like an intimate gesture of trust.
He'd locked her out of her own research.
Elara set the phone down carefully. If she didn't, she'd smash it against the table.
She had two hundred and forty-seven dollars. No home, no job, no access to her research, and a reputation so thoroughly destroyed that no one in the pharmaceutical industry would ever hire her again.
The door to the coffee shop opened. A woman in a business suit walked in, her phone pressed to her ear.
"Did you see that video from the gala?" she was saying. "Completely unhinged. I feel bad for Marcus Sterling. Three years with someone that unstable must have been exhausting."
Elara stood up. She left her half-finished coffee on the table and walked out into the gray morning.
She had nowhere to go, but she knew exactly what to do. Marcus Sterling wanted her gone. He wanted her silent. That, she realized, was the one thing he would never get.
Chapter 4
Elara walked for hours. Her feet blistered inside her heels, the ones she'd bought to match the emerald dress that was now stained with rain and humiliation. She’d changed into jeans and a sweater from the storage facility, but she still felt exposed. Like everyone who passed her on the street knew exactly who she was.
The disgraced scientist.
The crazy woman from the videos.
By noon, she found herself outside the Aethelgard Pharmaceuticals building. Forty-three stories of steel and glass rising into the cloudy sky. She’d worked on the twenty-seventh floor for three years.
Security was stationed at the entrance. She recognized Michael, the day guard who’d always smiled at her when she arrived early for lab work.
She walked up to the door, only for Michael’s hand to block her path.
“Sorry, but I can't allow you in, your credentials have been revoked so I can't let you past the lobby," he apologized, his expression sympathetic but firm
"Michael please, I have a hearing tomorrow and I desperately need my files; my research notes, every proof of my research I can get,” Elara pleaded.
“I’ve worked here for three years, you know this, you know me, please," she continued, trying to appeal to the person beneath the uniform.
"I'm sorry, but I still can't allow you in, I don't make the rules, I'm only obliged to follow work protocols.”
A black town car interrupted the stalemate. Marcus stepped out, looking infuriatingly well-rested and happy in a perfectly knotted navy suit. His pause upon seeing her was a calculated act of superiority.
What are you doing here?” He demanded.
“You should very well know what I'm here for Marcus. I need my research files, my notebooks, and the synthesis protocols I personally developed.”
“They now belong to Aethelgard, which makes them company property that you're neither allowed nor authorized to access,” he said with a cold dismissal.
Elara knew she had created them, but he used the intellectual property agreement she'd signed on her excited first day as a weapon, reminding her that everything she created while employed was theirs. The rights had been signed away.
Defeated on that point, she tried for the digital files, the trial data, the molecular models.
“You can't have those either,” he said flatly.
“Marcus, I just need to—"
“You’re not an employee anymore, Elara,” he said, cutting off her protest. He gestured to the glass doors, laying out the new reality: no clearance, no access, no rights to anything in that building.
"You need to leave now, before I call the police,” he threatened.
“Why? What's illegal about me standing on a public sidewalk?” she challenged.
In response to that, he revealed the restraining order Isabella had filed that morning.
Order of Protection: Isabella Cross vs. Elara Vance.
Elara’s hands shook as she unfolded the document he handed her, the words blurring: stay at least 500 feet away from the petitioner at all times. She was standing less than twenty feet from Isabella’s primary workplace.
"You're currently in violation of it, so I'd repeat it again Elara, Leave, Now,” he said calmly.
"Marcus, this is insane. Why would I need a restraining order?! I didn't do anything to her except scream at her in the ballroom!” she insisted.
“You accused my wife wrongly and made her feel unsafe, I see that as enough reason to safeguard her protection and prevent this from repeating," he stressed, his voice infuriatingly reasonable but twisting her actions in every way.
Elara paused. Wife?! What did he mean by that?
“Your wife?" She asked him directly in disbelief.
"Yes, I and Isabella are married. And I expect you to treat her with the respect as such.”
If she hadn't felt her heart completely break before this moment, she certainly felt it now. So many things had happened between the day and before that it was hard to believe that this wasn't some sort of fever dream. Her fiancee, well former fiancee, was actually married to the very woman who had stolen her work and had destroyed her, her reputation, her life work, her life basically, just for this strange woman.
"Marcus… why?" She sounded broken, defeated, finally crumbling under the weight of everything that had been happening.
