MasukIsla's POV:
I woke up with a jolt, gasping for air like I'd been drowning. My eyes flew open, and bright lights burned into my vision, white ceiling, beeping machines, and the sharp smell of disinfectant in the air.
I was in a hospital.
My hands flew to my head, expecting to feel the sticky warmth of blood, and the sharp sting of shattered glass embedded in my skull, but there was nothing. No wounds, and no pain. How was that possible?
I sat up too quickly, and the room spun around me. My heart was beating fast against my ribs so hard I thought it might break through. I looked down at my hands, turning them over slowly. They were clean. No blood, and no scratches from fighting with Sienna.
What was happening?
I threw off the thin hospital blanket and swung my legs over the side of the bed. An IV was attached to my arm, and I ripped it out without thinking, ignoring the sharp sting that followed.
"Mrs. Hartley!" A nurse's voice called from somewhere behind me. "Mrs. Hartley, you need to stay in bed!"
I didn't listen. Well, couldn't. I needed to see, and to know what exactly was going on.
I stumbled toward the small bathroom attached to the room, my legs shaky from fright and. The nurse called after me again, but I ignored her, pushing open the bathroom door and flipping on the light.
I stared at my reflection in the mirror as I got in, my breath coming in short, panicked bursts. My face stared back at me. It was whole, and unmarked, with no bruises and no cuts. My dark hair fell around my shoulders, clean and neat, not matted with blood. I turned my head slowly, checking the back of my skull with trembling fingers.
Nothing. No wound. No scar. Nothing.
But I died. I knew I died. I felt the glass shatter beneath me. I felt the cold creeping through my body. I felt myself slipping away. So how was I standing here?
"Mrs. Hartley, please!" The nurse appeared in the doorway, her face creased with concern. "You need to get back in bed. You sprained your ankle, and had a concussion. The doctor wants to monitor you."
Sprained my ankle? The words hit me like a punch to the gut. Concussion?
Wait a minute. I ran my fingers through my hair, biting my lower lips, thinking.
I knew those words. I'd heard them before. My mind raced, scrambling to make sense of it. When had I sprained my ankle? When had I been in the hospital for something so minor?
And then it hit me....a year ago.
Over a year ago, I'd fallen down the stairs at home. Margot had left her shopping bags on the steps, and I'd tripped over them in the dark. I'd spent one night in the hospital for observation because I'd hit my head on the railing. That was March. March fifteenth.
No. No, that couldn't be right.
I pushed past the nurse, stumbling back into the hospital room. My eyes scanned frantically until I found what I was looking for—a small calendar on the wall near the door.
March 15th. The year stared back at me, clear and undeniable.
How the hell is today March fifteenth? This should be April 12th. I'm sure of it.
My knees went weak, and I grabbed the edge of the bed to steady myself.
"Mrs. Hartley, what's wrong?" The nurse moved toward me, her hands outstretched. "Please, let me help you back into bed."
I spun around and grabbed her by the sleeve of her scrubs, my fingers clutching the fabric desperately. Her eyes widened in surprise. I signed frantically, my hands shaking. *What date is it? What is today's date?*
She blinked, clearly not understanding sign language.
I shook her slightly, my grip tightening, and signed again, slower this time, more deliberate. *The date. Tell me the date.*
"M-March fifteenth," she stammered, looking confused and a little frightened. "It's March fifteenth. Are you okay? Do you need me to call the doctor?"
*What year* I signed again.
"2025" She responded, looking confused.
2025? No way!. I let go of her and stepped back, shaking my head.
This couldn't be real. This didn't make sense. People didn't just go back in time. That wasn't how the world worked. That wasn't possible. But the calendar didn't lie. The nurse didn't lie. My unmarked face in the mirror didn't lie.
Somehow, impossibly, I was alive, and I was a year in the past.
I sank down onto the edge of the hospital bed, my mind reeling. If this was real—if I really had gone back—then Sienna and Declan hadn't betrayed me yet. Not publicly, anyway. The affair had probably already started, but I hadn't caught them. I hadn't died.
And the baby. My hand moved instinctively to my stomach.
I wasn't pregnant yet. I could prevent it. I could make sure I was never alone with Declan during that family gathering. I could protect myself.
But more than that, I could make them pay.
The memories flooded back, sharp and vivid. Sienna's mocking smile. Declan's cold indifference. The way she'd crumpled the pregnancy results in her fist. The way she'd shoved me. The sound of glass shattering. Her hand petting my hair as I died.
*You could have just let it go.*
My jaw tightened. My hands curled into fists on my lap.
Pain shot through my head, sudden and sharp. I pressed my palm against my temple, wincing. The memories were too much, too heavy, and were crashing over me like waves, each one pulling me under. Declan's voice echoed in my mind. *I've been enduring you for years.* Sienna's laughter. *He's always loved me.* The cold spreading through my body as I bled out on the floor.
