The Imam explained the basics of the faith to the girl and taught her to recite the shahada, the testimony of faith.

Lyanna repeated the words in Arabic, not fully understanding their meaning.

The Imam issued her a certificate of conversion to Islam, which was necessary for the marriage to take place.

The agency transferred the first half of the mahar to Lyanna’s father’s account, $50,000, an amount the family had never seen in their entire lives.

Her father paid off all his debts, bought medicine for his back, paid for his younger children’s education for a year in advance, and repaired the roof of the house.

He deposited the remaining money in a local bank.

Lyanna’s mother cried with relief and guilt at the same time.

She understood that her daughter was sacrificing herself for the sake of the family.

The day before her departure, Lyanna met with Maria, who had flown to the Philippines, especially for a short vacation.

They walked around the village and sat on the riverbank where they had spent time as children.

Maria held Lyanna’s hand and said that soon they would be together again in Dubai, that it wouldn’t be long, that everything would work out for them.

Lyanna asked what exactly would work out.

Maria replied that she had a plan.

Khaled is very rich.

His family owns real estate, accounts, businesses.

If Lyanna became his wife, she would have access to some of these resources.

Maria worked in the home of friends of the Al-Manssuri family, so she knew how the lives of wealthy Arabs were arranged.

Wives had their own money, their own jewelry, their own accounts.

Khaled would give Lyanna money for expenses.

Over time, she will be able to save enough for them both to return to the Philippines and start a new life.

A life where they won’t have to hide.

Lyanna listened and nodded.

She asked how long it would take.

Maria said a year, maybe two.

They would have to be careful, not arouse suspicion, and save money discreetly.

Khaled must not suspect anything.

Lyanna must be the perfect wife, quiet, submissive, grateful, and then when they had saved enough, they would disappear.

They would fly back to the Philippines to another province where no one knew them.

They would buy a small house and open a shop or a cafe.

They would live together as they had always dreamed.

Lyanna asked if it was dangerous.

Maria replied that it was dangerous, but they had no other choice.

They couldn’t be together in the Philippines.

Their families, their village, their church would never accept their relationship.

It wasn’t possible in Dubai either.

But there was money there.

Money that would give them freedom.

They just had to be patient and careful.

On the last night before her departure, Lyanna hardly slept.

She lay in her bed and stared at the ceiling.

She heard her father snoring in the next room, her younger brothers and sisters tossing and turning.

She thought about how she would never see this house, this village, these people again.

that tomorrow she would fly to another country, to a stranger who would become her husband, a man three times her age, a man who already had three wives and eight children, a man she had only seen in a photograph.

In the morning, the whole family took Lyanna to the airport.

Her mother cried incessantly.

The younger children clung to their sister’s hands.

Her father stood aside with a stony face.

Lyanna hugged each of them, saying that everything would be fine, that she would write to them every week, that they would see each other again soon.

She didn’t believe these words, but she kept repeating them.

An agency representative accompanied Lyanna to Dubai.

On the plane, the girl sat by the window and watched the Philippine Islands disappear below her.

rice fields, villages, rivers, everything she knew, everything that was her life.

The plane rose above the clouds and only the sea remained below them.

The flight lasted about 8 hours.

Lyanna was too nervous to eat.

The agency representative tried to calm her down, saying that the Almansuri family was very respected, that they would treat her well, that she was lucky.

Lyanna nodded silently.

When the plane landed in Dubai, it was early morning.

Lyanna was taken through passport control and her luggage was checked by customs.

At the airport exit, they were met by a driver in a black suit.

He took Lyanna’s suitcase and led them to the car.

It was a large black SUV with tinted windows and leather seats.

They drove along a wide highway.

Skyscrapers, shopping malls, and hotels flashed by outside the window.

Lyanna had never seen anything like it.

The buildings were huge, sparkling, and seemed unreal.

The roads were perfectly clean, the cars expensive.

Everything looked like the set of a movie about the future.

The driver turned off the main road into a residential area.

Here there were villas surrounded by high walls, palm trees, manicured lawns, flowering shrubs.

The car stopped in front of a massive row iron gate.

The driver pressed a button and the gate slowly opened.

Behind the gates was a spacious courtyard paved with light colored stone.

In the middle was a fountain surrounded by palm trees growing in large ceramic pots.

The house itself was two stories high, light beige in color with large windows and columns at the entrance.

It was a villa that could accommodate 20 houses from the village of Lyana.

An elderly woman in a black abaya with gold embroidery stood at the entrance.

Her face was covered with a nikub.

Only her eyes were visible.

It was Khaled’s first wife.

She silently looked Lyanna up and down, then gestured for her to follow her.

Inside the house, it was cool from the air conditioning.

The floors were white marble.

The walls were decorated with Arabic calligraphy and gold frames, and the furniture was dark wood with carvings.

The first wife led Lyanna through the living room, then up the stairs to the second floor.

They walked down a long corridor and stopped at a door at the end.

The woman opened the door and showed Lyanna the room.

