Mag-log inElara’s POV.
The brunch is held in the grand dining room. Crystal chandeliers, a table long enough to seat twenty, though only eight sit at it. I walk in on Adrian's arm. I feel Agatha's eyes on me before I see her. She sits at the head of the table. Diamond rings weighing down her fingers, her gaze travels from my face to my dress and back again. I smile, sweetly. The smile I practiced in the mirror before I walked out of my room. Adrian pulls out my chair. A small gesture. One he never made in my first life. I sit, and he takes the seat beside me. His eyes flick to me once, then away. Agatha begins. "Elara," she says, her voice honey over steel. "I see you've chosen something... bold for your first family appearance." In my past life, I shrank. I smoothed my skirt. I mumbled something about not meaning to draw attention. I meet her eyes. "I wanted to look my best for the family. First impressions matter, don't they?" Her smile tightens. "They do. Which is why I'm surprised Adrian didn't mention your... background before the wedding." Adrian's hand pauses on his water glass. He does not intervene. He never does. I tilt my head. "What would you like to know?" She sets down her fork. "Your mother was a schoolteacher, I understand." "Yes. She taught literature. She believed words had power." "And your father?" "He passed when I was young." "I see." She sips her champagne. "Adrian tells me you studied music. Such an impractical pursuit for a young woman without means." The table goes quiet. Adrian's jaw tightens. He looks at his plate. In my past life, I would have nodded. I would have apologized with my eyes. I would have made myself small so she wouldn't feel threatened. I smile. "Music taught me discipline, focus and excellence.” I pick up my fork. "I've found those qualities serve me well in every area of my life." Her hand stops mid-air. The table is silent. I lower my eyes, let my voice soften. "I'm sorry. That came out wrong. I'm just nervous. It's my first family brunch." Agatha stares at me for a long moment. Something flickers behind her eyes. Not anger but wariness. Adrian looks at me, just a glance. But longer than before. After brunch, I excuse myself. I walk through the mansion, past the rooms I once wandered like a ghost. My feet carry me to the music room. I open the door. The Steinway sits in the center, draped in white, dust everywhere. I pull the sheet away, it billows, settles on the floor. I sit at the piano. My fingers find the keys. They are cold. I play something simple. Scales at first. Then arpeggios. Then a piece I learned when I was twelve, one my mother loved. The notes rise, tentative at first, then stronger. My fingers remember, my heart never forgot. Later that day, I pick up my phone. My fingers tremble as I dial. It rings twice. Then a voice, gruff and familiar. "Valerio." My throat closes, my mentor. The man who shaped me. The man I abandoned, for who? I shake my head "It's me," I say. "Elara." Silence. Long enough that I think he will hang up. "Elara." His voice cracks. "After how many months, you call?" "I know. I'm sorry. I'm so sorry." Another silence. When he speaks again, his voice is softer. "Are you alright?" I think about the pills. The divorce. The headlights. The second chance. "I will be," I say. "I need to play again. Properly. Will you teach me?" "You want to come back?" "Yes." He exhales, slowly. "You broke my heart when you left, Elara. You had more talent than any student I ever taught. And you threw it away." Tears prick my eyes. "I was young. I was stupid." "You were in love." "I thought I was. I was wrong." He is quiet for a moment. "When do you want to start?" "Tomorrow." "Then tomorrow it is. Welcome back." I smile. For the first time in a decade, it reached my eyes. **** The changes are small at first. I stop waiting up for Adrian. When he comes home at nine, the dining room is dark. No candles. No warm meal. No wife at the window. He walks through the kitchen. I hear his footsteps pause at the dining room door. I am in the music room. I play a nocturne, low and slow, the notes bleeding under the door. His footsteps resume. He goes to his study. But he stops again. I pause, he doesn't hear anything, then he walks away. Two weeks pass. Valerio comes to the mansion when Adrian is at work. We work in the music room, the door closed, the hours disappearing beneath my fingers. "Again," he says. "The transition was sloppy." I play again. "Better. Again." I play until my fingers ache. Until sweat drips down my back. Until the music is not something I play but something I breathe. One afternoon, Adrian comes home early. I do not hear him. I am deep in Rachmaninoff, my hands flying, the piano trembling beneath my touch. I finish. The last note hangs in the air. I open my eyes. Adrian stands in the doorway. His face is unreadable. But he is not moving. Not walking away. He stands there… like he doesn’t know what to do with what he’s seeing. I turn on the bench. I meet his eyes. "I didn't know you still played," he says. I give him the smile he knows. The one that asks for nothing. "You never asked." His jaw tightens. Something flickers in his eyes. Confusion. Or the first stirring of something he does not yet understand. He opens his mouth. Closes it. I stand. I smooth my dress. I walk toward the door. As I pass him, I pause. Close enough that he can smell my perfume. Close enough that his breath catches. "Dinner is in the refrigerator," I say. "If you're hungry." I walk away without looking back, he follows me. "There's a business gala next week. The pianist canceled." I stop and look up at him. "You used to play," he says. "Just fill in." In my past life, I would have been terrified. I would have played something safe. Forgettable. Something that did not draw attention. I lower my eyes, demure and obedient. "Of course." He nods, already looking away. He is halfway down the hall before he pauses. He does not turn around. "The dress you wore to brunch," he says. "The green one." I wait. "Wear it again." He walks away. I watch him