MasukAmara has the life she was supposed to want — a handsome husband, a close family, a future that looks perfect from the outside. What she doesn't know is that the man she married has already decided what she is worth, and it is considerably less than she believes. When she discovers Antonio in bed with her sister Sasha, she gives him the only answer she has left — divorce. He gives her the only answer he has — a push down the stairs She dies. Hours later, he is holding her mother while she weeps. Trapped between worlds, invisible and unheard, Amara watches her own mourning and sees Antonio's performance for exactly what it is. Before she can be taken home, her spirit guide appears with a simple message — *it is time.* But Amara has one request. She has never asked for anything in her life. She is asking now. Send her back. Her spirit guide agrees, but the terms are non-negotiable. Three hundred and sixty five days, not a single one more, and a price she agrees to without fully understanding what it will cost her. She wakes up on March 19, 2019 — six years in the past, the morning of her own surprise engagement party. Antonio is bringing her breakfast in bed. The ring is still in his pocket. And Amara is the only person alive who knows exactly how the story ends. She came back for revenge. But Antonio is charming and calculating in equal measure, Sasha is warm and guilty and impossible to hate cleanly, and Jason — the man she walked away from long before any of this began — is a wound she packed away and called healed without ever checking whether it was. The clock is running. And she is already behind.
Lihat lebih banyak## **AMARA**
The house was quiet, except for the low, jagged sound of my mother. It was a keening so raw it seemed to vibrate through the very floorboards of the sitting room. I stood frozen in the center of the rug, my arms hanging uselessly at my sides, watching her. She was collapsed, her body folded in a way that looked physically painful, right beside a shape I couldn’t quite make out. *Mum is crying?* I thought. The observation felt dull and flat, like a radio frequency that hadn't quite tuned in. *Why is she crying like that?* I wondered. The front door stood wide open, letting in the heavy, humid evening air. A bag of groceries sat abandoned on the entryway table; a carton of eggs tilted precariously on the edge. They must have just walked in. They must have just seen... whatever was on the floor. My father, Chris, stood a few feet away. He hadn't even taken off his coat. He was perfectly still—a gray monument of a man, his hands curled into white-knuckled fists. He looked like he was trying to hold the walls of the room up with nothing but his gaze. "What happened?" I asked. My voice was a whisper, but it felt loud in the oppressive silence. "Dad? Is someone hurt?" He didn’t blink or flinch. He acted like he didn't hear me, if I wasn't so sure I would even conclude he was ignoring me. I moved closer, my feet feeling strangely weightless against the hardwood. I could hear my mother’s words now, muffled by the carpet she was clutching. "Amara," she gasped, her breath hitching in a way that sounded like she was choking on her own heart. "My baby... Chris, do something. Call someone. She was just here... she just called me..." The air in the room turned impossibly cold. "I’m right here, Mum." I stepped toward her, trying to lean into her line of sight. "Look at me. I’m standing right behind you." She didn’t turn. She reached out, her fingers hovering inches above the still figure on the floor, but she wouldn't actually touch it—as if touching it would make the nightmare she was seeing permanent. “Mum, look at me!” I reached out to grab her shoulder, desperate to shake her out of this trance. **My hand moved through her.** There was no impact, no resistance. It was like reaching through a trail of smoke. I pulled my hand back, staring at my fingers. They looked solid. I could see the lines on my palm, the pale half-moons of my nails. But when I pushed my hand toward the wool of my father’s coat, it slid through the fabric, through his arm, through the space where his heart should be. Panic began to boil in my gut. My brain scrambled for logic. *How was this even happening?* I didn't have an explanation for it. *Is this the experiment, Dad? Is this the trick?* I muttered. Dad dealt with physics and stuffs, was this what this was about. I moved around them, desperate to catch a glimpse of what they were seeing, and finally, I forced myself to look down. **The body was lying at the foot of the stairs.** I noticed the clothes first. A cream blouse. I frowned, looking at my own chest. It was the same fabric with same delicate pearl buttons. Then I saw the arm, bent at an awkward, unnatural angle. On the wrist was a silver bracelet, the charms tangled together—the one Antonio had given me for my thirtieth birthday. My stomach turned over. I fought the urge to look at the face, my mind throwing up walls of denial—*it’s a mannequin, I thought or maybe it’s a twin, it’s a cruel trick of the light.* It had to be something else. This couldn't be me. But then I saw the mole. Just beneath the left ear. The world tilted. That was me. That was my face, pale and wrong, my eyes half-open and clouded like windows in winter. I was the reason the groceries were abandoned. I was the reason my mother was breaking apart on the floor. **I was dead.** “No!” I screamed, the sound tearing through my ghost of a throat. “I’m right here! I’m still here!” But they remained locked in their grief. No one looked up. My words didn't even stir the dust in the air. Suddenly, the silence shattered. I heard footsteps thundered up the porch steps. Antonio burst through the open door, breathless, clutching a roll of fairy lights as if they were a lifeline. He skidded to a halt, his eyes darting from my parents to the stairs. The lights hit the floor with a dull, plastic thud. "What—" He moved toward them, his face contorting into a mask of horror that looked perfect. "What happened? I just left to get these... I was only gone ten minutes!" He didn't wait for an answer nor did he check for a pulse. "Did she slip?" Antonio asked, his voice cracking as he looked toward the staircase. "The stairs... oh God, did she fall down the stairs?" I froze, watching him. He was already providing the answer. He was already shaping the story before a single