LOGIN(Cole)
I watch her fall in the flames. It’s horrifying.
“Maya… No!” My heart has seared with her.
How could she do this to me, to Owen?
How can Lucy be dead? I called the hospital. I checked in before the party and they said she was going well.
Maya’s made a crazy choice taking Lucy’s body with her. She’s denying Owen a healthy life.
The drugs, the drugs took her over, changed her.
I thought she loved us. I never meant to love her, but I did.
Jade rages and pounds her fists against my chest. “Get in there! Get in there and get that child from her!”
“It’s too late, Jade.”
Her voice cracks, jagged with panic. “I didn’t do all this work to miss out now! I need that spoilt brat’s body!”
I push Jade away so hard she falls backwards onto the grass.
“Don’t! Don’t you talk about Lucy like that!” I roar at her. “Was it you? Did you do what Maya said you did just to get the bone marrow?”
“Yes! Cole, I just can’t lose Owen. I can’t.” She begins to sob and cry uncontrollably.
I’ve known Jade forever. I thought she was my best friend.
I was so sure she wouldn’t harm anyone I loved on purpose.
I have proof of Maya’s drug use. Her father was an addict…
But it turns out, I was played by Jade from the start.
The roof of the mansion collapses.
The firefighters shove harder at me now, pulling me away, holding me there. There’s nothing I can do. I’ve lost them both now.
Maybe I should’ve told Maya the truth from the start. That I wasn’t looking for a marriage.
I wasn’t expecting to fall in love.
But I did. And now she’s gone.
I failed her. I failed them.
I abandoned my wife and daughter who needed me.
(Maya)
It is black.
I’m nowhere.
Not night, not sleep, not even death. Just nowhere.
I am standing in it, Lucy’s body in my arms. She is weightless and heavy all at once, her skin still, her curls damp against my wrist.
Her little hand is slack where it used to cling.
I press her to my chest and the emptiness presses back, crushing.
I scream and beg for her to be okay. To take me and not her. But I hear no sound. My voice doesn’t exist here. It’s in my head, not out loud.
I crush her to me and sob. I failed to protect her.
Now here I am. Only her. And me. And the end.
“Not yet.”
The voice comes from everywhere and nowhere. Deep, endless, calm. It slices into the void like a command.
I look around, wild, but there is nothing to see.
“You will go back,” the voice says. “You will make it right. You will stop them this time.”
I choke, sobbing without tears. “I can’t. They already won. They took her, they took everything.”
“Then change it,” the voice answers. “You are not finished. She is not finished. Take this second chance.”
I clutch Lucy tighter. Her body is cold, but the words "second chance" linger inside me.
I don’t want to let her go, but the void begins to pull. My arms shake as I try to hold her against me.
I’m falling and I can’t hold her any longer.
The darkness changes. The air changes. She’s gone from my arms. If I ever see her again, I swear I will make it right.
And then—
I wake choking.
My throat is raw, my lungs scrubbed empty. I suck in the air, gasping, coughing until the room spins and steadies again.
For a moment I don’t know where I am.
Panic crushes down. My hands reach for her, but they’re empty. Did I fail? Did I drop her?
No, she disappeared. I remember burning and then falling. Oh God, am I in Hell?
Am I doomed to relive losing Lucy for eternity?
How can my eyes be opening now?
I burned with Lucy’s body in my arms. I know it. The fire ate us both. I saw it. I felt it.
How can I be here… alive… in my bedroom?
The walls are the same. The curtains, the dresser, everything.
No. This is wrong. This is impossible. A voice fills my head with the words ‘second chance.’
I stumble from the bed, heart pounding, vision swimming. I head straight for the crib. My heart is pounding as I cross the room.
Please. Please let her be there.
Let the voice that said I had a second chance be real.
I held her while she took her last breath.
I suffered through all those days of taunts from Jade, the lies, hearing how she’d taken it all from me. I watched my daughter die.
Did I dream it? Was it the drugs Jade forced into me? Was it madness?
The crib is exactly where it should be. My eyes lock onto her. I suck in a deep breath and just hold it.
Lucy is alive. Not still, not pale, not wired to machines.
She is up on her feet, hair in a wild halo of curls, slapping the bars with her palms and laughing at nothing.
The sound breaks me open.
I stagger to her, legs shaking. I can barely feel the ground under me. When she sees me, her little face lights up. She grins and reaches.
For a split second, my mind doesn’t believe what my eyes see.
My arms hesitate, like they’re scared of clutching air, of proving this a hallucination. My hands hover, trembling, before I finally scoop her up.
The warmth of her almost floors me. She wriggles, impatient to be free and run, her little voice babbling against my shoulder.
It’s real. The tiny huffs of her breath against my neck. The heat of her skin. The sound of her heartbeat pressed to mine.
I collapse back against the crib, sliding down to the floor with her clutched tight. Tears pour down my cheeks. My body shakes with each sob.
I can’t stop touching her. My hands trace her back, her arms, her cheeks. I kiss the soft space between her eyes, the curve of her ear, the crown of her head.
She squirms and pushes at me. But I just need a little longer to understand what is happening.
Images crash through me. Her body in my arms. The flames. The smoke. My decision to take her with me so Jade couldn’t touch her again.
And now this.
I bury my face in her neck. She’s here, she’s real.
Her voice. I never thought I would hear it again.
“Mama.”
“Yes darling,” I whisper fiercely, holding her tighter. “I’m here. They’ll never get near you again.”
She wriggles, making small, frustrated sounds, I put her on the floor and watch her toddle over to her toys.
What day is it?
I drag myself to the nightstand, grab my phone, and fumble it awake.
The date stares back at me.