I squeezed my eyes shut, trying to breathe through the pain, through the rage building in my chest. They thought I was weak. They thought I was nothing.
They had no idea what was coming.
The door to the hospital room opened. I looked up, my vision still slightly blurred from the headache.
Declan walked in, holding a bouquet of flowers.
Isla's POV:The investor dinner was smaller than I'd expected.Only twelve people in a private dining room at a restaurant so exclusive it didn't even have a sign outside.These were Callum's most important business partners, the people who'd helped fund Thorne Industries when it was just starting and still maintained significant stakes in the company.I sat beside Callum at the long table, nervous despite our practice session yesterday. His hand rested casually on my knee beneath the tablecloth where no one could see.The touch was warm and grounding, his thumb occasionally stroking small circles that sent warmth spreading through my entire body.The investors were curious about me but respectful in how they asked questions.They wanted to know about my background, my interests, how Callum and I had met. I responded through my phone's text-to-speech function and they listened attentively without making me feel rushed or awkward.Several of the older investors mentioned knowing my mo
Callum's POV:The investor dinner tomorrow required convincing affection.These weren't just business contacts we could fool with rehearsed smiles and practiced touches.These were people who'd known me for years, who'd watched me navigate my wife's death and single parenthood, who would spot fake intimacy immediately.Thursday evening I found Isla in the library reading and suggested we practice.The same way we'd rehearsed before the charity gala. She looked up from her book, hesitated for a moment, then nodded and followed me to the living room.But this time the stakes felt different. The air between us was already charged from everything that had happened this week.From late night confessions and morning awareness and interview questions that had revealed more than either of us intended.“Let's start simple,” I said, trying to keep my voice steady and professional. “Basic couple touches. The kind that happen naturally when two people are comfortable together.”I moved to stand b
Isla's POV:I woke up Wednesday morning with swollen eyes from crying and the memory of Callum's touch still burning on my cheeks.I'd shared more with him last night than I'd intended. Vulnerability I usually kept locked away had poured out in typed confessions while he sat across from me and listened without judgment.I'd told him about my mother's death and my father's blame and growing up feeling like a burden no one wanted.And he'd reached across the kitchen island and wiped my tears away so gently it had almost broken me completely.That touch had felt significant.It was different from all our practiced public appearances.It was different from the careful boundaries we'd agreed to in the contract.I got dressed slowly, taking extra time because I wasn't sure how to face him this morning. What did you say to someone who'd seen you fall apart? How did you act around them the next day?When I finally made myself go to the kitchen, he was already there making breakfast.He looked
Callum's POV:The security issue took hours to resolve.Arthur Brennan had tried to access his office building after hours, apparently attempting to destroy evidence before federal investigators could seize it.The building security had stopped him but not before he'd made it to the twentieth floor and broken into his own office. They'd found him trying to shred documents when security arrived.Now there were additional charges. Obstruction of justice. Evidence tampering. The prosecutors were pleased because it made their case even stronger, but it also created complications that required immediate attention.I spent hours on the phone with Margaret and James, coordinating with authorities and reviewing what Arthur had tried to destroy.Most of it was backed up in cloud storage anyway thanks to Patricia's meticulous documentation, but the attempt itself showed consciousness of guilt.By the time I finished and headed home, it was past midnight.I expected the penthouse to be complete
Isla's POV:Rosie took the interview assignment very seriously.She spent fifteen minutes setting everything up in the living room, arranging pillows on the couch in a specific way to create what she called “the special interview spot.”She gathered her stuffed animals and positioned them around us like an audience. She found a hairbrush to use as a microphone and practiced holding it up importantly.Her seriousness about the whole thing was both adorable and terrifying.“Okay, you have to sit here,” she instructed, pointing at the couch. “Together. Like you're on TV.”Callum and I sat down where she indicated. We were not too close but not far apart. The middle ground we'd gotten good at maintaining.Rosie settled into the chair across from us with her notebook decorated with hearts and stars. She had her pencil ready and her worksheet with all the questions printed on it.“First question,” she announced formally, holding up the hairbrush. “Where did my parents meet?”“The hospital,”
Callum's POV:I knew I was being irrational.Duane Ashford had seemed perfectly polite, professional even. The conversation with Isla had appeared completely innocent, just friendly discussion about the literacy program and her mother.Yet something about watching another man make Isla smile like that had triggered an uncomfortable feeling in my chest.Watching her relax and engage so naturally with someone who wasn't me. Seeing how easily they communicated, how comfortable she looked signing with someone who actually understood instead of waiting for typed responses.I told myself it was concern about public perception.We were supposed to be engaged. Having Isla look too friendly with other men could damage the narrative we'd built. People might question whether our relationship was real if she seemed interested in someone else.But that reasoning felt hollow even as I tried to convince myself it made sense.The truth was simpler and more complicated.I didn't like seeing her talk t