It was a spacious bedroom with a large bed, a wardrobe, a dressing table, and a separate bathroom.

The windows overlooked a courtyard with a garden.

The first wife said something in Arabic, but Lyanna didn’t understand a word.

The woman repeated it more slowly, but that didn’t help.

Then she simply pointed to the bed, the wardrobe, and the bathroom, and left, closing the door behind her.

Lyanna was left alone.

She sat down on the edge of the bed and looked around.

The room was larger than her family’s entire house in the Philippines.

The bed was soft.

The sheets were snow white.

The bathroom had a huge bathtub, a marble sink, and a mirror covering the entire wall.

There were new towels on the shelves and bottles of perfume and cosmetics on the dressing table.

Lyanna went to the window.

Below was a garden with fruit trees, rose bushes, and stone paths.

In the corner of the garden, she saw a small building that looked like a guest house.

Perhaps the servants lived there.

She thought of Maria.

The girl worked not far from here.

Maybe they would see each other soon.

Lyanna took out her phone and wrote Maria a message.

She told her that she had arrived, that she had been brought to the house, and that she was in her room.

Maria replied almost immediately.

She wrote that she was glad Lyanna was safe, that she needed to be quiet and obedient, that they would see each other soon.

In the evening, a young maid came for Lyanna.

The girl was from Indonesia and spoke broken English.

She brought Lyanna an abaya and a hijab and explained with gestures what she needed to put on.

Lyanna changed.

The abaya was made of thin black fabric, and the hijab covered her hair and neck.

The maid nodded approvingly and motioned for her to follow her.

They went down to the dining room on the first floor.

A long table was set with food.

There were dishes with rice, meat, vegetables, bread, and fruit.

Several people were sitting at the table.

The first wife was at the head of the table.

Next to her were two men in their 30s, probably Khaled’s sons.

Further down sat two women in hijabs, one of them holding a child in her arms.

Two more children sat on high chairs.

Everyone was speaking Arabic.

Lyanna was seated at the end of the table.

Everyone fell silent and looked at her.

The first wife said something.

Everyone nodded and continued eating.

Lyanna picked up a fork, but the maid stopped her and showed her that she had to eat with her hands like everyone else.

Lyanna tried to repeat the action but it was uncomfortable and awkward.

Khaled was not at the table.

Lyanna wanted to ask about him but did not know how.

After dinner, everyone dispersed.

The maid accompanied Lyanna back to her room.

The girl lay down on the bed and stared at the ceiling.

She didn’t know what would happen next, when she would see Khaled, when the wedding would take place.

what would be expected of her.

The next morning, the maid woke Lyanna up.

She brought breakfast on a tray and left it on the table by the window.

After breakfast, the first wife arrived with an interpreter, a young man in a white shirt and jeans.

He explained that he was Khaled’s nephew and would help Lyanna with translation until she learned Arabic.

The first wife said through the interpreter that the wedding would take place in 3 days.

Until then, Lyanna had to stay in her room, study prayers, and prepare.

A teacher would come to her and teach her the basics of the Islamic faith and the duties of a wife.

After the wedding, she would become a full member of the family and Khaled’s fourth wife.

The next three days were a blur.

An elderly imam came to see Lyanna every day.

He spoke English with a strong accent and explained to her the rules of Islamic marriage, the duties of a wife, and the importance of obeying her husband.

Lyanna listened and nodded.

Although much of what he said frightened her, the Imam said that a wife must obey her husband in everything, that a husband has the right to punish his wife if she disobys, and that a wife’s main duty is to bear children and serve her husband.

On the evening of the third day, the wedding took place.

It was a small ceremony at home, attended only by family members and a few close friends of Khaled.

Lyanna was dressed in a luxurious golden wedding dress embroidered with stones.

Her hair was styled.

Her face was made up.

She did not recognize herself in the mirror.

The ceremony took place in the large living room.

Lyanna sat on a chair surrounded by women from her family.

The imam recited prayers in Arabic.

Then Khaled was brought in.

He was dressed in snow white clothes.

His beard was neatly trimmed and he smelled of expensive perfume.

He sat down opposite Lyanna, looked at her appraisingly, and nodded with satisfaction.

The Imam asked Khaled a question, and he answered in the affirmative.

Then the imam addressed Lyanna through an interpreter.

He asked if she agreed to become the wife of Khaled al-Manssuri.

Lyanna looked at all the unfamiliar faces around her, at Khaled with his gray beard and cold eyes, at the luxurious house that was now her cage.

She thought of her family in the Philippines, of the $50,000 that had saved them from poverty.

She thought about Maria, who was waiting for her, about the plan they had to carry out.

She said yes.

The imam recited a few more prayers and the marriage was sealed.

The guests congratulated Khaled and the women hugged Lyanna.

A table was set with food, but Lyanna hardly ate anything.

She felt as if none of this was happening to her, as if she were watching someone else’s life from the outside.

Late in the evening, when the guests had left, Khaled approached Lyanna.

