Chapter 2

Ethan didn't knock.

He never knocked. In thirty years of marriage I had forgotten that detail, but standing in my childhood bedroom at twenty-six, listening to his footsteps pound down the hallway, I remembered it perfectly.

The door swung open hard enough to hit the wall.

He was still holding the form. I'd left a copy on the kitchen counter—I knew he'd find it. I'd been counting on it.

"What is this?" He crossed the room in three strides and thrust the paper at me. His face was flushed, jaw tight, the way it got when he couldn't decide between anger and embarrassment. "What the hell were you thinking, Stella?"

I folded a sweater and placed it in the open suitcase on the bed. "I was thinking it was the honest thing to do."

"You wrote Mia's name on a marriage application. Our marriage application."

"You've always wanted to marry her." I said it the same way you'd state the weather. "I'm making it easier for everyone."

"Who told you that?" His voice cracked on the last word. "Who told you I wanted—"

"You did." I looked up then. I made myself look directly at him, and I kept my voice very steady. "Every time I had a fever, you went to check on her instead. Every time I needed you to stay, you left because she called. Every time I cried, you told me I was being dramatic." I paused. "You never once looked at me the way you look at her. Not once in all the time I've known you."

His mouth opened. Closed.

"I'm not angry," I said. And the strange thing was, I meant it. Last time, I had been furious—furious and desperate and humiliated all at once, which had made me easy to manage. This time there was nothing in my chest except a kind of tired clarity, like a room after all the furniture has been moved out. "I just don't see the point anymore."

He stared at me like I'd started speaking a different language.

Then Mia appeared in the doorway.

She must have been listening from the hall. She was good at that—arriving at exactly the right moment, in exactly the right condition. Her eyes were already shining when she stepped into the room, her lower lip trembling just enough to be visible without being theatrical. She crossed to Ethan and pressed both hands against his arm.

"Ethan." Her voice broke on the single syllable. "Please don't fight because of me. This is all my fault. I should never have—I don't deserve—" She pressed her face against his shoulder. "Maybe it would be better if I just wasn't here at all."

I watched him go soft. It happened fast, the way it always did. His shoulders dropped, the tension left his jaw, and his arm came up around her automatically, like a reflex he'd spent years training.

"Hey." His voice dropped to something gentle I had never once heard him use with me. "Don't say that. None of this is your fault."

"But Stella—"

"Stella made her choice." His eyes flicked to me over the top of her head. There was something in them—not guilt, exactly. More like inconvenience.

I felt my stomach turn.

Not the hot, choking nausea of betrayal. Something colder. The feeling of watching a magic trick for the second time, when you already know where the rabbit is hidden and the whole thing just seems sad.

"You two take your time." I zipped the suitcase shut. "I have an enrollment appointment to get to."

Neither of them tried to stop me.

---

Harbor City University's administrative building smelled like old carpet and printer ink. The line for enrollment processing moved slowly, inching forward under fluorescent lights while a ceiling fan turned overhead without doing much about the heat.

I was studying the tuition breakdown sheet when I heard my name.

"Stella Chen? Window three."

I moved to the window and slid my documents across the counter. The clerk typed something, frowned at her screen, typed again.

"There's a processing hold on your scholarship file. You'll need to speak with the student affairs office directly. Someone from the student council is helping coordinate over there today—just follow the signs."

The student affairs office was at the end of a long corridor. Through the glass panel in the door, I could see a small cluster of new students gathered around a table covered in forms and lanyards and orientation packets.

And behind the table, helping a nervous-looking girl fill out a housing waiver, was a man I recognized.

I stopped walking.

Gabriel Moore.

I knew the name from a different context entirely—a headline I'd read in a hospital bed six months before I died. *Harbor City's Youngest Tech Founder Donates Research Wing.* There had been a photo. Sharp features, dark eyes, the kind of composed expression that looked like it had been earned rather than inherited.

I had not known, until this moment, that he'd gone to this school.

He glanced up from the housing form and noticed me standing in the doorway.

"Hi." He set down his pen and stood. "Are you here about an enrollment hold? Come on in—I can help you sort it out."

His voice was easy, unhurried. He smiled the way people smile when they're genuinely not trying to impress anyone.

I stepped inside.

