FAZER LOGINGrace Williams believed the worst thing in her life was the cancer slowly stealing her future. She was wrong. On April 12, 2023, weakened by illness and trapped in a loveless marriage, Grace returns home to a devastating discovery. Her husband, Michael Park, is in bed with her best friend, Susan Hargreaves. The confrontation turns violent, and in the chaos, Michael kills her. But death is not the end. Grace awakens in 2013, ten years before her murder, with all her memories intact. She realizes that fate, or perhaps the spirit of her late father, has given her a second chance. This time, she refuses to be a victim. Determined to escape her tragic future, Grace manipulates events to bring Michael and Susan together, trapping them in the toxic marriage that once destroyed her life. Soon, she discovers she is not the only one who remembers the past. Her quiet manager, Ethan Adams, has also returned with his memories. Once secretly in love with her, he is now determined to protect her. As their bond deepens into love, they attract the attention of Ethan’s ambitious ex fiancée, Rachel Stevens, who joins forces with Michael and Susan. Their alliance spirals into betrayal and violence that ultimately destroys them. When everything finally collapses, Grace stands free from the life that once doomed her. On April 12, 2023, the day she once died becomes the beginning of a new life filled with love, hope, and a future she chose for herself.
Ver maisGRACE’S POV
April 11, 2023.
6:00 a.m.
My alarm rang loudly, but I had already been awake for nearly an hour. Even then, it started me a bit.
Sleep didn’t seem to come to me as easily as it did before anymore. Whenever it tried to come, it was thin and restless, slipping away whenever the dull ache in my stomach increased into something sharper.
This morning the pain had woken me before dawn, as usual. It left me dreading the entire day already. The pain laid curling low beneath my ribs, and spread slowly outward like water penetrating a cabin.
I laid still, staring at the ceiling, the doctor's voice echoing in my head. I couldn't get it out of my head.
Gastric cancer.
The words still didn’t feel real, even after hearing them twice. The doctor had spoken gently, carefully, as if speaking softly could make the pain go away.
“It’s spreading, Mrs. Williams.” He had said, eyes searching my face as my own eyes strayed from his to my fiddling hands.
I turned to the other side of the bed. Beside me, Michael slept, his breathing slow and even. One of his arms was thrown across his pillow, his face was relaxed in a way I hadn’t seen when he was awake in a long time.
He hadn’t noticed when I left for the hospital two days ago. I didn't even bother to tell him, I hoped he'd notice.
He hadn’t asked why I came home pale and quiet, too busy in his world to take a second look at me.
He hadn’t noticed the prescription bottles in my handbag. Nothing about me concerned him anymore.
Or maybe he did notice all those things, just didn't care.
I pushed the blanket aside and sat up slowly, waiting for the dizziness to pass before standing up. The bedroom was quiet except for the soft hum of the air conditioning. Sunlight had started creeping through the curtains, thin and pale.
I made my side of the bed carefully, smoothing the sheets, tucking the corners, pressing out every crease. I made sure not to disturb Michael.
I’d always done it this way. Having things done properly made things feel like they were under my control, even when nothing else was.
In the bathroom, Michael’s presence the night before was evident. He'd come back home late when I was already in bed and had headed straight for the shower.
His damp towel laid on the floor near the sink, the shaving cream sat open, water droplets spotted the mirror. A trail of dry shaving foam marked the edge of the basin.
I cleaned everything without thinking, as usual. At this point It wasn’t love that made me do these things anymore.It was a habit. A routine that had stayed with me.
Something steady in a life that no longer felt steady at all.
By the time I stepped into the kitchen, the ache in my stomach had dulled slightly. I moved slowly, preparing breakfast as I made toast, scrambled eggs, and coffee. The smell of food should have made me hungry, but lately food only made my stomach uneasy. I couldn't stomach anything, just water and juice.
Michael walked in a few minutes later, already dressed for work, his attention fixed on his phone. His shirt was neatly tucked into his matching pants, his tie smartly knotted and his hair done the way he always likes.
“You didn’t wake me,” he said, pulling out a chair and sitting.
“I thought you needed the rest,” I replied, my voice soft.
He took a sip of coffee and frowned faintly. His eyebrows scrunched. “You’ve been off lately,” he said. “The house isn’t the same.”
I didn’t answer him, only focusing on making breakfast.
Lazy is what he meant to call me.
That was the word he had used last week.
If I told him I was dying, would he still think I was lazy? Or would he only worry about heading to work late? Or dinner being served late?
“I’ll be home late,” he said, standing and grabbing his keys. He placed his mug on the table and turned around.
“Okay” I replied so it didn't seem like I was ignoring him.
He left without another word, his footsteps echoing through the house, briefcase in hand.
The front door closed, and silence settled over the house like a weight placed on an incapable base.
I stood in the kitchen for a long time, one hand pressed lightly against my stomach as the pain returned, sharper this time.
For a second, the room tilted, but I steadied myself against the counter and took a slow breath.
