ВойтиRain hammered against the black SUV as Isabella stood frozen in the middle of the road.Victor Hale’s smile never moved.The gun stayed pressed against Emma’s head.And AlexanderAlexander looked terrified.Not angry.Not cold.Terrified.That frightened Isabella more than the weapon.Because Alexander Hale was a man who never showed fear.Not when companies collapsed.Not when enemies threatened him.Not even when blood stained his own hands.But right now, staring at Victor through the storm, something inside him had cracked.“Get away from the car,” Alexander said quietly.Victor laughed softly.“You always give orders like people should obey automatically.”Emma sobbed violently in the backseat. “Isabella please…”Her voice broke Isabella’s paralysis instantly.She took a step forward.Alexander grabbed her wrist hard.“No.”She turned toward him sharply. “He has my sister!”“And he wants you to react emotionally.”Victor smiled wider. “See? He knows you well.”Isabella yanked her
The darkness did not come quietly.It swallowed the road whole.One second Isabella could feel the rain against her skin and the cold metal beneath her hand.The next second everything vanished.No headlights.No sound.No breathing.Nothing.Her sister’s hand slipped from hers.Panic exploded inside her chest.“Emma!”No answer.Her pulse slammed violently against her ribs as she reached blindly through the darkness. Her fingers touched empty air. Wet leather. Broken glass.But not her sister.“Emma!”Still nothing.Then—A soft click.The dashboard lights flickered weakly.Just once.Enough for Isabella to see the front windshield.And the reflection staring back at her.Not her.Him.Alexander Hale.Her breath caught.The lights died again immediately.“No…” she whispered.That was impossible.Alexander was nowhere near the accident.Nowhere near this road.So why had she seen him?Her breathing became uneven.Because this was not just memory anymore.Something was pulling pieces t
Silence had settled, but it was not peace. It was a silence that pressed against her skull, that filled her lungs with weight, that made her knees tremble whenever she tried to move. The car sat on the wet road, metal twisted, glass shattered, lights fading. The world outside had retreated into shadow.Her hands were shaking. Her fingers were bloody. The warmth she had felt in the backseat, from the third body, from herself, from her sister, had not left. But it carried something else. Something alive. Something calculating. Watching.She turned slowly. The glow from the figure’s eyes had dimmed. Not gone. Just waiting. It was patient, infinite, and aware.Isabella’s heart thudded so loudly she thought it might give her away, but to whom, she could not say. The presence that had haunted her, manipulated her, tested her, had not moved. Yet she could feel it everywhere. In the air, in her thoughts, in the quietest beats of her heart.Her sister’s voice was small, broken, but real. “Isab
The rain had stopped. Not a drop remained on the road, on the broken glass, or on the twisted metal. The air smelled heavy, metallic, and cold. She could feel it pressing into her lungs with every breath she took. Her body ached. Her mind screamed. Her heart thudded like it wanted to escape her chest.Isabella stepped closer to the backseat again. The figure inside had not moved. Not even a twitch. And yet the eyes… the eyes burned with recognition. The same glowing, impossible light she had seen before. A light that promised truth and danger in equal measure.She swallowed hard. Every instinct screamed to turn and run, to leave and never look back, but her feet refused. Her hands refused. Her mind refused. Something deep inside told her that if she moved now, if she hesitated, she would lose more than just the moment.“Why are you here?” she whispered. Her voice cracked.The figure smiled faintly. Not cruelly. Not kindly. Just knowingly. Like someone who had been waiting for centurie
Not louder. Not darker.Just heavier.Like the air itself was watching.Isabella stood between them, her body refusing to move, her thoughts refusing to settle. Both versions of her were so close now that she could hear their breathing. It was the same rhythm. The same pulse. The same life.And yet nothing about this felt the same.Her fingers twitched at her sides.“I do not understand,” she said quietly.It was not a defense anymore.It was the truth.The frightened version tightened her grip on Isabella’s wrist. Her hand was cold, trembling, desperate to hold on to something that felt real.“You do understand,” she said, her voice breaking. “You just do not want to accept it.”The calm one did not touch her.She stood still, watching, her expression steady and unreadable.“She is right,” she said.Her voice carried no fear.No doubt.Only certainty.Isabella turned her head slowly toward her.“Then explain it to me,” she said. “Because all I see are two versions of me telling me op
It slowed.Like something losing patience.Like something waiting.Isabella sat frozen in the driver’s seat, her fingers locked around the steering wheel so tightly that they hurt. She could feel her pulse in her palms, loud and uneven, like her body was trying to escape before her mind caught up.Her breathing came in short bursts.“I did not leave her,” she said quietly.This time, she was not shouting. She was not trying to prove anything.She was trying to believe it.The silence inside the car stretched.It pressed against her ears.Against her chest.Then the voice came again, softer than before.“You keep saying that.”Her throat tightened.“I thought she was dead.”That sounded better.Safer.Easier to live with.But even as the words left her mouth, something inside her twisted. The memory did not match. It refused to stay still.“You did not check.”Her fingers trembled.“I could not see clearly. There was blood. There was smoke. I was trapped too.”Her voice began to rise a
Consciousness came back in pieces.Cold metal beneath her wrists.A sharp chemical smell.The hum of ventilation.Isabella kept her eyes closed.She didn’t move.She listened.Two sets of footsteps.Not rushed.Not panicking.Waiting.“She’s awake,” a male voice said quietly.So they knew.Isabella
The tremor did not stop.It deepened.Like something massive shifting its weight beneath the earth.Ariella felt it through her bones before the stone cracked. The vibration wasn’t violent. It was deliberate.Below.Not above.Below.Elias was still gripping her wrist too tightly.“It’s waking up,”
The world did not end quietly.It announced itself.Across the mountain range, the air pressure dropped so suddenly that birds fell from the sky. Power grids miles away flickered, then collapsed. Satellites lost orientation, drifting just enough to send global monitoring systems into panic.Inside
Light did not fade.It folded.The explosion that should have torn the chamber apart collapsed inward instead, spiraling back toward the cradle as if time itself had been yanked by the throat. Ariella felt it rip through her body, not as pain but as separation, like something essential was being pu