He took her by the hand, his palm dry and rough.

He gestured for her to follow him.

He led her up the stairs to the second floor, but not to her room, to his.

His bedroom was huge, with a bed larger than Lyanna’s entire room in the Philippines.

He closed the door.

Khaled spoke in broken English.

He said that Lyanna was now his wife and had to fulfill her duties.

Lyanna stood motionless, not knowing what to do.

Khaled came closer and began to remove her jewelry.

His movements were slow and methodical.

Lyanna closed her eyes and thought about anything but what was happening.

She thought about the sea, about the rice fields at home, about Maria.

Lyanna hardly slept that night.

Khaled fell asleep quickly, his breathing heavy and hoarse.

Lyanna lay next to him and stared into the darkness.

When dawn broke, she quietly got up and returned to her room.

She sat on the bed and sat motionless for a long time, staring at one spot.

In the days that followed, a certain routine was established.

Lyanna had to wake up early, perform her morning prayers, and then go down to breakfast with the rest of the family.

She sat silently, ate little, and answered questions monoselabically through the interpreter.

The first wife treated her coldly, but without open hostility.

The second and third wives paid little attention to her.

Khaled’s children, grown men and women, looked at her with curiosity or indifference.

During the day, Lyanna spent her time in her room or in the garden.

She was not allowed to leave the villa unaccompanied.

Khaled gave her a credit card for shopping, but there was nothing to buy and no one to buy it for.

A maid brought her food, did her laundry, and cleaned her room.

Lyanna tried to talk to her, but the girl spoke only Indonesian and a few Arabic phrases.

In the evening, Khaled usually summoned Lyanna to his room.

Sometimes he just talked to her through an interpreter asking how she was feeling, whether she liked life in Dubai, whether she was happy.

Lyanna replied that everything was fine, that she was grateful to him for everything.

Khaled seemed satisfied with her answers.

He said she was a good girl, obedient, and modest.

That’s exactly what a Muslim wife should be like.

A week passed.

Lyanna wrote to her parents that everything was fine, that she was being treated well, that she was happy.

It was a lie, but she couldn’t write the truth.

Her family had received the money, and their lives had changed.

She couldn’t ruin that.

Her mother replied with long messages, telling her how they had renovated the house, bought new furniture, and enrolled the younger children in a good school.

Her father had found a job as a security guard at a local store, and his back hurt less after treatment.

Lyanna also wrote to Maria every day, short messages about how her day went, what she ate, what she did.

Maria rarely replied, usually late at night when she finished work.

She wrote that she was very tired, that her employers were demanding that she missed Lyanna.

She promised that they would see each other soon.

2 weeks after the wedding, Khaled announced that his first wife’s family was hiring new servants.

They needed a girl to work in the kitchen and help around the house.

His first wife was no longer young, and it was difficult for her to cope with all the chores.

Khaled asked Lyanna through an interpreter if she knew anyone from the Philippines who was looking for work.

Lyanna replied that she had a friend who was currently working for another family, but would like to change jobs.

Khaled said he could arrange for the contract to be transferred if the girl was a good worker.

Lyanna assured him that Maria was very hardworking and responsible.

Khaled nodded and said he would contact the right people.

3 days later, Maria’s contract was transferred to the Al-Manssuri family.

Her former employers did not object because Khaled’s family was influential and it would have been unwise to refuse them.

Maria arrived at the villa on Saturday morning.

Lyanna watched from her bedroom window as the driver brought her in his car.

Maria got out with a suitcase and a bag.

She was dressed in simple jeans and a t-shirt, her hair tied back in a ponytail.

The maid showed her into the house and showed her the servants’s quarters in a separate building in the garden.

Lyanna couldn’t approach Maria right away.

That would have aroused suspicion.

She had to act as if they were just acquaintances, not close friends.

She waited all day for the moment when she could see Maria.

In the evening, when everyone had left after dinner, Lyanna went out into the garden.

She pretended to be taking a walk.

She approached the servants’s quarters and knocked quietly on the door.

Maria opened it.

They stood and looked at each other for a few seconds.

Then Maria pulled Lyanna inside and closed the door.

She hugged her tightly.

Lyanna felt all the tension of the last few weeks leave her.

They sat down on the narrow bed in Maria’s small room.

The room was simple, only a few square meters.

A bed, a wardrobe, a small window.

Maria asked how Lyanna was feeling.

Lyanna said she was fine.

Maria looked at her closely and said she knew that wasn’t true.

Lyanna began to cry.

Everything she had been holding back these weeks came pouring out.

She told Maria about the wedding, about Khaled, about how she hated every minute in this house.

Maria hugged her and said that it would all be over soon, that they just had to hold on a little longer.

They agreed to meet at night when everyone was asleep.

Lyanna would climb out of her bedroom window, which was on the first floor, into the garden.

They had to be very careful.

No one could find out about their meetings.

In the eyes of the family, Lyanna had to remain an obedient wife and Maria just a servant.

The following weeks passed in this double existence.

