LOGINThe Three Faces of Rose is a gripping tale of supernatural romance and self-discovery. Rose David has spent 21 years invisible—bullied at school, overlooked at work, and trapped in a life where no one seems to notice her at all. On her 21st birthday, everything changes. An ancient curse, cast by a bitter witch long ago, awakens three distinct personalities inside her: the wise and sharp elderly Mrs. Choice, the innocent and fragile childlike Susy, and the daring, seductive Blaire. Each face has a mind of its own and each threatens to take control. When CEO Kelvin Halt enters her life, he sees more than just the shy, timid secretary everyone else ignores. He sees the complexity, the pain, and the magic that binds Rose’s fractured soul. But falling in love with her is not simple. To truly save her, Kelvin must confront the dark curse at its source and help Rose face the secrets and betrayals of her past. As Rose struggles to balance her three faces, she learns that the curse is more than just magic—it’s a test of identity, courage, and trust. Only by embracing every part of herself can she hope to reclaim her life and her freedom. And in the end, she must decide if love can truly heal the wounds left by centuries of pain, fear, and magic.
View MoreI found out I was pregnant on a Tuesday morning.
I stood in the bathroom of our apartment, staring at those two pink lines until the cold from the tiles came up through my bare feet and my legs started to go numb. I didn't move. I couldn't. I just stood there and stared and waited for the fear to arrive, because I had always assumed that if this ever happened, fear would be the first thing I felt.
It wasn't.
The first thing I felt was joy. Pure, reckless, terrifying joy. The kind that fills your whole chest so fast it almost hurts.
I pressed the test against my chest and laughed — the quiet kind, the kind you keep inside your body because it's too new and too fragile to let out yet. Eight years with Daniel Ashford. Eight years of loving a man who moved through the world like it was built for him, and now this.
We were going to have a baby.
I practiced telling him all day. In the shower, in the car, in the bathroom at work between client meetings, standing in front of the mirror whispering to myself like a woman rehearsing a marriage proposal. Daniel, I'm pregnant. Daniel, I have something to tell you. Daniel, we're going to be parents.
None of it felt big enough. The words kept shrinking on my tongue.
His phone was on the bathroom counter when I came out.
I hadn't noticed it earlier. He must have left it when he rushed out that morning — one of his usual exits, jacket half on, coffee abandoned, already on a call before he hit the front door. I picked it up to move it and the screen lit up in my hand.
A message preview. No content, just a name.
Claire.
I set the phone back down.
I didn't know who Claire was. I had never heard that name from Daniel in eight years. I told myself it was nothing — a colleague, a work contact, one of the dozens of names that moved through his professional life without ever reaching mine.
I told myself that and I almost believed it.
I put the test in my bag and went to work.
He texted at nine that night. Working late. Don't wait up.
I waited up. I always waited up. That was one of those things I never said out loud — that I couldn't settle properly until I heard his key in the lock, until I knew he was home. I had loved him for so long and so completely that his absence felt like a physical thing. A weight. A gap in the room where he was supposed to be.
He walked in at half past eleven. Jacket over one shoulder, tie loosened, that particular brand of exhaustion that somehow still looked like confidence on him. He was that kind of man. The kind who made being tired look deliberate.
"Hey." He dropped the jacket on the armchair. Not the hook by the door. Never the hook by the door. I had stopped mentioning it years ago.
"Hey." I stood up. My heart was moving too fast. "Can we talk?"
Something in my face made him set his phone face-down on the counter without being asked. He almost never did that. I took it as a good sign. I was always looking for good signs with Daniel — small permissions to hope.
I reached into my bag. I set the test on the counter between us.
He looked at it without speaking. I stood on the other side of the counter and watched his face and waited for it to change. I had imagined this moment so many times on the drive home — his expression opening up, his arms coming around me. In the version I had rehearsed, he was scared but happy. In the version I had rehearsed, he pulled me close and said Maya and told me we'd figure it out together.
He looked up.
His eyes were calm.
"Get rid of it," he said.
I heard the words. I processed the words.
I waited for him to smile. To tell me he was joking. To let the mask drop and show me the man I had spent eight years believing was underneath it.
He didn't.
He just looked at me with those calm, steady eyes, and I understood — slowly and then all at once — that there was no joke coming. That this was exactly what it looked like.
"Daniel—"
"I'm not ready, Maya." His voice was even. Measured. The exact same tone he used in business meetings when someone brought him a problem he hadn't anticipated. "We're not ready. This isn't the right time."
"We've been together eight years," I said. The words came out before I'd chosen them.
"That doesn't mean we're ready for a child." He rubbed the back of his neck. "I'll pay for it. We can find somewhere next week. It doesn't have to be complicated."
Doesn't have to be complicated.
I looked at the test on the counter. At the two small lines I had pressed against my chest that morning like something sacred. Like something worth protecting.
I picked it up. Slipped it back into my bag. When I looked at him again I made absolutely sure my face showed him nothing.
"Okay," I said.
He nodded, picked up his phone, and went to the fridge.
