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Six Months

Penulis: Gelina Rose
last update Tanggal publikasi: 2026-06-04 22:04:58

Six months later Evelyn was running late.

She snatched her coat, bag, and keys—Liam had left them on the counter again like a quiet dare. Three weeks into cohabitation and he’d stopped reminding her. Just adapted.

“You’re going to be late,” he called from the kitchen.

“I know.”

“You said that yesterday.”

“And I was late yesterday too,” she shot back, appearing in the doorway.

He stood at the stove, left burner blazing too hot like always. He didn’t turn around.

“You look nice,” he
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  • Claimed By An Entity    Dana

    Dana arrived at seven sharp with a bottle of good red wine and the energy of someone trying very hard not to look like she was trying. She wore a simple black dress that somehow made everything about her feel intentional. Evelyn liked her immediately. She was almost exactly Marcus’s height, with deep, rich skin and natural hair pulled back in a clean, elegant twist. Her eyes locked on with quiet intensity. She handed Evelyn the wine at the door and said, without hesitation, “Your book sounds incredible. Marcus won’t stop talking about it. Like, actually won’t shut up.” “Complete exaggeration,” Marcus called from the kitchen, his voice carrying that familiar defensive edge. Dana leaned in slightly, lowering her voice with a small smirk. “He cried. Real tears.” “I did not cry,” Marcus shouted louder this time, clearly listening. Dana’s eyes sparkled as she looked at Evelyn. “He absolutely cried. Multiple times.” Evelyn grinned, already feeling the warmth settle in her chest. "Yea

  • Claimed By An Entity    Six Months

    Six months later Evelyn was running late. She snatched her coat, bag, and keys—Liam had left them on the counter again like a quiet dare. Three weeks into cohabitation and he’d stopped reminding her. Just adapted. “You’re going to be late,” he called from the kitchen. “I know.” “You said that yesterday.” “And I was late yesterday too,” she shot back, appearing in the doorway. He stood at the stove, left burner blazing too hot like always. He didn’t turn around. “You look nice,” he said. “You can’t even see me.” “Don’t need to. You get this sharp, electric thing when you’re rushing. It’s sexy.” She smiled, helpless. “I’ll be back by seven.” “I’ll have food ready.” “Don’t use the left burner.” “Already using it.” She left before the argument could spark. --- Fiona didn’t waste time. The editor’s office smelled like old paper and fresh ambition. She leaned back in her chair, eyes sharp. “Margaret’s chapter made me cry on the tube. In front of strangers

  • Claimed By An Entity    After

    The flat was on the third floor of a converted Victorian building in a quiet part of the city.Nothing like Harrow Hill.That had been deliberate.No grand staircase. No high ceilings. No ivy strangling the facade or gardens pressing close like conspirators. Just three rooms and a bathroom and windows that looked out over an ordinary street where ordinary things happened at ordinary hours.Evelyn had chosen it specifically for its ordinariness.She loved it completely.They arrived back at seven in the evening.The drive had taken longer than expected. Traffic on the motorway. A detour around roadworks. The particular extended quality of a journey that neither person is in a hurry to end because what waits at the destination is good and they both know it and want to arrive slowly enough to feel it properly.Liam carried the bags up.Evelyn unlocked the door.The flat was exactly as they had left it. Small and warm and smelling of the coffee they had made that morning before driving up

  • Claimed By An Entity    The Empty Hill

    The cafe at the bottom of the hill was small and warm and smelled of bacon and fresh coffee and the particular comfort of somewhere that had never heard of Harrow Hill and didn't care. They took a table by the window. Marcus ordered enough food for two people without apology. Serena ordered tea and a slice of toast and ate half of it. Liam ordered eggs and kept refilling Evelyn's coffee without being asked. Evelyn ordered the full breakfast. She hadn't eaten properly in days. The house pressing and the line on her arm darkening and the particular way anxiety kills appetite had kept her running on tea and determination for most of the past week. Now she was hungry. Really hungry. She ate everything on her plate and considered ordering more. Nobody talked about the house. They talked about ordinary things instead. Marcus's drive down. Whether the cafe's coffee was better than what they had been making at the house. Whether Serena had ever been to this town before her visits to

  • Claimed By An Entity    Down

    Evelyn Pov She didn't sleep. Not really. She drifted in and out of something that felt more like waiting than rest. Liam's arm around her. The guest room quiet. The house doing what it had been doing for three days now. Pressing. Pushing. Using the last of whatever it had left. She let it press. It didn't matter anymore. In a few hours it would have nothing left to press with. Joel's crew arrived at five forty five. Fifteen minutes early. The sound of vans on the gravel drive pulling Evelyn fully awake. She was dressed and downstairs before the first van door opened. The others followed one by one. Liam. Then Marcus rubbing his eyes. Then Serena already in her coat with her notebook under her arm. They stood on the front steps and watched Joel's crew move around the property with a brisk professional efficiency that felt almost surreal. Hard hats. Equipment. People talking into radios. The ordinary business of bringing something down. Joel found them at six. "We're ready,"

  • Claimed By An Entity    Deconstruction

    Marcus's contact called back the next morning. His name was Joel. Demolition contractor. Fifteen years experience. He had taken down listed buildings before, old churches, Victorian factories, the kind of structures that needed careful handling and precise sequencing. Marcus put him on speaker at the kitchen table. Joel asked practical questions. Age of the structure. Construction materials. Proximity to other buildings. Whether there were any underground utilities to consider. Marcus answered everything. Serena filled in the technical details about the foundation points without explaining why she knew them in the language she knew them in. Joel said he could do it. Three days. He needed three days to get his crew and equipment up the hill and prepare the structure properly. After Marcus hung up the kitchen was very quiet. Three days. Evelyn looked at the line on her arm under the table where nobody could see her checking it. Slightly darker than yesterday. Thr

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