LOGINIsla's POV:
Declan walked in, holding a bouquet of flowers and wearing a smile that would have fooled anyone who didn't know better. The roses were pink ones, the cheap kind they sold at the hospital gift shop downstairs.
I took a step back instinctively, my body responding before my mind could catch up. Fear shot through me in my veins. The last time I'd seen that face, he'd been standing over my dying body, watching as Sienna dragged him out of the room, watching as I bled out on our bedroom floor.
"Isla?" His smile faltered slightly, concern creasing his brow. "Are you okay? You look pale."
I forced myself to breathe, to think. He doesn't know. He can't know. This is a year ago. I haven't caught them yet. I'm not dead yet. I had to pretend. I had to play the part of the meek, silent girlfriend he expected me to be.
I nodded slowly, pressing my hand against my chest to steady my racing heart.
"You scared me," Declan said, moving further into the room. His voice was gentle, and concerned even, the kind of voice he used in public, when people were watching. "The hospital called me this morning. They said you fell down the stairs last night and hit your head? "
I nodded again, swallowing hard against the bile rising in my throat.
It was coming back to me now, the original incident. Margot had left her shopping bags on the stairs, deliberately, I'd always suspected. I'd been coming down in the dark to get water, and I'd tripped. I'd tumbled down half the staircase, landing hard on my ankle and hitting my head on the railing. Declan hadn't been home. He'd been "working late." With Sienna, probably.
"Here," he said, setting the flowers down on the bedside table. They looked wilted already, sad and pathetic. "I thought these might cheer you up."
I stared at them, remembering all the times he'd brought me flowers over the years, after arguments, after long business trips, after nights when he'd come home smelling like someone else's perfume. Guilt flowers, every single time.
"Let me help you get your things together," Declan said, moving toward the small closet where my clothes were hanging. "The doctor already signed your discharge papers. He said it was just a sprained ankle and a mild concussion. Nothing serious."
Nothing serious. I watched him pull my coat from the hanger, I watched him gather my shoes and purse with practiced efficiency. He'd always been good at this—at playing the attentive boyfriend when it suited him.
My hands clenched at my sides. A year ago, or rather, in my original timeline, I would have been grateful. I would have signed "thank you" and smiled at him, relieved that he'd taken time out of his busy schedule to pick me up. But now I knew better. Now I knew exactly what he thought of me. Tedious, boring, a placeholder, and a means to an end.
"The nurse said you ripped out your IV," Declan continued, glancing at the small bandage on my arm. "What was that about? Did something happen?"
I shook my head quickly, forcing myself to look confused and a little embarrassed, like I'd panicked for no reason. He studied my face for a moment, then seemed to accept it.
"Well, let's get you home," he said, holding out my coat. "I'm sure you'll feel better once you're in your own bed."
Home. The word made my stomach turn. That house wasn't home. It had never been home. It was a prison, filled with people who hated me, who were plotting against me even now. But I took the coat from him anyway. I slipped it on, letting him help me with the zipper like I was a child who couldn't manage on her own.
I had to be smart about this. I had to play along until I figured out my next move.
Declan gathered the rest of my things—the flowers, my purse, the paperwork from the hospital—and gestured toward the door. "Come on," he said. "I parked right out front."
I followed him out of the room, moving slowly because of my supposedly sprained ankle. The nurse from earlier saw us leaving and waved, looking relieved that I was finally cooperating. If only she knew.
The walk through the hospital corridors felt surreal. Everything looked the same as I remembered, but different somehow, brighter, and more vivid, like I was seeing it all for the first time. Because I was, in a way. This was my second chance.
We passed by the emergency room entrance, and I caught a glimpse of a man and a little girl near the reception desk. The man was tall, and dressed in a dark coat, and the girl was clutching a stuffed rabbit. My breath caught. It was him. The man from before. The one who'd caught me when I stumbled. Except that hadn't happened yet. Or had it? My head spun trying to make sense of the timeline.
Somehow, our eyes caught, and his brow furrowed.
Does he remember me? No. That can't be possible.
"Isla?" Declan's voice pulled me back. "What are you looking at?"
I tore my eyes away from the man and shook my head. Nothing. It was nothing.
Declan led me outside to the parking lot, where his sleek black car was waiting. He opened the passenger door for me, another performance of the dutiful husband, and I climbed in carefully. The leather seats were cold against my legs. The car smelled like his cologne, expensive and suffocating.
He got in the driver's side and started the engine, adjusting the rearview mirror before pulling out of the parking space.
"I called your father," Declan said as we merged into traffic. "I told him you had a little accident but you're fine. He said he'd stop by later this week to check on you."
My father was the man who'd arranged this marriage in the first place, the man who'd never once asked if I was happy. I stared out the window, watching the city blur past.
"Margot feels terrible about the bags on the stairs," Declan continued, his tone casual. "She didn't realize you'd be up so late. She said she'll be more careful next time."
Liar. Margot didn't feel terrible about anything. She'd probably left those bags there on purpose, hoping I'd trip, hoping I'd get hurt. Maybe even hoping I'd break my neck.
"Anyway," Declan said, turning onto our street, "the important thing is that you're okay. It was just a fall. Just a sprained ankle and a little bump on the head. Could have been much worse."
Could have been worse. I almost laughed. In a year, it would be worse. So much worse. But not this time. This time, I knew what was coming. This time, I had the advantage.
Declan pulled into our driveway and turned off the engine. "Home sweet home," he said, that fake smile back on his face.
I looked up at the house—the large, elegant prison that had swallowed so much of my life. This time would be different. This time, I wouldn't be the victim.
Declan got out and came around to open my door, offering his hand to help me out. I took it, letting him support my weight as I stepped onto the driveway.