We spent twenty minutes untangling the scholarship paperwork. He knew the system well—navigating the forms with the calm efficiency of someone who'd done it a hundred times, asking the right questions, flagging the right boxes. He didn't make small talk for the sake of it. When he spoke, it was because he had something useful to say.

At one point, while he was on hold with the registrar's office, he glanced over at my open folder and noticed the program I'd applied to.

"Environmental science," he said. "Good department. Professor Lin's research group is doing interesting work."

"You know it?"

"I sat in on one of her seminars last semester." He paused. "Are you interested in the urban ecology track or the policy side?"

I opened my mouth to answer—and then stopped.

Because I remembered, suddenly and completely, the one detail I had carried with me from the last days of my other life.

My funeral had been small. Ethan had arranged it efficiently, the way he arranged everything. Twelve people, maybe fifteen. Family, a few colleagues I'd barely known.

And one stranger, standing at the edge of the cemetery with a single white flower, someone no one else seemed to recognize.

I had seen it from somewhere outside myself, the way you sometimes do in those last moments. I had wondered who he was.

"You're staring," Gabriel said, not unkindly.

"Sorry." I looked back down at the paperwork. "Policy side. Definitely the policy side."

He nodded and went back to the phone.

I watched him for just a moment longer than I should have.

---

The house was lit up when I got home. That was my first warning.

The second was the unfamiliar car in the driveway—dark sedan, out-of-province plates. I knew those plates.

I pushed open the front door.

Mr. and Mrs. Pierce were sitting in the living room like a tribunal. Ethan's mother rose the instant she saw me, her face set in the particular expression of a woman who had rehearsed this conversation on the drive over.

"Stella." Her voice was sharp enough to cut. "What on earth were you thinking? Ethan loves you. He has always loved you. And you—you put your own sister's name on your marriage certificate? What kind of woman does something like that?"

I set my bag down near the door.

"A tired one," I said.

"That is not an answer—"

"Mom." Ethan's voice came from behind me. Quiet. Strained. "Stop. It's not Stella's fault."

His mother turned to him, startled. "Then whose fault is it?"

He didn't answer right away.

But his eyes moved—just slightly, involuntarily—toward the corner of the room.

Toward Mia, standing half-hidden in the shadow of the hallway, very still, watching.

Mrs. Pierce followed his gaze.

The room went quiet in a way that had nothing to do with silence.

Chapter 3

Mrs. Pierce moved fast for a woman in heels.

She crossed the living room in four steps and stopped directly in front of Mia, her finger raised, her voice shaking with something that had been building the entire drive over.

"You." The word came out like a verdict. "It was you all along. Hooking my son, playing the innocent little sister—"

"Mom—" Ethan started.

"Don't." She didn't look at him. She kept her eyes fixed on Mia. "I'm not blind. I've watched you for years. Every dinner, every holiday, every phone call at midnight. You think I didn't notice?"

Mia's face crumpled.

It happened the way it always happened—fast, practiced, devastatingly effective. Her knees hit the floor before anyone could react, and she pressed her hands together like she was praying, tears spilling down her cheeks in perfect, shining tracks.

"Auntie, please." Her voice broke on every word. "I never meant to—I tried to stop it, I swear I did. But Ethan said he loved me. He said it first. I didn't want to hurt Stella, I would never—" A sob cut through the sentence. "I'm so sorry. I'm so, so sorry."

Ethan stepped in front of her.

He actually stepped in front of her. Physically placed himself between his mother and the girl crying on the floor, shoulders squared, jaw set, like he was shielding her from something dangerous.

"Mom." His voice had gone cold and flat. "You don't talk to her like that. Not in front of me."

Mrs. Pierce stared at her son. For a moment she looked genuinely stunned—not angry, just stunned, the way people look when they've said something obvious out loud and the other person still doesn't understand it.

Then the fight went out of her. Her hand dropped. Her shoulders sagged.

Mr. Pierce had been standing near the window the entire time, quiet, watching. He was a careful man. He always thought before he spoke, which meant he usually said less than everyone else and meant more.

He turned to me now.

"Stella." His voice was low and even. "I'm sorry. On behalf of our family—I'm sorry. You deserved better than this."

I looked at him for a moment. He meant it. I could tell he meant it, which somehow made it harder to hear than anything else that had happened tonight.