go. In my past life, those words would have made my heart leap. A compliment. A scrap of attention. Something to hold against the cold. Now I know what his attention costs.Elara’s POV.The gala is held in the Sterling Hotel's grand ballroom. Crystal chandeliers. Champagne flowing. The city's elite gathered in their finest, here to see and be seen.I stand at the edge of the room, the emerald dress hugging my body, my hair swept back, my hands steady.Adrian approaches. He offers his arm. I take it.He leads me through the crowd, stopping to greet his business partners, accepting their praise, their envy, their respect. I stand beside him, silent, the dutiful wife."Adrian." A man in a gray suit claps his shoulder. "I hear your wife is playing tonight. How delightful."Adrian's smile is tight. "My wife will play a little piece. Nothing special."In my past life, they would have sunk into my chest, heavy with shame.Now, I smile sweetly and innocently."Nothing special," I echo.Adrian glances at me. Something flickers in his eyes. A question, maybe or the first stirring of unease.He does not know what is coming.The piano sits at the center of the stag
Elara’s POV.The brunch is held in the grand dining room. Crystal chandeliers, a table long enough to seat twenty, though only eight sit at it.I walk in on Adrian's arm. I feel Agatha's eyes on me before I see her.She sits at the head of the table. Diamond rings weighing down her fingers, her gaze travels from my face to my dress and back again.I smile, sweetly. The smile I practiced in the mirror before I walked out of my room.Adrian pulls out my chair. A small gesture. One he never made in my first life. I sit, and he takes the seat beside me. His eyes flick to me once, then away.Agatha begins."Elara," she says, her voice honey over steel. "I see you've chosen something... bold for your first family appearance."In my past life, I shrank. I smoothed my skirt. I mumbled something about not meaning to draw attention.I meet her eyes. "I wanted to look my best for the family. First impressions matter, don't they?"Her smile tightens. "They do. Which is why I'm surprised Adrian
Adrian’s POV.The empty bottle sits on the dining table. Vitamin B, the label says. I found it in the dustbin.“What is this really?”My mother doesn't look up from her tea. She shifts in her chair, bracing herself. “Vitamins. I told you. For that wife of yours.”“She has a name,” I say quietly. “Elara.”“Elara.” My mother tastes the name like poison. “The pianist. The one with no family, no money, no…”“What is in the bottle, Mother?” My grip tightens around the bottle. She sets down her cup, her eyes meet mine, cold and unblinking. “Birth control. Someone had to protect you from your own stupidity.”The words land like a slap. “You lied to me?”“I've been protecting you. Sophia is the one you should have married. She has connections, money and a future. That girl you dragged to the altar has nothing.”“It's none of your business who I marry,” I reminded her, trying not to lose control.“Everything about you is my business.” She stands, her voice dropping to a hiss. “I built this
Elara’s POV.Somewhere, a phone is ringing. No….. not ringing. Someone is shouting. A voice I know."Elara! Elara, answer me! Where are you? Pull over!” His breath is uneven, like he’s been running.Adrian! I have never heard him sound like that. Afraid and desperate. He sounds like a man who might lose something he didn't know he wanted.I smile faintly.Too late, the darkness comes slowly. It wraps around me. I gasp.My body jerks upright, air fills my lungs like fire. My heart pounds so hard I can feel it in my throat, my temples, my fingertips.I try to search my mind, but for a moment, everything is blank.Then it hits me. The accident. The rain. The headlights. Fuck!! Immediately, my hands fly to my body, but there is no pain…no scars or stitches.My eyes dart around. That’s when I realize I’m not in a hospital.I am in bed. A large, familiar bed. Silk sheets. Morning light filtering through floor-to-ceiling windows. I know this room. I know this light. I know the faint scent
Elara 's POV.The message plays in my head all night.I lie in the dark, staring at the ceiling, and wonder what she looks like. Sophia. His ex. The woman he laughs with on the phone. The woman he softened his voice for.I have never seen her face, he never kept photos. But I know she exists in the spaces between us, a ghost I have been competing with since the day I said I do.Morning comes. I rise at six, same as always. I make his coffee. I arrange the tray. I place a fresh rose in the tiny vase.He comes down at seven-fifteen. He takes the cup and leaves.But something is different. He is humming.I stand at the kitchen counter, listening to the sound fade down the hall. I have not heard him hum in years. The melody is unfamiliar, something that belongs to a man who is happy. He is happy because she is coming back.When I step out of the kitchen, I see the maid walking in with new shirts. Slimmer cuts, younger fabrics. He never did any of this for me.I remember our first year.
Elara 's POV.“A wife of mine doesn’t need a career.”The words don’t just echo, they settle into my bones as I stand in his study room, my back presses against the cold wall.I bring him the invitation, the Philharmonic, asking me to play. A single concert. I thought he would be proud, he might finally look at me the way he used to, before the ring was on my finger.He looks at me like I’ve handed him something embarrassing.“I don’t understand,” I say. “This is what I trained for. This is who I am.”“You’re my wife now.” He doesn’t look up from his papers. “That’s who you are.”“But Adrian…”His fingers pause briefly on the paper before he speaks.“I don’t care about your little hobby. The conversation is over.”I open my mouth to argue. To tell him that music isn’t a hobby, it’s my blood, my breath, the only thing that makes me feel like myself.He stands. Walks past me without a glance. The door closes behind him, and I am alone in his study, holding an invitation that suddenly f