It’s before the divorce. Before the paternity lie. Before Jade had me committed. Before Lucy was taken and used until there was nothing left of her.
My whole body seizes with the enormity of it.
The second chance.
It’s real.
Somehow, impossibly, I am back.
And this time, they will pay.
(Jade)Owen has been awake for two hours.But in the last ten minutes he hasn’t been calm or comfortable. He’s struggling.His skin is too warm beneath my palm, he’s restless. He presses his fingers to his temples and squeezes them hard.“My head hurts again,” he says.Seeing this is horrible. I don’t know what it means.I thought him waking up meant positive things. That his ravaged body was finally going to stop attacking itself.Cole shoots a worried glance at Maya and frowns. Then he puts the back of hand against Owen’s forehead. “He’s burning up.”He doesn’t tell me. He doesn’t even look at me. It’s Maya he’s focused on.I see it.I hate it.Cole presses the call button. A nurse pops her head in the door. “How can I help?”“Owen is burning up. Get the doctor in here.” Cole orders and she nods and leaves again.My heart is in my throat. “You’ll be okay, Owen. You have to be,” I say.I don’t think he even heard my words.The doctor strides in. Not any doctor. My doctor. He gives me
(Maya)His fingers jerk first.Not a gentle twitch, but a sharp, uneven movement that knocks lightly against the mattress.His small hand makes a fist and then releases.Cole sees it at the same second I do.“Oh my God—” he says, already moving.He slams the call button hard, once, then again. “Owen. Hey. Hey, buddy. Can you hear me?”Jade’s chair scrapes back violently as she surges to her feet.“Owen?” Her voice cracks on his name. “Owen, baby, can you hear me?”His eyelids flutter.Once.Twice.Then they open.Not fully. Not steady. But open.Jade kisses his forehead and leans over him.Cole lets out a broken sound and spins toward me.He grabs me, lifts me clean off the floor, and turns in a rough, uncoordinated circle, laughing and swearing at the same time.“He’s awake,” he chokes. “He’s awake, Maya—he’s awake!”I cling to him, laughing and crying at once, the shock hitting me before my brain can catch up.He sets me down but doesn’t let go, his forehead pressed to mine like he
(Maya)A family lounge sits at the center of the mansion medical wing.That wasn’t an accident. I wanted the kids to see us moving around, talking, eating. To hear chatter. To feel as normal as possible.No tension. That’s the goal anyway.Tension is my middle name lately.Lucy is curled beside Owen on the wide bed, her body angled toward him, one small hand resting near his arm.His breathing is deep and even since he’s arrived.Cole looked so worried and he hasn’t left his son’s side. Or his daughter’s.He can do dedicated and loyal. He can do unconditional love.With the kids. I don’t believe he can do it with me. I used to. Believing that was my whole life.Until my life ended in horror circumstances. In a level of despair no one could ever imagine reaching.But then I came back. I got my second chance and I am not going to waste it. I will have my revenge.But not at the expense of these kids. I have to be sure their lives are better too.It’s working. Being together here is work
(Jade)From the outside, everything looks settled.Lucy is resting beside Owen. Owen is holding steady.His fingers curled around his sister’s. And his breathing is more steady and deeper when she is beside him.Yesterday he had his first lifesaving infusion. It will work. It has too. It’s his last hope.From the outside, this works.Lucy is settled. Owen is resting. Cole and Maya and I talk like normal parents talking about normal things. Coffee. Food. What Lucy usually eats. What Owen used to like watching before all of this.Anyone walking in would think this is what healing looks like.I lean back in my chair and play along. I nod when I should. I say things that sound supportive. I don’t overdo it.Inside, I’m thinking about how temporary all of this is.Lucy is useful right now. That’s the truth of it.Once that stops being true, everything changes.People don’t like thinking about things that way. They call it heartless. They pretend situations don’t have expiry dates.They do.
(Maya)I can’t leave the hospital without seeing Tessa.I’m halfway through her door when I hear a chair scrape inside.Rhett places himself in front of me, shoulders squared, eyes cold. Blocking my entry.“You’re not going near her,” he says. “I told you to stay away.”“Tessa is my best friend,” I reply. “Move.”“She’s my sister,” he says. “And you’re the reason she is in here.”I look past him.Tessa lies still, pale under the sheets, hair shoved back, tape and tubes and machines monitoring everything. Waiting for her to wake up. I need for her to wake up and be okay.This world needs her light.Rhett catches my gaze and shifts to block more of her. “Just leave.”“I’m not here to argue,” I say.“Neither am I.”“I’m leaving the hospital later tonight,” I say. “Lucy’s cleared to be transported and recover at home.”“I’m glad she is okay. I’ll take care of Tessa from here.”“Tessa needs me,” I say. “You can’t stop me from being here.”His eyes cut into me. “You cost me everything. My c
(Cole)The nurse checks the line, checks the dressing, checks the monitor, then writes the time on the chart.“Infusion is complete,” she says. “He’s stable. The next phase is the rough one. His counts will drop. He may look worse before he looks better. Fever protocol is strict. Keep his environment calm at all times.”Her eyes flick between Jade and me, then she softens her voice. “Try to keep conversations… gentle.”Jade nods without looking up. Her hand stays on Owen’s forearm.Owen doesn’t wake. Somehow I was hoping he would. He’s barely been awake since he’s been in here.He’s pale and wiped out, mouth slightly open, breathing shallow but even. He looks so fragile and it makes everything in me go sharp and protective.The nurse finishes, then slips out and shuts the door behind her.Hospital quiet settles back in.Jade leans closer to Owen and smooths the blanket near his shoulder.She presses a kiss to his hairline, then sits back in the chair, eyes locked on his face as if wat