"Uncle Pierce." I shook my head once. "You don't need to apologize. This isn't your fault. And it's over now—I'm not going to make this into something it doesn't need to be."

He nodded slowly. He looked tired.

The room had gone quiet except for Mia's soft, subsiding sniffles. Ethan still hadn't moved from in front of her.

I was reaching for my bag when Ethan's voice stopped me.

"Wait."

Something in the word made everyone go still.

I turned around.

He was on one knee.

I don't know when he'd gotten down there—I hadn't seen him move. But he was kneeling on the living room floor with a small velvet box open in his hand, and inside it was a ring I didn't recognize, which meant he'd bought it recently, which meant he'd planned this, or some version of this, before tonight.

Mia made a sound behind him. A small, involuntary sound. Her face had gone the color of old paper.

"Stella." Ethan's voice was different now. Softer. The performance of sincerity. "I was wrong. I've been wrong for a long time and I didn't see it until tonight. But I see it now." He swallowed. "I love you. I want to marry you. Please—give me another chance."

His mother pressed her hand over her mouth.

Mr. Pierce looked at the floor.

I stood there and looked at Ethan kneeling in front of me, and I waited for something to move inside my chest. Some reflex of the girl I used to be. The twenty-six-year-old who had wanted this so badly she'd spent thirty years pretending she'd gotten it.

Nothing moved.

I just felt tired.

"You don't love me," I said.

"Stella—"

"You don't." I kept my voice quiet. "You love having me here. There's a difference." I looked at him steadily. "If I leave, the story falls apart. Your mother stops asking questions. Mia stops being the other woman. Everything goes back to being complicated and uncomfortable." I paused. "But if I stay—if I'm the wife—then whatever happens between you and her is just family. It's just how things are. Nobody has to call it what it is."

The ring box stayed open in his hand.

"I'm not a shield, Ethan," I said. "I'm not going to be one."

I walked to my room.

---

He followed me, of course.

I was pulling the last of my things from the closet when I heard him in the doorway. I didn't turn around.

"You can't just leave." His voice had lost the softness. It was back to the tone I knew better—tight, slightly aggrieved, the voice of a man who was used to things resolving themselves around him. "Where are you even going to go?"

"Harbor City." I folded a jacket and set it in the bag.

"That's—that's two thousand kilometers away."

"I know."

He crossed the room and grabbed my wrist.

Not hard. He never did anything hard enough to be called what it was. Just firm. Insistent. The grip of someone who expected to be listened to.

"Think about Mia," he said. "She's fragile. You know how she gets when things fall apart. If you leave like this, if you make a scene—"

I stopped moving.

"That's your reason." I turned to look at him. "That's why you proposed. Not because you love me. Because Mia needs a cover story and I'm the most convenient one available."

His jaw tightened.

"You want to marry her," I said. "So marry her. Stop using me as the reason you can't."

I pulled my wrist free.

He didn't reach for me again.

I picked up my bag and walked out of the room, and I did not look back at the bed or the curtains or the mirror or any of the other things that had once meant something to me in that house.

---

Three days later, I was on a train.

The seat was by the window. Outside, the city dissolved into flat farmland, then low hills, the landscape emptying out the further we got from everything I'd known. I watched it go and felt, for the first time in as long as I could remember, like I was moving in the right direction.

My phone buzzed.

I looked at the screen.

*Ethan: Stella, Mia and I registered today. But I'm not giving up on you. I want you to know that.*

I read it once. Then I pressed delete and set the phone face-down on my knee.

The train swayed gently. Across the aisle, someone was eating instant noodles. A child two rows back was asking her mother how much longer.

I leaned my head against the window glass and closed my eyes.

When I opened them again, I noticed the man sitting directly across from me.

He was maybe thirty, with dark-framed glasses and a book open in his lap, but he wasn't reading it. He was looking at me—not staring, not intrusively, just the quiet, considering look of someone who has noticed something and isn't sure yet what to make of it.

I recognized him.

Gabriel Moore.

The enrollment office. The scholarship paperwork. *Environmental science. Good department.*

He held my gaze for a moment, then glanced back down at his book with the unhurried ease of someone who wasn't embarrassed to have been caught looking.

I turned back to the window.

The hills kept coming.

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