MasukJules' POV
The dashboard clock pulsed crimson in the dark, its digits stubbornly flicking towards midnight. The road stretched before me, a black ribbon winding through the emptiness, just a few miles short of Nana's farm. I pulled over, my hands trembling on the steering wheel, the engine's hum falling silent. For a moment, I sat there, eyes wet with a sadness that blurred the headlights into soft, glowing halos. Nana's questions would pierce me, gentle as they might seem. I couldn't bear them—not now, not with everything I'd lost.
I didn't choose to move. My body simply rose from the driver's seat, as if it had a memory of its own, a rhythm I no longer controlled. The fields called to me. The same fields where Adam and I had kissed for the first time—back when the world felt weightless, back when his hand in mine seemed to make everything glow. The air, thick with night, greeted me with a kind of emptiness I hadn't anticipated. It was louder than the quiet itself, like the earth had been waiting for me to return only to mock me with its stillness.
I fell into the grass, damp and cool, the blades sticking to my skin. My arm ached where the angry red marks from that fight—what fight?—stood out under the moonlight. I glanced down at my stomach. Not rounded yet, but already there was a heaviness I couldn't name. A weight more than physical, growing, pressing, reminding me of what I carried within me. A life. A child. His child.
A laugh caught in my throat—bitter, dry. "What now?" I whispered, my words disappearing into the night. "What am I supposed to do?" My voice trembled and broke as if even the night didn't want to hold my sorrow.
The tears came hot and fast, running down my cheeks. I wrapped my arms around my belly, feeling the faintest flutter of something—not quite hope, but not despair either. "I loved him," I whispered into the darkness, my voice soft, cracking. "I loved him so much. Your daddy, I loved him more than anything... but he didn't love me back. Not like I thought he did."
The sobs stopped suddenly, overtaken by a fierceness I didn't know I had. "Stupid," I spat the word into the silence, my chest tight with a rage that burned as hot as the pain. "God, Jules, you idiot. How could you fall for him—just some city boy who left you behind? And now look at you." I glared at the sky as if it, too, was mocking me. "Alone. With a baby. And nothing but a damn fool to show for it."
But then, beneath the anger, there was something else. A flicker. Small, barely perceptible, like the glow of a match in the wind. It was defiance—a reminder that I was still here. Still breathing. This baby inside me didn't care about Adam. This baby didn't care about the past or the hurt or the empty spaces Adam had left behind. It just needed me.
For the first time, something like hope began to thread its way through the sadness, delicate as it was. I wasn't sure what tomorrow would bring. I didn't even know what the next hour held. But I knew I wasn't alone—not really. Someone needed me. And that small, fragile truth felt like a lifeline.
I sat in that field for what felt like hours, staring at nothing and everything, my thoughts spinning slowly, like leaves caught in a lazy current. Time seemed to stretch and fold in on itself. The future I had once imagined, the one with Adam—gone. But a new one, unfamiliar and uncertain, began to form. It scared me. But it also stirred something in me. Strength. A strength I hadn't realized I'd lost until now.
The car felt different when I slid back into the driver's seat. I wasn't crying anymore. Instead, there was a quiet, steady resolve, like a still lake before the storm. The engine rumbled to life, but before I could pull away, the night cracked open.
A wail—high and broken—sliced through the silence, unnatural, like a howl of some wounded animal. My heart seized as I looked ahead. The sky was glowing orange, a thin ribbon of smoke twisting into the stars. The closer I got, the brighter it became, until I could see the flames licking the sides of a house. My house.
Panic seized me, and before I knew it, I was running, my feet pounding the ground as the fire roared louder in my ears. The heat wrapped itself around me, suffocating. Sheriff Mike grabbed me, pulling me back as I tried to fight against him, my lungs burning, my skin stinging with the heat.
"Where's Nana?!" I screamed, my voice cracking like the wood that splintered in the blaze. I tore at Mike's hands, my heart thudding in my chest, a frantic rhythm that drowned out everything else. "Mike! Where is she?!"
He didn't answer. Not at first. His eyes held something—something I didn't understand, something that made my blood run cold.
"No," I whispered. "Please, no..."
I couldn't hear the rest of what he said. Words tumbled out of his mouth, but they seemed distant, like they came from underwater. "Didn't make it out... too late... we tried." My knees buckled. I couldn't breathe.
Then, there was the man. A tall figure in a dark suit, his presence cold and sharp, like the edge of a blade. He said my name—Julia Rose Arthur—and his voice chilled me to the bone. His hand clamped around mine, hard and unrelenting.
Panic clawed at me. "What—what are you doing?"
"You're under arrest," he said, his voice devoid of any emotion. "You have the right to remain silent."
My mind fractured, pieces of thought splintering in a thousand directions. "No!" I screamed, my voice raw, desperate. "I didn't... I didn't do anything!"
They shoved me into the back of the police car. I called out for Mike, pleading, begging, but he didn't look back. And as the car pulled away, the house—my childhood, my family—burned in the rearview mirror, the red lights blurring into the flames, until everything was ash.
