Erykah Phelps POV:
Arthur slammed his foot on the accelerator, the engine roaring as he sped through the city streets. His knuckles were white on the steering wheel, his jaw clenched so tight I imagined his teeth grinding. His fear for Ivy was a tangible thing, a pulsating energy that filled the car. But it wasn't the searing, soul-deep grief I had felt, or the raw anguish I had just witnessed from my parents. This was adrenaline. This was the instinct of a protector, focused entirely on the immediate threat. My death, the revelation of my pregnancy, the shattered faces of my parents – all of it had been pushed to the backburner, instantly overshadowed by Ivy' s manufactured crisis.
He hadn't shed a single tear for me. He hadn't even paused to fully absorb the fact that I was gone. The shock, yes. The recognition of his colossal mistake, perhaps. But the profound, debilitating sorrow of losing someone you truly love? It wasn't there. His world had not stopped for me. It had merely paused, a brief, inconvenient blip, before accelerating back into motion, propelled by Ivy's desperate call.
I watched him, my ghostly heart an empty cavern. This was it. The final, undeniable proof. He had always chosen Ivy. Always. My years of devotion, my quiet sacrifices, my unwavering love – they were meaningless. Just disposable parts of his life, easily cast aside for his "family." The hatred I had felt for him, for Garth, for myself, had begun to dissipate the moment I saw my parents' pain. Now, watching Arthur race to save Ivy, it vanished completely, replaced by a vast, echoing emptiness. There was nothing left to feel. Just the numb void, the chilling certainty that I meant nothing to him.
"Arthur, hold your position!" Bilal's voice crackled over the radio. "Backup is five minutes out. Do not engage alone."
"No time, Bilal!" Arthur barked, swerving around a slow-moving car. "Ivy's alone with a bomb strapped to her. I'm going in."
No time, I thought bitterly. But there was time to hang up on me. Time to lecture me about jealousy. Time to reassure Ivy that she was your priority. The irony was a cold, hard stone in my stomach.
I floated beside him, a silent, resigned passenger. My emotional turbulence had ceased. There was no point. I was a ghost, and he was a man barreling towards his destiny, utterly blind to the ghost he carried with him. The outcome of this rescue mission, whether Ivy lived or died, felt utterly irrelevant to me now. I was simply an observer, detached, waiting for my tether to him to finally snap.
The textile factory, or what was left of it, loomed ahead, a charred skeleton against the predawn sky. Arthur screeched to a halt, throwing open his door and rushing inside.
"Arthur! Help me! He's going to blow me up!" Ivy's hysterical screams echoed from within.
Arthur burst into the main hall, his gun drawn. There, in the center, was Ivy, tied to a support beam, a familiar-looking incendiary device strapped to her chest. Garth Figueroa stood nearby, a remote detonator in his hand, a chilling grin on his face. This was a mirror image of my final moments.
"Holmes," Garth sneered, his eyes glinting with malicious triumph. "Right on time. Came alone, just like I told her."
Arthur ignored him, his eyes fixed on Ivy. "Ivy, are you okay?"
"Arthur! Get me out of here!" she sobbed, her voice laced with terror.
Arthur moved quickly, his detective training kicking in. He dropped his gun, raising his hands. "Alright, Garth. You win. Just let her go."
"Oh, no, no, Holmes," Garth chuckled, shaking his head. "This isn't about winning. This is about making you feel what I felt. What she felt." He gestured vaguely towards the scorched ground where I had died.
Arthur' s gaze flickered to the spot, a momentary flicker of something unreadable in his eyes. But his focus snapped back to Ivy. He started slowly approaching her, his hands still raised.
As he got closer, I noticed something. Ivy' s tears, though plentiful, seemed… forced. Her breathing, though ragged, wasn' t quite as panicked as it should have been. And the bomb… it looked identical to mine, but something about the wires seemed slightly less… urgent. Was it my imagination? Or was something off?
Garth laughed, pressing a button on the remote. The timer on Ivy' s bomb started counting down. 5:00.
"Now, Holmes," Garth growled. "You get to choose. Her life, or your future. But either way, you suffer."
Just then, a shot rang out. Garth stumbled, a surprised look on his face, then collapsed. Bilal stood in the doorway, his gun still smoking. Behind him, a tactical team swarmed in, guns raised.
"Arthur, get back!" Bilal yelled.
But Arthur was already at Ivy's side, frantically working on the straps of the bomb. The swat team moved in, carefully disarming the device. It was removed from Ivy's chest, still ticking.
"Get out of here!" Bilal screamed, grabbing Arthur. "It's still active!"
But Ivy, the moment the bomb was off her, didn't wait. She scrambled to her feet, her eyes wide, and bolted for the exit, not even glancing back at Arthur. She ran, without a word, without a look. Without waiting for him.