During the day, Lyanna played the role of Khaled’s wife.

She prayed, sat with the family, smiled when necessary.

In the evenings, she went to Khaled and let him do what he wanted.

She closed her eyes and thought about something else.

Khaled either didn’t notice her absent gaze or didn’t pay attention to it.

To him, she was an obedient body performing a function.

At night, after midnight, when the house fell asleep, Lyanna quietly climbed out of the window.

The garden was dark with only a few lanterns lighting the paths.

She quickly made her way to the servants’s quarters.

Maria was always waiting for her.

They spent an hour or two together whispering, holding hands.

Those were the only hours when Lyanna felt alive.

Maria worked in the kitchen from 6:00 in the morning.

She prepared breakfast, helped with lunch and dinner, washed the dishes, and cleaned the dining room.

There was a lot of work, and the first wife watched everything closely and strictly.

Maria did not complain.

She told Lyanna that the main thing now was that they were together and that nothing else mattered.

They began to discuss a plan.

Lyanna had to save money.

Khaled gave her a card for shopping and she could withdraw small amounts of cash so as not to arouse suspicion.

$500 once a week.

She said she was buying clothes, cosmetics, and gifts for her family in the Philippines.

Khaled didn’t check.

He was so rich that these amounts seemed insignificant to him.

In a month, Lyanna had saved about $3,000.

She hid the money in a suitcase with a false bottom, which she made by cutting open the lining.

Maria also saved her salary, $400 a month.

She sent $200 to her mother and hid the rest.

They calculated that in 6 months they could save about 15,000.

That would be enough to buy tickets to the Philippines, rent a house in another province, and start a small business.

But 6 months is a long time.

Too long.

Lyanna felt she couldn’t hold out that long.

Every evening with Khaled became more and more difficult.

She started taking sleeping pills, which she secretly took from his first wife’s medicine cabinet.

She drank before going to Khalid to feel detached, as if it wasn’t happening to her.

Maria noticed the changes in Lyanna.

The girl became silent, her gaze dull.

She hardly ate and lost weight.

Dark circles appeared under her eyes.

Maria became concerned.

One night when Lyanna came to her, Maria asked her directly how long she could live like this.

Lyanna said she didn’t know.

Maybe a month, maybe less.

Maria made a decision.

She said they wouldn’t wait 6 months.

they would leave earlier.

They already had about $4,000, which would be enough for tickets and the first few months.

They could leave in a few weeks.

Lyanna asked how exactly.

Maria said she had an acquaintance, a driver from Bangladesh who worked for her neighbors.

He could take them to the airport early in the morning when everyone was asleep.

They would fly to Manila, then travel to another province.

No one would find them there.

Lyanna listened and felt hope rising inside her.

Real tangible hope that this nightmare would soon be over.

She asked when exactly they could leave.

Maria said in 2 weeks.

They needed to prepare the documents, buy tickets online, and make arrangements with the driver.

Lyanna nodded.

2 weeks.

14 days.

She could hold out for another 14 days.

Lyanna counted the hours over the next few days.

She behaved as usual so as not to arouse suspicion.

She prayed, ate with her family, and talked to Khaled through an interpreter.

But inside, all her thoughts were of escape.

Maria bought tickets for a flight to Manila, departing on Saturday at 6:00 in the morning.

They made arrangements with the driver, who agreed to take them for $200.

Maria said they needed to leave at 4:00 in the morning to make it to check in on time.

There were 5 days left.

Lyanna packed her things into a backpack, a minimum of clothes, documents, money.

Maria also packed a bag.

They were ready.

Each night brought them closer to freedom.

But after 3 days, something changed.

Khaled began to behave differently.

He started watching Lyanna more closely.

He asked strange questions.

He asked where she went in the evenings, why she didn’t sleep at night.

Lyanna replied that she just walked in the garden because she couldn’t sleep.

Khaled looked at her for a long time, studying her, then nodded and let her go.

Lyanna became worried.

She wrote to Maria that Khaled suspected something.

Maria replied that they needed to be even more careful, that there were only 2 days left, that they had to hold out.

On Thursday evening, Khaled did not call Lyanna to his room.

This was strange as he usually called her every evening.

Lyanna stayed in her room and waited, but no one came.

She went to bed, but could not sleep.

Something was wrong.

On Friday morning, Khaled’s first wife came for Lyanna.

She had an interpreter with her.

The woman said through him that Lyanna had to go with her to the mall.

They needed to buy new clothes and gifts for the family.

Lyanna was surprised.

She usually never left the house, but she couldn’t refuse.

She nodded and went to get dressed.

They drove in a car with a driver.

The first wife sat silently looking out the window.

Lyanna tried to talk to her through the interpreter, but the woman answered in mono syllables.

They arrived at a large shopping center and spent several hours there.

The first wife bought things, showed Lyanna dresses and jewelry, but didn’t buy anything for her.

They returned home in the evening.

Lyanna immediately went to her room.

She wrote to Maria that they were leaving tomorrow, that she needed to be ready at 4:00 in the morning.