“Elara, I won't repeat this again. Leave, before I make you to." Marcus replied coldly then turned to Michael.
Michael's radio crackled. A security guard’s voice came through, reporting a situation at the front entrance and a possible violation of the restraining order.
Elara, defeated, backed away from the door. “I’m leaving,” she said quickly. “I’m leaving right now.”
She turned and walked down the sidewalk, her vision blurring with tears. Behind her, she heard Marcus say something to Michael. The two men laughed. She kept walking.
Three blocks away, she stopped in front of a convenience store. Her phone buzzed.
Another email. It was from Dr. Helena Moss.
Elara opened it.
The graduate committee at North City University had voted to review her doctoral dissertation. Given the recent allegations about her research integrity, they must ensure that her degree was earned legitimately. The review would take several months. Until it was complete, her PhD would be considered conditional.
Conditional.
They were going to take her doctorate.
Three years of graduate school. A dissertation that had been praised as groundbreaking. A degree she'd earned through countless sleepless nights and failed experiments and small victories that had felt, at the time, like everything.
Now it was conditional.
Elara walked into the convenience store. She bought a bottle of water with some of her remaining cash. The clerk barely looked at her.
She sat on the curb outside and drank the water slowly. The sky was starting to darken. Evening was coming.
She had nowhere to sleep tonight.
The storage facility closed at six. She'd gone there this morning to retrieve her clothes and found that Marcus had put almost nothing in storage. Just a few boxes of personal items. Her books. Some photographs.
Everything else, the furniture they'd bought together, the kitchen supplies, the artwork on the walls, had disappeared.
Probably sold. Or thrown away.
She checked her bank account again: $235.10.
A cheap motel would cost at least fifty dollars a night. That gave her four nights, maybe five if she didn't eat.
Then what?
Her phone buzzed. A text from a number she didn't recognize.
"Stop embarrassing yourself. No one believes you."
Then another text.
"You look pathetic in those videos."
Then another.
"Crazy bitch. Get help."
The messages kept coming. Someone had leaked her number online.
Elara turned her phone off and put it in her pocket.
She sat on the curb as the sun set and the streetlights flickered on. People walked past her. Some glanced her way. Most didn't.
She was invisible now.
Erased.
Chapter 5
The Starlight Motel on the edge of downtown cost fifty-eight dollars a night. The room smelled of stale cigarette smoke, institutional bleach, and the lingering scent of desperation.
The carpet was a tapestry of ancient stains, and the brown bedspread looked like it had not been laundered since the last presidential election.
Elara locked the door with a loud, final click and leaned her forehead against the wood.
“I guess this is what I've been reduced to,” she whispered to the peeling paint. “Scrimping on money for a sanctuary of grime while Marcus enjoys the luxury of our apartment. No, his apartment now. I suppose the restraining order made that very clear.”
She sat on the edge of the bed, the cheap mattress springs groaning in a sharp, metallic protest. She pulled her phone from her pocket, her thumb hovering over the glass as the screen lit up.
You look pathetic in those videos.
Crazy bitch. Get help.
She deleted them without reading past the first few words, the digital violence a physical assault.
Crazy. Liar. Pathetic. Fraud.
The words were a monotonous, humiliating chorus.
She opened her email instead, hoping for a professional neutral space. There was none.
The university had sent another message.
Subject: Teaching Assistantship Cancellation.
"...due to the ongoing ethics investigation and the need to maintain an environment of academic integrity for our students, your teaching assistant position for the fall semester has been canceled. The department cannot have someone under review working directly with undergraduates."
Elara’s throat tightened. Her TA position was her only remaining employment, a guaranteed stipend that was now gone. They weren't just taking her job; they were preemptively barring her from ever teaching again.
She stared at the next subject line.
Subject: Membership Suspension.
It was from a respected professional organization she'd been a member of for ten years. Her membership was suspended, pending the outcome of the Aethelgard Ethics Committee's investigation.
Then the last, most cruel blow.
Subject: Retraction Request: Neural Plasticity and the Aethelgard Compound.
The journal that had accepted her paper six months ago was retracting the publication. Her co-author, Dr. Marcus Sterling, had requested the retraction due to concerns about data integrity
The phone slipped from her numb fingers onto the bedspread.
Data integrity.
The irony was a bitter, choking taste. He was the one who had fabricated medical records, manipulated security footage, and lied on international television, yet he was invoking the sanctity of data integrity to destroy the last shred of her scientific career.