Life didn’t stop because I was possibly dying, even though I wish it did. Bills still had to be paid, unfortunately. Work still had to be done because no one else would do it for me.
Painstakingly, I dumped the entire breakfast into the trash can. It's not like anyone would want to eat it. I grabbed a box of apple juice, poured some into a glass and gulped it down.
Then, I left to get dressed for work.
I picked out an outfit, work pants and shirt. I checked my bag for any misplaced file and when I didn't see anything out of place, I headed to the bathroom to shower.
In the shower, I did everything I could to drown out the thoughts, but nothing worked. The warm water turned cold, I remained there for a minute longer, wishing I could curl up in there and cry.
After drying up, I made up a little, something to remind me that I was alive. Unwell, but alive nevertheless. The pants and shirt gave more space than usual, proof that I had lost weight. I refused to think about it.
I picked up my bag and walked out of the house, locking up and getting into my car. The ache appeared again, like another reminder that I wasn't only alive, unwell too.
GRACE'S POV The silence that ensued was cold and very surprising. As everyone stared at Grey, he only looked at us for a brief second, shrugged and then looked back at this computer. I was trying to make total sense of what he said, and I'm sure the others were as well. I looked back at Lana, she looked very pale, like a secret she'd spent a long time keeping had been exposed. “Say what now?” Craig asked, almost yelling.Grey shrugged again, almost like he hadn't just said something very shocking. “Lana? What's he talking about?” Julia asked, turning to look at her. Lana, still pale, looked at all of us. She tried to speak, but ended up stuttering. Then, she cleared her throat, “He's lying, obviously. Why would I do that?” The question was directed to Grey.Grey picked up a pen from his table and started drumming with it, an organised and almost distracting beat. “Because you liked the guy, and wanted him, but he was proving to be difficult to conquer. So, when you found out, you
GRACE’S POVAs the elevator doors closed, I stomped my feet annoyed at the nickname Ethan just threw at me. But the most glaring problem, I was late late.The doors opened and I took a deep breath before stepping out and walking to my office. Tentatively, I opened the door to everyone working silently. They looked towards the door as I walked in and went back to working. I sighed again, walking to my desk. “You're late.” Lana said as I walked past her. “Good morning to you too.” I replied, sitting down and putting my bag down. “You're late.” She repeated, fingers moving rapidly across her keyboard. I nodded. “I can see that, I have the time on my phone.” She paused, stared at me blankly and continued typing. “You left me to present our updates alone.” I groaned, leaning into my seat, hoping it would just swallow me briefly. “Look, I guessed. And I'm sorry, it's just been rough. It won't happen next week. I'll be here, early and ready. Did they ask about me?”She glanced at me a
GRACE’S POVThe moment I stepped out of Susan’s apartment building, reality hit me like a slap I didn’t deserve.I was late, and very late at that. I glanced at my wrist instinctively, forgetting for half a second that I wasn’t wearing a watch. I cursed quietly asI fumbled for my phone instead, checking the time.My heart dropped into my stomach at the sight of the time glaring at me from the phone screen. Even that was mad at me.“Oh my God.” I hastened my steps, almost running. My building was just down the street, thankfully. I still had to shower and dress up, I'd have to leave food till lunchtime.All of this happened because of Susan. She'd promised we would come back safe and early and still come to work without being late or too tired. I honestly don't know what I was thinking when I believed her, because the result was her, extremely hungover, and late, and me, tired and late. And I still wasn't ready to get to work yet.I hurried down the street, my steps quick and uneven a
GRACE’S POV“Graceeeeeee!”I groaned, pulling the throw pillow over my head.No, o, no, no. Not today, not this morning. Maybe if I ignored her, she'd go away. I stayed silent and hoped she would disappear.“Grace!” She didn't. Gosh, she was persistent.I sat up abruptly, pissed and drained. “What?!” I snapped. My eyes focused immediately, but not without a sharp headache.Susan stood a few feet away from me, looking like a complete disaster. Her hair was everywhere, her eyes were slightly swollen, and her face was scrunched in pain.“I’m dying.” she said, sounding so sure of herself.I blinked at her. “You said that yesterday, you said you saw the light.”“This is different.” she gestured to her body I shut my eyes and opened them. “How?”“I mean it this time.”I sighed and dragged myself out of the couch. It's not like it was so comfortable anyway. “You’re not dying. You’re just hungover.”“I don’t get hangovers.” She sounded like it was something I should know, and by me, I didn't


















Welcome to GoodNovel world of fiction. If you like this novel, or you are an idealist hoping to explore a perfect world, and also want to become an original novel author online to increase income, you can join our family to read or create various types of books, such as romance novel, epic reading, werewolf novel, fantasy novel, history novel and so on. If you are a reader, high quality novels can be selected here. If you are an author, you can obtain more inspiration from others to create more brilliant works, what's more, your works on our platform will catch more attention and win more admiration from readers.