Maria replied an hour later.

She wrote that everything was ready, that the driver would be waiting at the gate.

Lyanna didn’t eat dinner.

She told the maid that she wasn’t feeling well, that she had a headache.

She lay down on the bed and waited.

She listened to the sounds of the house, how everything gradually quieted down, how the lights in the rooms were turned off, how silence fell.

At midnight, Lyanna got up.

She put on dark clothes and took her backpack.

She went to the window and carefully opened it.

She listened.

Silence.

She climbed over the windowsill and jumped into the garden.

The grass was wet from the evening watering.

Lyanna quickly went to the servants’s quarters.

She knocked quietly.

No one answered.

She knocked again.

Silence.

Lyanna tried to open the door.

It was unlocked.

She opened it and went inside.

The room was empty.

The bed was neatly made.

The wardrobe was open.

Maria’s things were gone.

There was a note on the table.

Lyanna picked it up with trembling hands.

The note was in English and the handwriting was not Maria’s.

There were only a few words written on it.

Go back to your room immediately.

Lyanna stood with the note in her hands.

Her heart was beating so hard that she could hear it pounding in her ears.

Maria was gone.

Her things were gone.

Someone wrote this note.

Someone knows.

She turned and ran out of the room.

She ran back to the house.

She had to get to her room and pretend nothing had happened.

Maybe it wasn’t too late.

Maybe she could come up with an excuse.

But when she ran up to her window, there was a man standing there.

It was Khaled’s eldest son, about 35 years old.

He was dressed in black, his arms crossed over his chest.

He looked at Lyanna with a cold stare.

Another man emerged from the shadows behind him.

The villa’s security guard, large, silent.

Khaled’s son said something in Arabic.

The guard grabbed Lyanna by the arm.

She tried to break free to scream, but the guard covered her mouth with his hand.

With his other hand, he held her by the shoulder.

Lyanna couldn’t move.

Khaled’s son came closer.

He looked at her with contempt.

He said something harsh in Arabic.

Then he waved his hand at the guard.

The guard dragged Lyanna to a car parked at the side entrance to the garden.

It was a black SUV with its headlights off.

Lyanna was pushed into the back seat.

Khaled’s son sat next to her.

The guard got behind the wheel.

The car quietly drove out of the courtyard through the side gate.

Lyanna looked out the window.

She saw the villa, the garden, everything that had been her prison for the last few weeks receding into the distance.

The car drove through the empty night streets of Dubai.

The skyscrapers glowed with lights.

Then the city began to disappear.

The road narrowed and there were fewer houses.

They turned onto the highway.

Ahead was the desert.

Lyanna realized what was happening.

She knew stories about girls who had disappeared in this country, about servants who ran away and were found dead, about wives who disgraced their families and were never seen again.

She knew that there were laws in this country, but for families like the Al-Manssuris, the laws didn’t always work.

Money and influence decided many things.

She tried to open the door.

It was locked.

She tried to hit Khaled’s son.

He easily caught her arm and twisted it painfully.

He said something in Arabic, his voice icy.

Lyanna stopped resisting.

She realized it was pointless.

They drove for over an hour.

The desert around them was black, only the headlights illuminating the road ahead.

Then the car turned off the highway onto a dirt road.

They drove for another 20 minutes.

They stopped in the middle of nowhere.

There was only sand around them.

The guard got out of the car.

He opened the trunk.

He took out two shovels.

Then he opened the back door and pulled Lyanna out.

She fell onto the sand.

She tried to stand up, but her legs wouldn’t hold her.

The guard pulled someone else out of the trunk.

Maria.

The girl was wearing the same clothes Lyanna had last seen her in.

Her hands were tied behind her back.

Her mouth was taped shut.

Her eyes were wide with terror.

They were placed side by side.

Khaled’s son got out of the car.

He took a gun out of his pocket.

It was black and matte.

He looked at the girls for a long time.

Then he threw shovels at their feet.

He said something in Arabic.

The guard translated it into English.

Dig.

Lyanna looked at the shovels, then at Maria, then at the endless desert around them.

They were an hour’s drive from the city.

There was no help coming.

Their phones were in the backpack that the guard had taken.

It was pointless to scream.

There was no one around.

Maria looked at Lyanna.

Her lips were taped shut, but her eyes said it all.

I’m sorry.

I love you.

Goodbye.

Lyanna picked up a shovel.

She stuck it in the sand.

She started digging.

They dug for about an hour.

The sand was dense.

The shovels heavy.

Maria worked with her hands tied, falling several times.

The guard lifted her up and forced her to continue.

Khaled’s son stood aside and smoked, keeping his eyes on them.

When the holes were deep enough, about waist deep each, Khaled’s son waved his hand.

The guard took the shovels, the girls were placed at the edge of the holes, facing the desert.

Lyanna turned around.

She wanted to say something, to ask for mercy, to explain anything.

Khaled’s son raised his gun.

Lyanna saw the barrel pointed at her.