It was his final, elegant twist of the knife: not only stealing her work but making her own name poison to the scientific community.
She lay back, staring at the water-stained ceiling. The fan above her spun slowly, its motor grinding a weary, repetitive protest. Forty-eight hours ago, she had been Doctor Elara Vance, lead scientist-to-be, on the verge of the biggest breakthrough of her life. Now, she was a disgraced lunatic with two hundred dollars to her name and her professional reputation in ruins.
Her stomach growled. She hadn't eaten since yesterday. She couldn't afford to eat.
She closed her eyes. Sleep didn't come.
Instead, she replayed every moment of her relationship with Marcus. Looking for the signs she'd missed. The moments when his mask had slipped.
“Had there been any signs?” she asked the spinning fan.
Or had he been perfect the entire time, right up until the moment he decided to destroy her? She picked a loose thread from the bedspread, worrying it between her numb fingers.
She thought about the first time he'd kissed her. It had been in the laboratory, late at night. She'd just successfully synthesized a compound she'd been working on for months. She'd been so excited that she'd hugged him without thinking.
He'd pulled back and looked at her with an expression she'd interpreted as affection.
Had it been calculation instead?
She remembered the first time he'd asked her to move in…
"Elara," he’d said, his voice low and warm, wrapping her in his arms on the lab couch, "I can't imagine my life without you. Move in with me. We'll be unstoppable, professionally and personally."
"I... I don't know, Marcus," she’d hesitated. "I like my space. And my commute. Plus, mixing work and home…”
"Please Elara, I love you, I want to spend every moment of my day with you…” he had pleaded.
“And I believed him,” she whispered, a tear finally escaping and trailing into her hair.
She thought of the late nights, the times she had almost collapsed from exhaustion while he kissed her forehead.
"You look awful, Elara, but keep going. I know you're almost there. And you're brilliant, you just have to push a little harder than everyone else.
“Every ‘I believe in you’ was a lie,” she said in between sobs. “It was a lie designed to get me to the finish line so you could step in and claim the prize."
Marcus had pursued her, not the other way around. He'd been the one to suggest they work together on the neural regeneration project. He'd been the one to encourage her to push harder, work longer, dedicate herself completely to the research.
He'd isolated her from her other colleagues. Convinced her that they didn't understand her work the way he did. That they were jealous of her brilliance..
He'd made her dependent on him. And then he'd used that dependence to destroy her.
On the nightstand, her phone buzzed again, yanking her from the spiral of revelation. The message was short, anonymous, and brutal: You should kill yourself. Save everyone the trouble of dealing with your crazy ass.
Elara stared at the screen, a new kind of cold clarity washing over her, overriding the grief.
The fury that had been building inside her, the raw, humiliating grief, coalesced into a single, burning purpose.
“You want me gone?” she asked the phone, her focus sharp and sudden. “That is the one thing you will never get, Marcus.”
She opened her notes app. Her fingers were trembling, but her mind was suddenly lucid, focused with the fierce intensity of a hunted animal.
Synthesis Pathway — Step 1: Compound X reacted with Compound Y at 68°C under nitrogen. The thermal stability is the key.
She knew Marcus had never understood the thermodynamics of the stabilization phase nor many other nitty gritty details involved in the synthesis.
She wrote down everything she could remember, reconstructed every synthesis step, every molecular formula, every trial result. These were the granular, essential details that proved the depth of her ownership, the very details Isabella Cross could not recite on television because she did not understand the underlying theory.
She couldn't access her digital files, but she still had her memory. For now, that would have to be enough.
She kept writing for hours. Her fingers cramped, her eyes burned. But she kept going, driven by a furious, single-minded need to reclaim her work.
By the time the sun rose, she had seventy pages of scientific notes, a dizzying, imperfect first draft of the Aethelgard Formula's true development story.
She saved the file to her cloud storage. Then she backed it up to two separate email accounts.
Elara stood up and looked at herself in the scratched mirror above the dresser. Her hair was tangled. Her face was pale. She had dark circles under her eyes. She looked exactly like the unstable woman from the videos Marcus had released.
“Good,” she whispered to her reflection. “Let them think I am broken. Let them think they have won. I will use their certainty against them. If I am a ghost, then I will be the one that haunts you until your empire crumbles.”