Why Mourn What You Killed?
When Alexander Smith stands in front of me and says he's going to marry someone else, that's when I realize he's been reborn too.
I remember our 20 years of love in our past life. A plane crash. And then, rebirth.
"This is to save Sophia," he says. "In our past life, she was sold to a Vostmark oligarch after her father's political scandal. Not long after, she took her own life due to abuse. I can't let that tragedy happen again, so I need to get engaged to her."
As he speaks, he hands me an orange prescription bottle.
"If you take this, you'll forget me for a little while. You won't feel the pain. It's just seven days. Once her father's scandal blows over, you'll stop the medication and your memory will return. Then I'll end the engagement and officially propose to you."
I stare at the bottle, knowing it's a lie.
Not the part about Sophia's suicide. The lie is about the drug.
He thinks it only causes temporary memory loss. But I know better.
The suppressant causes permanent damage to emotional memory.
The seven-day countdown isn't the time it takes for my memories to return.
It's the time it takes for my love for him to die.