LOGINAva's Pov:
I jolted awake with a gasp that tore from my throat like it had been trapped there for years. My hands flew to my neck, my chest, checking for blood, for glass, for the cold emptiness of death. Nothing. Just the steady thrum of my heartbeat beneath my palm. I was breathing. I was alive. The room around me was too bright. It had white walls, white sheets, with the rhythmic beeping of a machine beside me. This was a hospital. My mind raced asfragments of memory came crashing into each other. I remembered the glass table, the blood, Vivian's smile, and Ethan walking away with Vivian by her side. I died. I know I died. So why was I here? What's going on here? Am I in the land of the dead? Or what? I threw the blankets off and stumbled out of bed, my legs shaking beneath me. The floor was cold under my bare feet as I rushed toward the small mirror hanging on the wall. My reflection stared back at me. I looked the same. I had the same face, same dark eyes, and same scar on my eyebrow from when I was seven. But something was different. Something looked different. My skin was smoother. The exhaustion that had settled into my bones as a result of suffering, it was gone. Even my hair looked healthier, and fuller. I wasn't sick yet. The cancer hasn't started taking over yet. I looked...younger. My breath came faster, as panic clawed at my chest. What is happening to me? What's going on? A nurse rushed into the room, her eyes wide with concern. "Miss Arande! You need to get back in bed. You shouldn't be up..." I didn't listen. I grabbed her by the arm, my fingers digging into her scrubs. She froze, startled by the intensity in my grip. I pointed frantically at the calendar on the wall behind her, my other hand moving in desperate signs. What date is it? What day is it? I signed. The nurse followed my gaze, confusion flickering across her face. "It's...it's March 15th," she said slowly. "You came in yesterday evening after a fall. You sprained your ankle. You had a fall. Do you remember?" March 15th. The air left my lungs. No. That's impossible. I died around March 16th. Or was I wrong? Did she mean a year ago? More than a year before the glass table. Before I found them together. Before I died. I shook my head, backing away from the nurse. My hands trembled as I signed again, faster this time. What year? What year is it? She looked at me like I'd lost my mind. Maybe I had. "It's 2025," she said gently, like she was talking to someone confused. "Miss Arande, are you feeling alright? Did you hit your head when you fell?" 2025. One year. I went back one year. My knees buckled. I gripped the edge of the sink to keep from collapsing. This isn't real. This can't be real. But the fluorescent lights were too bright to be a dream. The beeping monitor too steady. The nurse's concerned face too clear. I was here. I was alive. I went back. Oh my God. Oh my God. The realization hit me like a wave, drowning out every other thought. I clenched my jaw, my hands balling into fists. I thought about Ethan, Vivian, the glass table, and the way they looked at me like I was nothing. It all came rushing back, sharp and vivid, like it had just happened yesterday. Because to me, it had. A sound escaped my throat—half laugh, half sob. The nurse stepped closer. "Miss Arande..." I held up a hand, stopping her. I needed a moment. I needed to think. I turned back to the mirror, staring at my reflection. My lips parted slightly. I could feel it. The vibration in my throat. The breath moving past my vocal cords. I had my voice back. But I closed my mouth quickly, glancing at the nurse. She hadn't noticed. She was too busy trying to guide me back to the bed. No one could know. Not yet. I let her lead me back, my mind spinning with possibilities. If I really went back a year, then I could change everything. I could stop the engagement. I could protect myself. I could make them pay. But I had to be smart. I had to be careful. I sat down on the edge of the bed, my hands folded in my lap, my face carefully blank. The nurse checked my vitals, murmuring something about monitoring me for a concussion. I nodded absently, my thoughts elsewhere. Ethan would come. He always did after I got hurt. Not because he cared, but because it was expected. Because it made him look good. And sure enough, a few minutes later, I heard footsteps in the hallway. The door opened.Ava's POV The address Marcus had sent was in the quieter part of the city. The car he'd sent, I had refused at first, then accepted when I calculated how long the bus would take and remembered I had a timeline, pulled up in front of a townhouse that was large. A small tree in the front that had been there long enough to belong. I sat in the car for a moment after it stopped. This was where I would live. For one year, behind a contract and a signature, this building would be my address. The place I came home to. I got out of the car. Marcus answered the door himself. No staff member. No Claire with her charcoal blazer and economical walk. Just Marcus in a dark sweater and trousers that were slightly less formal than anything I had seen him wear before, which on him still looked completely composed. He looked at me for a moment. "You found it," he said. I nodded and held up my phone where I had typed: Your driver found it. I just sat in the back. Something moved at the cor