doctor or policeman had even arrived. Sasha, my sister appeared in the doorway a second later. Her scream was a sharp, jagged blade that cut through the room. She rushed to my mother’s side, her face already wet with tears. Antonio dropped to his knees, pulling them both into his arms. To anyone looking in, it was a portrait of a family destroyed by tragedy. But as Antonio buried his face in my mother’s shoulder, his eyes stayed open. He looked across the room at Sasha. It was a look that lasted less than a second—a cold, sharp moment of recognition. Sasha gave the smallest, nearly imperceptible nod. At first it didn't make sense but then, the memory came back, crashing through the fog of my death. The bedroom door swinging open. The golden afternoon light. Sasha’s hand on Antonio’s back in our bed. And then the feeling of his palms—flat, hard, and desperate—slamming into my spine at the top of the stairs. I looked at him—my husband, the man currently "comforting" my mother. I looked at my father, the silent anchor standing over them, his eyes fixed on the stairs with a distant, calculating flicker of doubt. The cold in the room didn't feel like death anymore. **It felt like a countdown to revenge.**AMARA *Leave... please, Jason. Please don’t come in.* My heart slammed so violently against my ribs that I could barely breathe. I stood in the corner of the mezzanine, my fingers white-knuckled as I clutched the velvet railing. Every instinct screamed that if Antonio saw him here—if he realized who was waiting just beyond the threshold—Jason wouldn’t leave this estate alive. The air in the ballroom felt thin, turning from a festive atmosphere into a suffocating trap. I hurried down the grand staircase, weaving between elegantly dressed guests whose laughter felt grotesquely out of place. Crystal chandeliers glittered overhead, casting sharp, blinding light on the opulent crowd, but beneath the music and the clinking of champagne flutes, I could feel invisible, predatory eyes tracking every movement I made. Antonio laughed at something Sasha whispered, but every few seconds, his gaze drifted across the ballroom like a shark surveying its territory. He was the center of gravity in
AMARA The music in the ballroom was a suffocating wall of sound, a relentless, glittering cacophony of violins and forced laughter that grated against my raw, exposed nerves. Standing there, watching Antonio lean into Sasha’s space, I felt a strange, icy detachment. They were too close, their body language telegraphing an easy, mocking intimacy that made my skin crawl. It didn't matter that it stung; I knew exactly what they were. I knew what he had done to me in my past life. *If he could kill me then, what is stopping him from destroying Jason now?* I thought to myself as the Spirit’s warning played on an endless, chilling loop in my mind, she had told me there woukd be a change in reality if I chose to change the past, was it Jason getting hurt I didn't know. A funeral bell tolled beneath the upbeat tempo of the party. I approached them, forcing my expression into a mask of glassy composure. "Antonio," I said, my voice barely audible over the crowd. "Can I speak with you for a
JASONI gripped the brass doorknob so tightly the cold metal bit into my palm, using the physical sting to ground myself. The name *Susan* still echoed in the small space between us, a toxic ghost I thought I’d buried miles beneath the surface. For a split second, the hallway seemed to shrink, the walls closing in as the memory of that suffocating betrayal threatened to pull me back into the dark. "Don't," I choked out, my voice dropping an octave, stripped entirely of its earlier impatience. It was raw, dangerous, and vibrating with an underlying tension that immediately cut through the quiet house. "Don't ever say that name to me again, Javis." Javis flinched as if I’d struck her across the face. The playful, relentless twin who had been breathing down my neck and fishing for gossip vanished in a heartbeat. Her hand dropped from my arm, her fingers curling tightly into her sides as a heavy, suffocating guilt washed over her features. She knew exactly what that name did to me. She
JASON Seeing Amara’s message flash across my screen tonight left my mind spinning in absolute, utter confusion. For a long, agonizing moment, I just stared down at the glowing glass, my chest tightening as my brain went totally haywire trying to process it. It didn't make a lick of sense. She had ignored me for what felt like an eternity, freezing me out of her life entirely and treating me like a complete stranger. I had spent countless sleepless nights wondering what I had done wrong, assuming she had completely moved on to that high-society, ultra-wealthy lifestyle and left me in her dust. And now, out of nowhere, she suddenly wanted to see me? Tonight? The sudden urgency of her text was deeply baffling, and a massive, uneasy knot was forming in the very pit of my stomach. Every logical instinct in my body was screaming at me that the timing was completely off, that the reason behind her sudden change of heart didn't make any sense at all. But despite the glaring red flags,
AMARAThe heavy glass double doors of the terrace loomed ahead, the golden light from inside spilling onto the marble floor like an unearned blessing. Antonio offered me his elbow with a practiced, seamless grace. I slipped my hand through it, forcing my fingers to relax against his sleeve. The tra
## AMARA I coughed. It came out of nowhere—a sharp, rattling thing that dragged me upward from a depth I couldn't name. My chest heaved, hitting the air like a wall. My eyes flew open and immediately slammed shut, seared by a light that felt like a physical weight. Suddenly, everything was too
AMARAI was dead.And apparently, my sister was a terrible actress.Sasha stood in the middle of the room crying her eyes out, and all I wanted to do was grab her by the shoulders and shake her. You suck at this. She knew it. I knew it. The only people who didn’t know it were the ones busy being a
## **AMARA** The house was quiet, except for the low, jagged sound of my mother. It was a keening so raw it seemed to vibrate through the very floorboards of the sitting room. I stood frozen in the center of the rug, my arms hanging uselessly at my sides, watching her. She was collapsed, her body






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