SOPHIA'SPOV
Today has been really busy for me. Customers kept coming and going, and I barely had time to catch my breath. At one point, I had to quickly mix the dough just in case I needed to make more. All I kept hearing was, "Can I have that?" "Oh! This looks nice, can I have two of them?" "Oh! My husband loved the doughnuts from last time; I think I want to place an order." It was one voice after another, a chorus of demands that made my heart race with excitement. I was glad things were moving fine for me. I was starting to get my life back to normal. At least now, I could afford some things for myself without having to disturb Dr. Grace about my needs. The freedom felt refreshing. I was also glad I could do something for myself, and I had Dr. Grace to thank for all this. Speaking of Dr. Grace, we had missed two sessions. Though she was done with the conference, she had something important to take care of. I couldn’t wait to see her again to tell her about the progress of my bakery. "Can I have two of those?" a middle-aged woman spoke as she pointed to the pillow doughnuts lying in my display case. The doughnuts were round and looked sumptuous, their golden-brown color enticing customers to take a bite. I quickly picked two of them up and placed them in a box. "Mummy, cake," the two-year-old beside the woman spoke up, her little finger pointing at the colorful cakes in the display. The woman smiled down at her. "Okay, baby. Add the cake too, miss," she said to me again. "Alright, ma'am," I replied, trying to keep my tone upbeat despite my growing fatigue. I hurriedly grabbed a slice of cake and carefully placed it in the box. The microwave beeped, signaling that the doughnuts were ready. I removed them, packaged them, and handed everything over to the woman. She smiled brightly, passing the treats to her daughter. "Thank you, miss," she said with a broad smile, which I reciprocated. "Thank you for your patronage, ma'am. Bye, kid!" I said, and the little girl waved at me with delight. "Bye, miss!" she called in a cute voice that made my heart melt. I smiled at her cuteness, feeling a warm glow inside. My business was doing well, and I was so glad. It was usually very busy, sometimes overwhelming. If my bakery continues at this pace, I might need an assistant to help me manage the rush. The thought of expanding filled me with hope and excitement. It was a long day, and as the sun began to set, casting a golden hue over everything, I decided it was time to wrap up. I wiped down the surfaces and cleared the tables, humming to a tune that echoed the joy I felt in my heart. Suddenly, a wave of nausea washed over me. I had been feeling it for hours, but this time it hit hard, and I dropped the towel, running out to the back of the bakery to ease myself. My head spun, and I could feel a slight fever creeping up on me. I knew I needed to go for a test later; something wasn't right. ✧✦✧✦✧✦✧✦✧✦✧✦✧✦✧✦✧✦✧✦✧✦✧✦ A Few Minutes Later…. I walked into the clinic and stopped at the receptionist’s desk, the sterile smell of antiseptic filling the air. It irritated me as I waited for her to finish speaking to someone. This was why I disliked hospitals and clinics. The wait felt interminable, and a wave of dizziness washed over me, so I went over to sit on the bench in a corner, clutching my stomach. I closed my eyes, trying to steady my breathing. After about ten minutes of waiting, the receptionist finally called me. "Hello, ma'am. Sorry for keeping you waiting. How may we help you?" "I would like to see the doctor, please," I said, forcing a smile despite my unease. "Oh! He just stepped out. Hold on for a few minutes; he’ll be back in no time," she said, continuing to type on her computer, oblivious to my discomfort. After another 15 minutes of anxious waiting, I was told that the doctor was back. "You can see him now, ma'am. He's waiting for you," she said, and I nodded, my heart racing as I walked into the doctor's office. Just as I expected, it was filled with all kinds of books and medical supplies. Calendars of the heart and other related images that I couldn't decipher were hung on the wall, the sight both familiar and intimidating. "Please, sit," he said, gesturing to the chair across from him. "So, what's the issue?" he asked in a deep, professional voice. I explained everything I had been feeling for the past few days to him, leaving out no detail. "When was the last time you had your monthly flow?" he asked, and I wondered why he brought up that question. I was about to ask him the reason for it when he spoke again. "We'll carry out a pregnancy test on you and a typhoid test as well, just to be sure what's wrong, okay?" he said calmly. "Why a pregnancy test, Doctor?" I asked, my heart sinking as the reality of his words settled in. "Because you're showing signs of early pregnancy," he said, and I gasped, my mind racing. "That's not possible," I said, almost in a whisper, panic bubbling up inside me. "Don't worry, my dear. You'll be fine. We'll find out what's actually wrong once the test results are out," he said, and I fell silent, the weight of his words pressing down on me. "So, shall we begin?" he asked, and with that, he got up from his chair and retrieved a new syringe from a pack. A few minutes later, my blood sample was taken, the prick of the needle, was sharp but bearable. Afterward, I was told to wait at the reception for the results. For the first time in my life, I prayed to have typhoid. I couldn't afford to be pregnant right now. It’s got to be typhoid. Yes, I thought desperately, clinging to that notion. I refused to think about my monthly flow or anything that would suggest I might be pregnant. After waiting for almost thirty minutes, I was called into the doctor's office once more. "You're pregnant, Miss Sophia," the doctor said without hesitation, his voice steady but my world started to crumble. "What?" I exclaimed, disbelief flooding through me. "You're two months pregnant," he repeated, looking at me with concern. "Excuse me! That's not possible," I said, a bit louder now, my heart racing as fear gripped me. He passed the test results to me, and my eyes popped open wide. It showed that I was indeed two months pregnant. This is not possible, I thought, shaking my head vehemently. No. How can this be? What do I do now? Nathan