Jules' POVThe morning of my wedding came in clear and warm, the late-May light moving across the lake in the particular gold-green way it had been doing more and more often as the season properly arrived, and I woke before my alarm with a calm I had not expected, given the nervous, scattered energy of the night before.Madeline appeared at seven with coffee and a clipboard, transformed overnight from grieving best friend into a logistics commander of terrifying efficiency, and the next several hours moved in the particular blurred, golden way that important days tend to move — hair, the dress, Eli appearing in a small suit that he found deeply uncomfortable and complained about at intervals with the specific, repetitive insistence of a child being asked to tolerate something unreasonable, Madeline fixing my hair for the third time with the patience of someone who understood that today required patience.The garden had been transformed. Not elaborately — we had insisted on that, both
Jules' POVMadeline had insisted on tradition, which meant that the night before the wedding I was not allowed to see Adam, a rule I found simultaneously absurd, given that we had been living in the same house for the better part of a year, and oddly moving, given how seriously Madeline enforced it — relocating Adam to the guest cottage by the lake for the night with a firmness that brooked no negotiation, despite his clear and visible reluctance to be parted from us even for twelve hours."It's one night," Madeline had told him, physically herding him toward the door with his overnight bag. "You've waited four years. You can wait twelve more hours.""That's not actually a fair comparison," Adam had said, but he'd gone, pausing at the door to find me across the kitchen and mouth I love you with an expression so genuinely wounded by the separation that I'd nearly broken the rule myself just to spare him the night.I didn't. Madeline's resolve on the matter of tradition was, I had learn
~ ~ ~Jules' POVThe garden had been Madeline's idea originally — a small plot behind the kitchen, nothing ambitious, just a few raised beds where Eli could plant things and watch them grow, the kind of project meant to give a restless four-year-old something productive to focus his enormous energy on during the long stretch of spring afternoons. It had become, over the months, something larger than any of us had intended.I found myself out there most mornings now, kneeling in dirt that had become genuinely familiar to my hands in a way that surprised me — the particular satisfaction of working soil, of watching something respond to careful attention, that I hadn't experienced since Nana's garden, since the farm, since a version of my life I had believed was permanently behind me.Eli's section was chaos, by design. He had insisted on planting things in patterns that made sense only to him — a row of carrots interrupted by a single sunflower seed he'd insisted needed to be "in charge
~ ~ ~Adam's POVCooper Hale had been Adam's lawyer, fixer, and occasional moral compass for the better part of a decade, but it was not until the engagement that Adam fully understood the man also functioned, in some unspoken capacity, as something closer to a friend — possibly the closest thing to a friend Adam had managed to maintain through the years of building a company and losing a mother and very nearly losing everything else that mattered.He came to the house two days after the proposal, ostensibly to discuss the legal logistics of the engagement — a prenuptial conversation Adam had insisted on having early and gently, not from any lack of trust but because he wanted the entire arrangement to be unambiguous, generous, and entirely in Jules's favor regardless of what came later, a position Cooper had received with the particular dry approval of a man who had seen too many wealthy clients handle these conversations badly.But the legal discussion took twenty minutes, and then
Jules' POVMadeline's reaction to the engagement was loud enough that Victor fled the kitchen entirely and did not reappear for the rest of the afternoon, which I considered a fully reasonable response on the cat's part.She had been at the kitchen table grading a stack of student art portfolios when I came down, still in my pajamas, cold-addled hair a wreck, and held out my hand without saying anything because I genuinely did not trust my voice. She looked up, looked at my face, looked at my hand, and made a sound I had never heard a grown woman make before — somewhere between a shriek and a sob, entirely without dignity, completely without restraint."HE DID IT," she said. "HE FINALLY DID IT.""You knew?""Jules. Jules. He asked me three weeks ago what your ring size was. I told him I'd find out without you noticing. I have been waiting three weeks to lose my mind about this and you have no idea what that has cost me.""You knew for three weeks and didn't say anything?""I'm an exce
Jules' POVI was recovering from a cold — nothing serious, just the particular sluggish misery of a head full of pressure and a body that wanted only to stay horizontal — when Adam brought me coffee in bed on a Saturday morning in early April, which was not in itself unusual, except that he sat down on the edge of the mattress instead of handing me the mug and leaving, and something in the careful way he settled there told me this was not going to be an ordinary morning.Eli was downstairs with Madeline, watching cartoons with the particular devotion he reserved for Saturday mornings. The house was quiet in the way houses are quiet when everyone in them has somewhere specific to be except the two people in the room you're in.Adam held the coffee but didn't hand it over yet."How are you feeling?" he asked."Better. Still a little fuzzy." I pushed myself up against the pillows, hair a disaster, nose pink from a week of tissues, in absolutely no condition for whatever was clearly about
The thunder rumbled low in the distance, a heavy drumroll that shook the windows and the walls, rattling the thin panes of glass in their frames. Rain lashed against the house like a thousand tiny fists, and the room was filled with the steady hiss of water meeting earth. I watched Adam talk to Nana
Julie's POVIt should have been the moment that defined everything—when he stepped onto the farm. Part of me wanted him from the start, even if I refused to admit it. He was life itself, like the sun—a warmth that could burn, yes, but one you crave even when you know it might hurt. The first two wee
Jules' POV The room was draped in the gentle glow of late afternoon, the kind of light that makes the dust motes linger in the air, suspended like tiny worlds of their own. I hadn’t realized how still I’d been standing, how long I had been watching him, until his voice cut through the silence like
ONE YEAR AGOJules’ POVThe afternoon sunlight lingered lazily, cascading in golden threads through the small, old-fashioned windows, catching the dust particles in its path and making them glimmer, suspended in their quiet, aimless dance. I watched them float, as I often did. Outside, the vastness