I sat back on the couch. I turned the television on. I watched it for an hour without seeing any of it — laughed when the audience laughed, reached for my water glass at the commercial break, performed being fine so thoroughly that I almost believed my own performance.
He went to bed at midnight. He didn't check on me. He didn't ask if I was okay. He just said goodnight and disappeared down the hall like it was any other evening.
I sat alone in the dark living room, held my own hands, and didn't make a sound. I had learned a long time ago not to cry where Daniel could see me. He found it hard to respond to. He had told me so himself, early in our relationship, and I had taken that information and used it ever since to manage myself around him.
Even now. Even tonight. I was still doing that.
I sat in the quiet and held the wreckage of the last hour inside my chest and did not let a single piece of it out.
That was the first mistake. Not the only one. But the first.
After about an hour, I couldn’t resist breaking the silence. “How’s it going over there? Need any help with that file?”She turned her head, her hair falling softly over one shoulder. “It’s okay. I’m just organizing the client notes. But… um, this one has a lot of details. Do you want me to prioritize the urgent ones?”I stood up and walked over, leaning over her shoulder to look at the screen. The scent of her shampoo filled the air, and I had to remind myself to focus. “Yeah, that sounds good. Here, let me show you a shortcut.” I reached for the mouse, my hand covering hers gently. She didn’t pull away, instead, she relaxed a little, her breath catching softly.As I guided her through the steps, I felt a spark, like electricity humming between us. “See? Just drag and drop like this.” I lingered for a second longer than necessary, then straightened up, but not before giving her hand a quick, reassuring squeeze.“Thanks,” she said, her v
~KELVIN~I watched as the security team carefully maneuvered Rose’s new desk and chair through the door of my office. They placed it in the corner by the large window, It wasn’t much—just a simple setup with a computer, a lamp, and a few drawers but it felt right. Having her here, close to me, where I could keep an eye on her and make sure no one else dared to hurt her again.“Thank you,” I said to the team, my voice steady but firm. They nodded and left quietly, closing the door behind them with a soft click.Rose stood there, her hands clasped in front of her, looking a bit lost. Her eyes darted from the desk to me, then back again. She was still shaken from what had happened in the secretaries’ department, I could see it in the way her shoulders hunched slightly, like she was trying to make herself smaller. But she didn’t need to do that anymore. Not with me.“Come on,” I said gently, stepping closer and guiding her toward the desk with a ligh
The elevator doors slid open, and the moment I stepped onto my floor, my chest tightened, I already knew what usually waited for me.The bully and whispers.The eye rolls.The fake laughs.The extra work dumped on my desk like trash.But today… Nothing, like the universe decided to bless my day.I walked into the secretaries’ department and the whole place was quiet…fucking too quiet.Sandra typed like she was in a typing competition.Hilda didn’t even glance up.Mia and Lissa didn’t smirk or say their usual nonsense.They just sat there stiff, pretending to work like the whole floor suddenly became a church.My footsteps slowed.Okay… creepy.Peace wasn’t normal in this place, If they were quiet, it meant something worse was coming…my stomach already had that heavy feeling like I had walked into the wrong place at the wrong time.Then I saw it.The way they kept stealing side-eyes at one another.Small sneaky smiles.
The moment those stupid words left my mouth, I felt my whole body freeze, I turned to Kelvin slowly, scared of what I’d see on his face.He wasn’t angry neither was he cold, he was just shocked, like I had said something that hit him harder than I meant.His jaw tightened. “Who told you that?” he asked quietly, the calmness in his voice scared me more than if he had shouted. “Where did you hear that from? Who told you I was gay?”I couldn’t answer, my throat locked up, and I just looked down, squeezing my hands together.Kelvin studied my face for a second, then unbuckled his seatbelt and moved closer and before I could react, he gently held my face with both hands, his palms were warm and steady.“Rose,” he said softly, “I’m not gay and I’ve never been gay.”I swallowed hard, still unable to speak.“I don’t know who told you that,” he added, brushing my cheek lightly, “but you can’t believe every rumor about me, there are too many of them and if you keep
~ kelvin ~I didn’t go home.I didn’t even leave the building.Instead, I walked straight into the private elevator and hit the basement level…the one only Josh and I had access to. But today, I didn’t need comfort, I only needed isolation…I need to think.I need to breathe b
~ Kelvin ~We both walked back into the office. The moment the doors opened on the top floor.The atmosphere was too quiet. The secretaries were pretending to type but kept stealing glances at me.I ignored all of them and walked straight into my office.The second I ent
~ Kelvin’s pov ~The ride to my mother’s new house was quiet… too quiet.She sat in the backseat, her fingers still loosely wrapped around Rose’s hand. She hadn’t said a single word to me or Josh since we left the prison gates. Not even a glance.Fifteen years locked up, and
Inside the box lay a chopped human hand, the blood around it had dried into a dark crust, but the skin still looked real, not fake, not a prop…but real.Blaire’s heart hammered in her chest, she stumbled back slightly, nearly losing her balance.“What… what is this?” she whispered.A












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