and I only did it twice—once on the day he marked me and again the day before the incident. Is that enough to get me pregnant? What am I even saying? How do I raise a child right now? I'm not ready for this. With tears streaming down my cheeks and millions of questions flooding my mind, I dashed out of the doctor's office and hurried home, my heart pounding in my chest. Nathan has successfully ruined my life!NATHAN'S POVThe winds had gone quietNot peaceful kind — not the kind that brought rest — but the sort of quiet that came after the screaming stopped, the screams from that reality. It was kind that left your bones buzzing with aftershocks, your muscles tight with the knowledge that something was wrong. Still wrong. That something was yet to happen.Sophia was asleep again.Not the enchanted kind this time, thank the goddess. Just exhaustion. Her head rested on my shoulder, breath soft and uneven, one hand still curled in the fabric of my shirt like she couldn’t believe I was real. She looked so beautiful, with her raven black hair contrasting with her skin. I couldn't get over how radiant she always was – no matter the situation. “She's brave.” My wolf hummed in approval.“Yes, she is. She always was.” No matter what was thrown her way.I didn’t move.Didn’t dare.Not because I was afraid of waking her — but because I didn’t know what I’d do if I let myself stand. If I let this mo
SOPHIA’S POV“Oh,” she purred, her voice thick like syrup. “There you are, love. I was starting to worry you’d gotten lost.”Nathan stiffened beside me.And just like that, the air dropped ten degrees.Victoria glided into the kitchen as if she owned it, the hem of her molten gold gown whispering across the tile. Behind her, the walls pulsed and flickered, revealing glimpses of decay beneath the dream – scorched wood, broken glass, things that had no place in a fucking memory. She was the only thing still fully formed — and that was what scared me most. She hadn’t cracked. She was still holding on.And her eyes — Goddess, those eyes — were fixed on Nathan like he belonged to her.“Don’t move.” I murmured to him without turning, feeling the rise and fall of his breath beside me. “She’ll try to pull you under again.”“I won’t go.” he said, voice low, trembling. “Not again.”Victoria’s smile grew — slow, indulgent and cruel. Oh so very cruel.“Oh Nathan,” she said, her tone dripping mock
SOPHIA'S POVHe didn’t let go of me.Even when the floor pressed cold and hard under us, even when his breath came in ragged bursts and the illusion cracked and groaned around us, Nathan held on — fiercely, desperately — like I was the only thing anchoring him to this world.And maybe I was.His forehead rested against mine, slick with sweat. His arms, trembling with the weight of everything he’d been made to carry, stayed locked around my waist like releasing me would send him spiraling into something he wouldn’t come back from. It was like the second time he went under, the enchantment knew he had escaped and had locked him down even harder. I don't even want to know the horrors….I could feel his wolf beneath the surface — restless, battered, but alive. And goddess, that mattered. That meant we still had time. The man looked like he had been through battles, a victim of war, just to be here. I didn't realise how much he must have gone through the first time he broke through. It ma
SOPHIA’S POVI didn’t sleep.Not because I didn’t try – I did. I lay next to him, heartbeat pressed to heartbeat, my fingers laced with his like they belonged there. And they did. But every time I closed my eyes, I’d see his – wide, wild, vulnerable that night – from the time before the spell retook him. The moment he was still in there.And now… he wasn’t.I knew it before I opened my eyes that morning. My heart fluttered slowly, still holding on to some ridiculous hope that he had won the battle again and was Nathan – My Nathan – again.But I was wrong. The silence had changed. It wasn’t stillness. It was hollow.Nathan was already moving around the room — dressed, cheerful, soft voiced again.“Morning.” He said, turning toward me with a smile that once would’ve made me melt. It was his – the version Victoria had designed. Tender. Polished. Completely unaware.And it broke something in me.“Sleep okay?” He asked, crossing to me with a mug of something warm. “You kept reaching for me
SOPHIA'S POVWe stepped out of the bathroom like nothing had happened.My hand was still tingling where he’d held it so tightly, anchoring me to the truth, but I forced a smile as we walked down the hallway together. The illusion around us shimmered with deceptive warmth – the hallway walls soft with golden light, the scent of sugar and vanilla hanging in the air. Every detail was still perfect. Every corner still whispered comfort.I couldn’t let it fool me. Not again.Nathan’s hand lingered at the small of my back, just like it always did. The practiced ease of it – the way we slipped back into the charade – should’ve unsettled me more, but instead, it gave me strength. We could pretend. We had to. Victoria was watching. Listening. We couldn’t give her a single reason to suspect that I knew.But inside, I was burning.The version of me that had floated through this world for weeks – I hated her now. I hated how easily she’d believed this dream. How quickly she’d swallowed the lie. M
NATHAN'S POV For the second time, I opened my eyes in her dream. But this time, I wasn’t just another version of myself conjured from Sophia’s memories. I was… me. Fully. The first time I’d entered this world, I’d gotten lost – lulled into the illusion, the peace of it, the dangerous perfection that felt so close to what we’d both wanted. I didn’t even remember when it started slipping. That was the thing about enchantments like this – they didn’t drag you under. They sang you to sleep. I heard the laughter. I’d seen the twins playing, their cheeks flushed with joy. I’d looked into her eyes and seen no trace of the pain I’d caused her. And for one blissful moment, I let myself believe it was real. But that version of me – the version she dreamed up – he was built to stay. To keep her locked in this golden cage. Not me. It had taken everything I had to claw my way back to awareness, to fight off the numbness that crept in like vines around my mind. Elara’s warning echoed in my