Erykah Phelps POV:
A blinding flash, a deafening roar, and then... nothing. Or perhaps, everything. My body, a vessel of pain and regret, was gone. Dissipated in a wave of heat that scorched the very air. But I wasn't gone. I was… everywhere.
I hovered above the wreckage, a silent, unseen specter. Below, the abandoned textile factory was a twisted inferno, black smoke billowing into the night sky. Firefighters swarmed, their sirens wailing, painting the scene in urgent flashes of red and blue. My earthly shell, or what remained of it, was a charred silhouette amidst the debris, barely recognizable. A strange calm washed over me. The pain was gone. The terror, the heartbreak-all of it had been consumed by the flames, leaving behind a profound emptiness. It wasn't peace, not exactly. More like a lack of anything. A numb void.
I drifted aimlessly, a phantom breath in the cold Chicago air. Minutes, hours, days, time lost all meaning. Until he arrived. Arthur.
He moved with a familiar grim determination, his detective' s badge glinting under the harsh floodlights. His face was set, a mask of professional detachment. He was with Bilal, his partner, their movements coordinated, efficient. I watched as they surveyed the scene, the remnants of my life.
"Jane Doe," Bilal murmured, jotting in his notepad. "Incendiary device. Looks personal."
Arthur knelt beside my charred form, his eyes scanning the ruin. My spirit yearned for recognition, for a flicker of sorrow, a whisper of my name. It' s me, Arthur. Look. It' s me.
But he saw only a case, a victim. "Female, early twenties," he stated, his voice flat, devoid of emotion. "No identification. Looks like a professional job. Thorough."
A wave of crushing disappointment washed over me. He didn't know. He didn' t even recognize the outline of the woman he had claimed to love. The one who was carrying his child. My disappointment hardened into something else, a bitter, cold resentment.
I followed as they zipped my remains into a body bag, a sterile, impersonal act. The ambulance lights pulsed, a mournful rhythm. I slipped into Arthur' s unmarked car, settling into the passenger seat as if I still belonged there.
Bilal glanced at his partner. "You heard from Erykah at all, man? She seemed a little off the other day."
Arthur scoffed, running a hand through his hair. "Erykah? Probably still giving me the silent treatment for not dropping everything to coddle Ivy." He let out a humorless laugh. "Honestly, Bilal, it's exhausting. The jealousy. The constant need for attention. You'd think after three years she'd trust me."
My ghostly form shivered, a phantom chill seeping into my essence. The words sliced through me, sharper than any knife. Silent treatment? Trust? Is that what you think? The agony was suffocating, a familiar ache in a body that no longer existed.
Bilal sighed. "Maybe she just had a bad day, Arthur. Everyone does."
"No, this is different," Arthur insisted, his voice tight. "She sent me some cryptic message right before she went radio silent. Something about regretting loving me and never wanting to see me again. Total emotional blackmail." He shook his head. "She always pulls this crap when Ivy needs me."
He pulled out his phone, his thumb hovering over the screen. "You know what? I'm gonna call her. This 'silent treatment' has gone on long enough."
My ethereal heart pounded. Don't. Please, don't. But my silent pleas were useless. He dialed. It rang. And rang. Then, a click. "The number you have dialed is currently unavailable."
Arthur's face darkened. He stared at his phone, his jaw clenching. "Unbelievable," he muttered, his anger simmering. "She blocked me. She actually blocked me." He looked up, his eyes blazing with a cold fury I knew all too well. "Fine. If that's how she wants to play, then we're done. No more games, Erykah."
With a swift, decisive movement, he scrolled through his contacts, found my name, and hit 'Block'. "Consider us officially over," he growled.
He didn't consider for a second that I might actually be in danger. He didn't connect the "cryptic message" with an actual cry for help. His world revolved around his perception of me, a jealous, attention-seeking girlfriend, always competing with Ivy.
The last vestiges of hope, the desperate wish that he might, just might, care, crumbled to dust. My spirit felt a profound sense of numbness, a hollow echo where love once resided. He truly never cared. He was incapable of it.
I followed my own body, or what was left of it, to the medical examiner's office. I watched, a silent spectator, as Arthur stood over the cold steel table, dictating notes as the ME began the grim task. My heart, or what was left of it in my ghostly form, twisted. He was dissecting me, the woman he had just casually blocked, the mother of his unborn child, and he had no idea. I was tethered to him, a cruel trick of fate, cursed to witness his indifference.





