Sleep came heavy that night.
Not the gentle kind that wraps around you like safety, but the kind that pulls you under before you realize you’re sinking.
I knew I was dreaming the moment the world shifted.
The room dissolved.
The walls stretched and thinned, melting into mist, and suddenly I was standing somewhere else entirely.
The forest.
But not the one from before.
This one was dimmer.
The air was thick, like it resisted being breathed. The trees leaned inward, their branches tangled and heavy, as though listening.
My heart began to race.
"Mum?" I whispered.
The word barely left my mouth before I felt it , the strange presence.
She appeared near the lake.
But this time, she wasn’t glowing.
Her red curls were duller, weighed down like wet leaves. Her skin looked pale, almost translucent, as if moonlight passed through her instead of resting on her.
She looked... tired.
Weaker.
I wanted to rush towards her and then I remembered what my father had told me at the dining table.
About wraiths and how they took forms of people that we loved to manipulate our thoughts and take over our minds.
I swallowed.
She fell down and I found myself rushing to her and then I paused a few inches away from where she stood.
"Mum," I said again, louder now, fear threading my voice.
She turned toward me sharply.
Her eyes widened. Not with joy this time, but with alarm.
"Jasmine," she breathed.
She moved toward me, but the moment she did, the air rippled violently, like something invisible snapped between us.
She staggered.
"Mum!" I ran forward again, but the ground shifted beneath my feet, stretching the distance no matter how fast I moved.
Her face tightened in pain.
"They’re trying to stop me," she said urgently.
My chest seized. "Who?"
She shook her head, glancing around wildly.
"You shouldn’t be here," she said. "You shouldn’t be listening to....
Her voice trailed off and she looked into the distance.
My heart slammed painfully.
"To who?" I demanded.
She reached for me, her hand trembling.
"Jasmine," she said, voice breaking. "You have to..."
The forest screamed.
Not a sound, a pressure. A violent ripple that bent the trees and distorted the sky.
She cried out, clutching her chest.
"Mum!" I screamed.
She fell to her knees.
"No," she gasped. "No, not now baby. Not now I promise you."
She seemed like a mad person.
And I began to fear her.
I pressed my hands to my ears as the air thickened, buzzing like it was alive.
She lifted her head again, eyes blazing now, fierce despite her fading strength.
"Listen to me," she said. "I am not...."
Her body flickered.
Like a candle in the wind.
The word echoed and yet I heard nothing.
I froze.
She looked directly at my stomach then, eyes softening despite everything.
Her hand pressed over her heart.
"They lied to you," she whispered. "About me. About you. About.... Everything and..
The ground cracked between us.
Her form splintered.
I screamed her name.
She reached out desperately, her fingers brushing the air where my stomach was, never quite touching.
"Run," she whispered.
The word hit me like lightning.
I pressed my palm against my belly, panic rising sharply.
I searched his face.
"She was... weaker," I whispered. "She said they were trying to stop her."
His jaw tightened almost imperceptibly.
"And?"
"She told me to run."
Silence stretched between us.
Then he smiled gently.... practiced, soothing.
"That’s exactly how wraiths behave," he said. "They grow desperate when their influence weakens."
My chest tightened.
"She told me she wasn’t—"
"A wraith?" he finished smoothly. "Of course she would."
"She touched my stomach," I said. "She looked afraid. Not dangerous."
Aiden stepped closer.
Placed a hand over mine.
"She’s exploiting your vulnerability," he said gently. "Your pregnancy makes your soul bright. Open. Spirits are drawn to that."
My fingers curled slightly against the blanket.
"She told me I’m being lied to," I said quietly.
He didn’t react.
Not at all.
Instead, his voice softened further.
"Jasmine," he said. "If she were truly your mother... would she frighten you like this?"
My lips parted.
He squeezed my hand reassuringly.
And then I began to weep.
I burst into tears.
"You were right father." I said as I threw my arms around you. "She turned into a monster and she wanted to attack me. That’s not my mother."
He held me close to him as he soothed my hair like I was a child.
"It’s okay my love." He whispered into my hair. "No one is going to hurt you ever again."
There was a thin silence and then I heard his voice into the dark.
"We’ll start the medicine today," he said. "It will stop the dreams. Protect you. Protect the baby."
I nodded slowly in agreement.

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