She closed her eyes.

Her last thought was of her mother selling vegetables at the market.

Her younger brothers and sisters in their new school uniforms.

A shot broke the silence of the desert.

Lyanna fell face down into the pit.

A second shot rang out a few seconds later.

Maria collapsed next to her.

The guard checked both of their pulses.

He nodded.

He took a shovel and began to fill the pits with sand.

He worked quickly and methodically.

Half an hour later, only two small mounds remained.

The wind began to smooth them out even before the men left.

The car returned to Dubai at dawn.

Khaled’s son entered the house through the side entrance.

He went up to his father’s bedroom.

Khaled was sitting on the edge of the bed reading the Quran.

He looked up.

His son nodded.

Khaled closed the book and continued his prayer.

In the morning, the first wife informed the servants that Lyanna and Maria no longer worked in the house.

The girl’s belongings were packed into boxes and thrown away.

Lyanna’s room was cleaned and locked.

A week later, a new maid from Sri Lanka took Maria’s room in the servants quarters.

An agency representative called Lyanna’s family in the Philippines.

He informed them that their daughter had run away with her lover, disgracing Khaled’s family.

The marriage was dissolved.

According to the contract, in the event of a breach of the terms by the bride, the family was obliged to return the dowy, $100,000.

The family did not have that kind of money.

The representative said he would give them a month to collect the amount, otherwise there would be a court case.

Lyanna’s father sold the house.

Her mother sold everything they had bought with the dowy money.

They took out loans from anyone who agreed to give them money.

They collected 60,000.

The agency wrote off the rest as a bad debt.

The family moved to an even poorer neighborhood.

The younger children dropped out of school again.

The father returned to work in the fields, even though his back made it almost impossible for him to bend over.

Lyanna’s mother tried several times to call her daughter.

The number was unavailable.

She wrote messages, but no one replied.

She reported her daughter missing to the Philippine police.

The police contacted the authorities in Dubai.

They replied that no report of a missing Philippine citizen had been received and that according to immigration records, Lyanna Raymond had left the country 3 weeks earlier on a flight to Bangkok.

Maria’s mother received the last money transfer from her daughter at the beginning of the month.

Then the transfers stopped.

All contact was lost.

The woman also contacted the police and received the same response.

The two mothers met and compared their stories.

They realized that their daughters had disappeared on the same day.

They tried to attract the attention of the media and wrote to several newspapers.

One small newspaper published a note about the missing girls, but the article was not widely circulated.

A lawyer who agreed to help the families free of charge tried to obtain information about the girl’s whereabouts through the Philippine embassy in the UAE.

The embassy sent a request to the Dubai police.

The police replied that both girls had left the country voluntarily and that no crimes had been reported.

The case was closed.

Khaled al-Manssuri continued to lead a normal life.

He visited the mosque five times a day.

He prayed long and intently.

He donated money to charity.

He was respected in the business community as an honest and god-fearing man.

6 months later, he took a new fourth wife.

This time, a 20-year-old girl from Indonesia.

Khaled’s eldest son was promoted in the family business.

He became the director of security for all of the company’s facilities.

The security guard who was with him that night quit a year later and returned to Pakistan.

He bought a small shop there with the money he had saved in Dubai.

The bodies of Lyana and Maria were never found.

The desert holds many secrets and two mounds among the endless sands were no different from thousands of other irregularities in the terrain.

Within a few months, the wind had completely leveled them with the ground.

Officially, the girls are listed as missing.

Their case is in the Manila Police Archives, among thousands of other similar cases of Filipino workers who have disappeared abroad.

Every year, dozens of Filipino women do not return home from the Persian Gulf countries.

Some do indeed run away and start a new life.

Others die from accidents or illness.

Others simply disappear and no one ever finds out what happened to them.

The story of Lyanna Raymond and Maria Santos is yet another line in these statistics.

Their families are still waiting.

Their mothers sometimes receive messages from scammers who claim to have seen their daughters in Thailand or Malaysia.

They ask for money in exchange for information.

The families no longer believe them, but they check every time because hope dies last.

The only thing left of the girls are a few photos on their relatives phones and entries in their village’s church records.

Their names are listed among those who have been baptized.

The column for death is left blank.

Technically, they are still alive.

They just disappeared somewhere between Dubai and Manila.

Between the hope for a better life and the reality that turned out to be a grave in the

Maria Santos Rivera died on a Tuesday morning in her suburban Los Angeles home while her husband was at work and her children were at school.

The 38-year-old Filipina-American housewife was stabbed 17 times in her own kitchen by someone she knew intimately.

Someone who had been inside her home dozens of times before.

Someone whose mother lived just three houses down the quiet tree-lined street.

The weapon was a knife from Maria’s own kitchen block.

A wedding gift from 15 years earlier.

Her blood soaked into the white tile floor she had mopped just the day before.

Spreading beneath the refrigerator covered with her children’s artwork and family photos from happier times.