The front door opened before we even reached it, and there, standing in the doorway with a fake and practiced smile plastered across her face, was Sienna.
Isla's POV:Alexander was warm against my chest and heavier than I'd expected for such a tiny person and his eyes were searching in the unfocused way of someone encountering light for the first time.I held him with both arms and looked at his small face and the feeling was not like anything I had a word for in my vocabulary.Not love in the way I'd understood love before with Callum or Rosie or even my mother, this was something older and more instinctive and so large it sat slightly outside the boundaries of language.It was protective and fierce and consuming in a way that felt like it had always existed somewhere deep inside me just waiting for this moment to emerge."He's perfect," I whispered and my voice was rough from crying and exhaustion.Callum was beside me laughing and crying at the same time and kissing my face and saying things I caught in pieces."You did it," he said. "You were so strong.""We have a son," I said still marveling at the reality of it."We have a son,"
Callum's POV:Two hours of pushing and I held Isla's hand through all of it and did not look at the monitor and did not do any of the things the fear in me wanted to do.The fear wanted me to leave the room and be somewhere that was not here and not watching the woman I loved in this much pain.The fear wanted me to demand interventions and ask for constant updates and spiral into panic about everything that could go wrong.But I stayed and I breathed when she breathed and I said the things the childbirth class had told me to say and I meant them which turned out to matter."You're so strong," I said. "You can do this.""One more push," I encouraged. "You're almost there."The fear that had been sitting in my chest since the moment Isla told me she was pregnant was a specific and familiar shape and it had Sarah's name written all over it.I didn't push it away because I'd learned that pushing it away gave it more room than acknowledging it did.I held the fear alongside everything els
Callum's POV:Eleanor arrived on a Sunday afternoon with two large bags that suggested a longer stay than the one month she'd originally mentioned and I helped her carry them up to the guest room we'd prepared.She took over the kitchen within four hours in a way that was entirely benevolent and efficient and which I found to my genuine surprise a relief rather than an intrusion.I'd expected to feel managed or like she was overstepping boundaries but instead I felt like something had been handled that I didn't know I needed handled.She organized the pantry and restocked things we'd been running low on and made a grocery list of items we'd need once the baby came and did it all without asking permission or making it feel like criticism of how we'd been managing.Rosie was ecstatic about having her grandmother staying with us and followed Eleanor from room to room like a very small and very verbal shadow."Grandma what are you doing now?" Rosie asked."Making a lasagna for the freezer
Isla's POV:Eight months pregnant and I'd made peace with the fact that I was uncomfortable and that comfort was not something I was going to recover until after the baby was born.My back protested by ten in the morning every day no matter how I positioned myself at my desk or how many times I stood up to stretch.My sleep was fragmented and shallow because I couldn't find a comfortable position and Alexander decided the middle of the night was the perfect time to practice gymnastics.I'd been wearing the same two pairs of maternity pants in rotation for three weeks because they were the only ones that accommodated my stomach properly and I'd decided I didn't care about fashion anymore.I was underneath all the discomfort deeply happy and these two states were not contradictory, they were just both true at the same time.The baby shower was organized by Eleanor and Patricia and held on a Saturday afternoon at our apartment.Eleanor had transformed the space with decorations I hadn't
Callum's POV:The board met Thursday morning to review Isla's maternity leave transition plan and I sat at the head of the table waiting to see if anyone would raise concerns.The plan was thorough and well-organized with clear delegation of responsibilities and backup coverage for every scenario.Jennifer Park would take lead on strategic reviews, Sophie Martinez would handle team management, and Richard Hayes would provide oversight to ensure continuity.The board members reviewed the documentation I'd distributed and asked a few clarifying questions but nobody raised significant objections."This is a solid plan," one board member said. "The coverage is comprehensive and the team seems capable."The approval came without lengthy discussion which was the best possible outcome because it meant the plan was strong enough to speak for itself.Richard Hayes used the end of the meeting to suggest something I hadn't anticipated."The division Isla leads has consistently exceeded performan
Isla's POV:Twenty-four weeks, the number meant something specific in medical terms and I knew exactly what it meant because I'd looked it up when I was six weeks pregnant and had been keeping quiet track since then.Viability, the point where a baby born prematurely had a real chance of survival with medical intervention, it was a milestone that mattered more to me than I wanted to admit out loud.I didn't mention the milestone to Callum in those terms because I didn't want him to know how precisely I'd been monitoring the calendar and counting down to this specific point.Instead I mentioned it to Patricia on the phone when she called to check in on how I was feeling."I'm twenty-four weeks today," I said casually.There was a brief pause and then Patricia said "good" in a tone that carried weight.She knew about my pregnancy in the other timeline and how I'd died at six weeks before I even knew what it meant to be carrying a child.Twenty-four weeks meant this baby had crossed int
Isla's POV:I arrived at the coffee shop twenty minutes early because I couldn't sit still at home any longer.The place was quiet on Saturday morning, just a few people scattered at tables with their laptops and coffee.I chose a table in the back corner where I could see the entrance and waited,
Callum's POV:Tomorrow was the board meeting.Tomorrow I'd either save my company or watch everything I'd built over the past decade crumble.The presentation sat on my laptop, ready to go. Every piece of evidence organized and documented.My legal team had prepared for every possible angle Gerald
Isla's POV:My hands were shaking as I pulled up the cloud storage account I'd created years ago and barely used.I uploaded the document, watching the progress bar crawl across the screen with agonizing slowness. Eventually, the upload finished. I checked twice to make sure it was there, safely
Isla's POV:I woke up before the sun.My eyes opened in the dark and for a moment I just lay there, staring at the ceiling and listening to the house settle around me.I heard no voices through the wall this time,just heavy silence, thick and heavy, the kind that presses down on you until you have