Ava's POV Nine AM. Don't be late. He replied. I set the phone down on the bed and looked at the engagement announcement still open on my screen beneath his messages. My name and Ethan's, the date. The photograph of two people who had never chosen each other. I closed the app and started getting dressed. I was in the lobby at eight fifty-two. The same receptionist. The same polished stone floor. The same deliberate quiet of a building that had decided long ago what kind of place it was going to be. This time she picked up the phone before I reached the desk. "Miss Arande." She didn't phrase it as a question. "Claire will be right down." I nodded and stood by the desk rather than sitting. I didn't feel like sitting. Claire arrived in three minutes, same charcoal blazer, same economical walk. "Mr. Donovan is ready for you," she said, and turned toward the elevator without waiting. I followed. The fourteenth floor received me the same way it had yesterday. The thick carpet
Ava's POV I woke up at five forty-three, which was really early from the usual time I woke.The room was still dark.I lay there for a moment, staring at the ceiling, listening to the house breathe around me. The distant tick of the hallway clock. The almost silent hum of the refrigerator two floors below. This was the only hour the house felt real.I sat up and reached for the notebook on the nightstand and opened it.Not to the why me page. I turned past that deliberately, and found a clean page toward the back.I wrote for twenty minutes.Not the proposal. Not the Hale timeline or the Ashton details or any of the organized information I had been building since the night I found that headline.Just thoughts. Unplanned and honest in a way I couldn't afford to be anywhere else. The cost of last night's performance. The texture of watching Vivian's eyes go to that door. The way Marcus had asked why me and the way the question had followed me through three hours of pretending to be so
Ava's POV I smelled his cologne before I opened the front door.I adjusted my expression before I turned the handle, Into something soft, slightly tired. The face of a girl coming home from a pharmacy errand with nothing more complicated on her mind than getting off her ankle.I pushed the door open.Ethan was in the living room.He was sitting on the sofa with his jacket folded over the arm beside him, his sleeves rolled to the elbow, a cup of something on the table in front of him. He was relaxed, at ease. Like the house welcomed him in a way it never quite managed with me.He looked up when I came in and he smiled.Not the practiced smile. Not the one he wore at family dinners and business functions, the one that lived only in the lower half of his face.This one reached his eyes.I had forgotten he could do that."There you are," he said, standing. "I was starting to think you'd gotten lost."I held up the small pharmacy bag I had actually stopped to purchase on the way home, bec
Ava's POV He let the silence run for a long moment then he opened the folder on his desk and turned it to face me. "About Maxwell Ashton."I looked at the page. It was a printout of something internal. An email chain, partially redacted, with Ashton's name appearing three times in the visible portions."My team pulled this last night after your call," Marcus said. "It doesn't confirm everything you told me. But it confirms enough that you're sitting in that chair instead of being referred to our legal department."I held his gaze and nodded once."So." He closed the folder. "Before we go any further. How do you have this information?"I reached into my bag and pulled out my notebook and a pen. I had prepared for this question. I had written four different versions of the answer and crossed out three of them.The one I kept was the only one that was true without being something he would believe.I wrote it and turned the notebook to face him.I can't tell you how I have it, not yet. W
Ava's POV Getting out of the house was the first problem.I came downstairs at seven fifteen to find Caroline already in the kitchen, which was unusual. She was a woman who treated mornings like a personal problem and rarely appeared before nine.She looked at me over her coffee cup."You're dressed." Her tone was flat.I nodded and signed that I had something to do."What thing?" She asked.I held up my phone and showed her the screen. A pharmacy website I had pulled up thirty seconds ago in the hallway and then I pointed to my ankle.She looked at the screen, then at me."Take the bus," she said, turning back to her coffee. "The car isn't available."I nodded like that was fine. Which It was. I had already planned to take the bus.I arrived at Donovan Enterprises at seven fifty-two.Eight minutes early.I stood on the pavement outside for exactly none of the time I had stood there yesterday. I had already done the looking up. I had already done the steadying.Today I just walked in