When her husband Robert found her body 6 hours later, the scene was so horrific that the first responding officer, a 20-year veteran of the Los Angeles Police Department, had to step outside to compose himself before securing the crime scene.

This is the story of how an affair born from loneliness, nurtured in secret, and ending in rejection became a brutal murder that destroyed two families and shattered the illusion of safety in a close-knit Filipino-American community where everyone knew everyone else’s business or at least thought they did.

The neighborhood of Cypress Park in Northeast Los Angeles, where Maria Santos Rivera lived and died, looked like the embodiment of the American dream for immigrant families who had worked hard to achieve middle-class stability.

Wide streets lined with mature jacaranda trees, well-maintained single-family homes with neat lawns and American flags hanging from front porches, minivans parked in driveways, children’s bicycles left on sidewalks.

This was not the Los Angeles of Hollywood glamour or gang violence that dominated news coverage.

This was the Los Angeles of working families, of parents who left for work before dawn and returned after dark, of kids who walked to the local elementary school in groups, of weekends spent at backyard barbecues and birthday parties where everyone in the neighborhood was invited.

The area had a significant Filipino-American population drawn by affordable housing >> >> and the presence of family members who had immigrated decades earlier.

On any given Sunday, you could walk down Cypress Avenue and smell adobo cooking in half a dozen kitchens, hear Tagalog being spoken on front porches, see groups of men playing basketball at the local park while their wives caught up on community gossip.

It was the kind of neighborhood where people still looked out for each other, where elderly neighbors had their groceries carried inside by teenage boys, where block parties were organized through group text messages and everyone contributed food.

The Santos Rivera family had lived on Cypress Avenue for 12 years, moving in when Maria was pregnant with their second child.

They were considered pillars of the local Filipino community.

Robert Rivera worked as an IT manager at a downtown firm, often putting in 60-hour weeks to support his family >> >> and maintain their comfortable lifestyle.

Maria was involved in everything at their church, organizing fundraisers, coordinating the children’s choir, hosting prayer groups at their home.

Their two children, 14-year-old Joshua and 11-year-old Emily, were excellent students who participated in multiple extracurricular activities.

To their neighbors, the Riveras represented success and stability.

No one suspected that behind the perfectly maintained facade, Maria was desperately lonely, feeling invisible in her own home, and seeking connection in the most dangerous place possible, just three houses down the street.

Maria Santos was born in Manila, Philippines in a modest neighborhood where large families lived in small houses and everyone’s business was known to everyone else.

She was the eldest of four children, raised in a traditional Catholic household where her mother taught her that a woman’s primary purpose was to serve her family, that marriage was forever, and that personal happiness came second to duty and obligation.

Maria was a bright, ambitious girl who dreamed of becoming a teacher, who loved to read, who wanted to see the world beyond the crowded streets of her neighborhood.

She finished high school with excellent grades and began attending a local college, working part-time at a restaurant to help pay tuition and contribute to her family’s expenses.

It was at that restaurant, a place that catered to American tourists and business travelers, where she met Robert Rivera.

He was a second-generation Filipino-American, born and raised in Los Angeles, working in Manila for 6 months on a technology project for his company.

Robert was handsome, confident, spoke English with an American accent, and represented everything Maria associated with opportunity and a better life.

He was kind to her, tipped generously, and always asked about her studies.

Their courtship was brief but intense.

Robert extended his stay in Manila by 3 months, taking Maria to nice restaurants, movies, shopping trips to malls where she had only window shopped before.

He talked about life in America, about opportunities for advancement, about the Filipino community in Los Angeles that would make her feel at home.

He asked her to marry him after 5 months, promising to sponsor her immigration to the United States.

Maria’s mother approved of the match, seeing it as a chance for her daughter to have a better life and potentially help the rest of the family immigrate eventually.

Maria was 23 when she married Robert in a small ceremony in Manila, 24 when she arrived in Los Angeles with a green card and high hopes for her new life in America.

The reality of immigration was harder than she had imagined.

She missed her family desperately, struggled with homesickness, found the sprawling city of Los Angeles overwhelming and impersonal compared to the tight-knit community she had left behind.

Robert worked long hours, leaving early and returning late, often too tired to do much more than eat dinner and watch television.

Maria found herself alone in their small apartment most days, without friends, without family, without the support system she had always known.

When she became pregnant with Joshua 6 months after arriving in the United States, she was thrilled to have a purpose and focus.

Motherhood gave her days structure and meaning, but it also increased her isolation.

Robert’s career advanced rapidly, requiring longer hours and frequent travel.

By the time Emily was born 2 years later, they had moved to the house on Cypress Avenue in a neighborhood with other Filipino families, and Maria had found a community through the local Catholic church.

She threw herself into being the perfect wife and mother, cooking elaborate meals, keeping an immaculate home, volunteering at her children’s schools, organizing community events.

From the outside, her life looked full and successful.

Inside, Maria felt increasingly empty.

She loved her children fiercely, but as they grew older and more independent, she felt her purpose shrinking.

