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Tiana’s POV
The dream was heavy - a suffocating mist that tasted of copper and old paper. I was running toward a door that kept shrinking, the handle slipping through my fingers every time I reached for it. I could hear a heartbeat, but I wasn't sure if it was mine or the house's. It was a rhythmic, thudding sound that eventually morphed into something sharper, something more mechanical. I turned around and saw a face - Ben’s face - but the eyes were wrong. They weren’t the kind, familiar eyes of the boy I’d shared a sandbox with at Primary school. They were eerie, dark, bottomless pits.
Rrrrrimgggggg.
The sound didn’t just ring; it vibrated through the springs of the sofa and directly into my skull. I jolted upright, my heart hammering a frantic rhythm against my ribs. For a confused second, I didn't know where I was. The room was bathed in the hazy, dim orange of the streetlights filtering through the blinds, casting long, slatted shadows across the hardwood floor of my Fellsdello apartment.
I glanced at the antique clock on the mantel. 8:00 PM.
Damn it," I whispered, rubbing the sleep from my eyes. "That went quick.
I had walked through the door at 5:30 PM, intending to just "rest my eyes" for five minutes before the girls arrived. Apparently, my body had other plans. Working as the Publisher at Masemann Books was a dream job, but it was a marathon of the mind. Reading three hundred pages of a poorly paced thriller before lunch tended to drain the soul in a way no amount of caffeine could fix. I scrambled off the sofa, feeling the familiar pins and needles in my left foot, and straightened my rumpled blouse. At 5’8”, I usually felt quite composed, but right now, I felt like a mess of dark brown curls and wrinkled silk.
With Marissa and Cleo, a mess was acceptable. We had seen each other at our absolute worst - breakups, food poisoning, and the disastrous "perm incident" of 2019. Even my mother’s death when we were small. I hurried to the intercom by the door.
Hello?
Hey, girl!" Marissa and Cleo chimed in perfect, practiced harmony. It was a sound that acted like an instant shot of espresso to my nervous system.
Hiya! Come on up," I trilled, pressing the buzzer to release the secure door downstairs.
As soon as I released the button, the silence of the apartment rushed back in. I leaned my forehead against the cool plastic of the receiver for a split second. I loved them, truly, but tonight I felt a strange heaviness, a prickle on the back of my neck that I couldn't quite shake. It was the residue of the dream, I told myself. It had to be.
Before heading to the kitchen, I walked to the window and peered through the slats of the blinds. The street in Fellsdello was quiet, the kind of quiet that usually felt safe. But tonight, it felt off. Below, a lone car sat idling under a flickering streetlamp. Its headlights were off, but the exhaust curled into the chilly autumn night air like ghostly fingers. I watched it for a beat too long, waiting for a door to open or for it to pull away, but it just sat there - a dark, silent sentinel.
I shook off the paranoia. It’s Friday. It’s Pamper Night. Stop being a character in one of your own thrillers, Tiana.
I flew into the kitchen, my mind already ticking through the checklist. This wasn't just a hang-out; it was a sanctuary. Life was moving too fast - between Marissa’s kids and Cleo’s high-stakes legal career, these few hours were the only thing keeping our trio anchored.
I grabbed the cocktail shaker, the cold metal biting into my palms. Tequila, Cointreau, fresh lime juice - no bottled mix allowed. By the time I heard the thunder of footsteps on the stairs, I was already rimming glasses with sea salt. The door burst open, yielding to the sheer force of Cleo and Marissa’s arrival.
Honey, we’re home!" Cleo announced, striking a pose in the doorway.
She was a pocket-sized powerhouse. At 5’3”, she was the shortest of our trio, but she had enough presence to fill a football stadium. Her chocolate-toned skin glowed, and today she’d styled her black braids into a high, intricate bun that showcased the vibrant pink tips. She was wearing a tailored cream blazer over a pink silk camisole dress - stylish as always, even for a night of girly mayhem.
Marissa followed close behind, lugging a massive suitcase that looked like it contained enough supplies for a small army. My adoptive sister stood about 5’6”, with a slightly thicker, curvier frame and pale skin dusted with a constellation of freckles. Her thick, fiery red hair was pulled into a messy bun that looked like it was losing a fight with gravity.
Move it, counsellor, this bag is damn heavy," Mari groaned, nudging Cleo inside.
Hi!" I squealed, abandoning the limes to rush over.
We fell into a three-way hug in the doorway. It was a chaotic tangle of perfume, laughter, and the shared history of a lifetime. Marissa, usually the most grounded of us, was practically vibrating. Cleo, on the other hand, had a predatory glint in her eye that usually meant she had a secret to spill.
You look exhausted, Ti," Mari noted, pulling back. Her icy blue eyes, usually sharp and discerning from her role as C.O.O. at Masemann Books, held that deep-seated weariness that only came with motherhood. "And your hair... honey, did you walk here through a wind tunnel?
I fell asleep on the couch," I defended, reaching up to smooth down a stray curl. "I was reading the Taylor manuscript. It’s eight hundred pages of metaphors about existential dread.
You work too hard," Cleo said, already reaching for the tequila bottle. "From one workaholic to another, you need to learn to delegate.
I’m the Publisher, Cleo. If the book fails, it’s on me," I said, leading them toward the kitchen island. "And Mari, don't talk to me about exhaustion. How’s life in the 'slow lane' of maternity leave?
Mari let out a hollow laugh, dropping the suitcase onto the floor with a heavy thud. "The slow lane? I spent three hours this morning debating a four-year-old on why we don't put Lego in the toaster. I’m the C.O.O. of a major publishing house, yet I’m being out-negotiated by Henry. Maternity leave is a scam, Tia. I miss my office. I miss the smell of fresh ink and people who don't leak fluids on me."
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