The shadows were still clinging to my skin when I stepped into my house.
The warmth hit me first.
The smell of food.
Soft lights.
My mother's voice calling my name like nothing in the world could ever touch me.
I smiled.
Here, I wasn't feared.
I wasn't hunted.
I wasn't a queen.
I was just their daughter.
"Dinner's getting cold," my mother said, placing food on my plate.
My father looked at me the way fathers do—protective, proud, unaware.
I laughed. I talked. I ate.
No blood.
No guns.
No ghosts.
But power doesn't disappear just because you sit at a dining table.
My phone vibrated.
Once.
I ignored it.
It vibrated again—longer this time.
I excused myself, standing up calmly, walking away like a normal girl going to answer a normal call.
The moment the door closed behind me, my face changed.
"Speak," I said.
Chaos spilled through the phone.
Borders breached.
Weapons drawn.
A name whispered with fear.
A war had begun.
I didn't hesitate.
"I'm coming," I replied—and the call ended.
The city didn't sleep for wars.
It waited for me.
By the time I arrived, the air smelled of smoke and metal. People stepped aside instinctively. Here, I had another name—one that didn't belong to my parents' world.
A name spoken only in shadows.
I took my place at the front.
"They won't cross this line," I said calmly.
Gunfire answered me.
I moved like I always did—precise, ruthless, controlled. Every step calculated. Every breath measured. I didn't fight like someone desperate to survive.
I fought like someone born to rule.
Then—
I heard it.
A sound that didn't belong to the battlefield.
A whisper.
Low. Familiar. Dangerous.
The same voice I had heard before.
My hand faltered—for half a second.
"Focus," the voice murmured, close enough to brush my thoughts.
My eyes sharpened.
I didn't lose.
I adapted.
I fought harder, faster, like I was dancing with death instead of running from it. Bullets missed where they should've hit. Enemies fell before I even saw them.
Someone was helping me.
Someone unseen.
I felt him there—not beside me, not behind me—but within the fight itself.
When the war ended, the city stood silent.
Victorious.
I stood alone, breathing steady, crown intact.
"Show yourself," I said softly.
The air shifted—but he didn't appear.
"You don't need to see me," the voice replied. "You already know."
I closed my eyes.
"So it was you," I whispered.
A pause.
"I protect what I claim," he answered.
I didn't ask his name.
Not yet.
Some things were more powerful when left unspoken.
And as I walked back toward my car—back toward my normal life, my sweet smile, my parents' safe world—I understood one truth clearly:
I wasn't living two lives.
I was ruling three worlds.
And all of them were slowly becoming his… and mine.