She loved Robert, or at least the memory of the man he had been in Manila, but their emotional connection had eroded over years of him being physically present but emotionally distant.

Maria was 38 years old, living in a beautiful home, married to a successful husband, raising two wonderful children, and feeling more alone than she had ever felt in her life.

She wanted to be seen, to be desired, to feel like a woman instead of just a wife and mother.

That vulnerability, that hunger for connection and validation, would make her susceptible to attention from the most dangerous possible source.

The Rivera marriage had started with genuine affection and optimism, but had slowly calcified into a partnership focused on practical matters rather than emotional intimacy.

Robert was not a bad husband by most conventional measures.

He was faithful, worked hard to provide financial security, >> >> never raised his voice or his hand, attended important family functions, and was involved with his children when his schedule allowed.

But he was emotionally unavailable in ways that left Maria feeling like a housekeeper and child care provider rather than a partner and lover.

They had not had a meaningful conversation about anything other than household logistics or the children’s activities in months, possibly years.

Their physical relationship had become perfunctory and infrequent, occurring maybe once a month when both happened to be awake and in bed at the same time, which was rare given Robert’s habit of working late and falling asleep on the couch.

Maria could not remember the last time Robert had asked her how she was feeling, what she was thinking, what she dreamed about.

She could not remember the last time he had really looked at her, seeing her as Maria and not just as his wife who kept the household running.

The distance between them had grown so gradually that neither had noticed how far apart they had drifted.

Robert saw himself as a good provider who was sacrificing time with his family to ensure their financial security and his children’s futures.

He worked 60-hour weeks, traveled for business, took on additional projects for promotions and raises.

In his mind, he was demonstrating love through provision.

What he did not see was his wife’s increasing loneliness, her need for emotional connection, her hunger to feel desired and appreciated.

Maria tried to communicate her feelings several times over the years, >> >> but these conversations always ended the same way.

Robert would promise to work less, to spend more time at home, to be more present.

He would follow through for a few days or weeks, then slowly slip back into his old patterns.

Eventually, Maria stopped trying.

She told herself that this was simply what marriage looked like after 15 years, that expecting passion and romance was childish and unrealistic, that she should be grateful for a stable home and a faithful husband.

She buried her dissatisfaction deep inside, where it festered and grew into resentment she barely acknowledged even to herself.

Financial pressures added stress to an already strained relationship.

Despite Robert’s good income, the cost of living in Los Angeles was crushing.

The mortgage payment, property taxes, insurance, and maintenance on their house consumed a significant portion of Robert’s salary.

>> >> There were also the costs of raising two children in an expensive city.

School supplies and fees, sports and music lessons, health care, clothing, food, and the constant pressure to keep up with other families in the neighborhood.

Maria felt guilty spending money on herself, rarely buying new clothes or personal items, cutting her own hair to save the cost of salon visits.

Every dollar spent had to be justified, weighed against the family’s needs and future expenses.

This constant financial pressure meant that Robert felt he could not afford to work less, that he had to pursue every opportunity for advancement and additional income.

It also meant that Maria felt trapped.

She had considered getting a job to contribute financially and to have something for herself outside the home, but the income she could earn with her limited work experience and education would barely cover child care costs.

Robert was not opposed to her working, but he also made it clear that it could not interfere with her primary responsibilities of managing the household and caring for the children.

Maria felt caught between the traditional expectations she had been raised with and the reality of modern life, where most families needed two incomes.

The cultural dynamics of their relationship added another layer of complexity.

Maria had been raised with very traditional ideas about gender roles and marriage.

A good wife supported her husband’s career, maintained a beautiful home, raised obedient children, and did not complain about her lot in life.

She knew that if she talked to her mother or older relatives about her unhappiness, they would tell her she was being ungrateful, that she had a good life by any reasonable standard, that marriage required sacrifice and compromise.

Robert, despite being American-born, had absorbed many of these same cultural values from his own parents.

He expected dinner on the table when he got home, a clean house, well-behaved children, and a wife who managed all the domestic responsibilities without burdening him with complaints.

This dynamic had worked for his parents’ generation, but it left Maria feeling like she was living in the 1950s while watching other women her age pursuing careers, traveling, having adventures.

She loved her children and did not regret the choice to focus on family, but she also felt like she had disappeared into her roles as wife and mother, losing any sense of herself as an individual.

By the spring of the year she would die, Maria’s marriage had become a hollow shell.

She and Robert were roommates who shared financial obligations and parenting duties, but had no emotional or physical intimacy.

They did not fight because fighting would have required caring enough to be angry.

They simply existed in parallel lives that occasionally intersected over practical matters.

Maria felt invisible, undesired, and desperately lonely.

That loneliness made her vulnerable to someone who would see her, who would desire her, who would make her feel alive again, even if that someone was wildly inappropriate and dangerously obsessed.

The Cooper family had lived on Cypress Avenue even longer than the Riveras, having moved into their house 28 years earlier, when Thomas Cooper first got his job as a foreman at a manufacturing plant in Vernon.

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