Current location: Novel nest HOSTILE TAKEOVER: RECLAIMING MY BODY Chapter 7

"HOSTILE TAKEOVER: RECLAIMING MY BODY" Chapter 7

Chapter 7: Ghost in the Glass

The room was silent, save for the rhythmic, metallic ticking of the ventilation system.

Damian sat in the study, his posture stiff, his eyes locked on the large, ornate mirror mounted above the fireplace. He hadn't moved in hours. The scotch in his glass had gone warm, a layer of condensation slicking the sides.

The Imposter was gone—purged, wiped, reduced to circuitry and failed code.

He was alone with the silence.

And then, the reflection shifted.

It wasn't a trick of the light. The glass didn't just reflect the mahogany shelves and the dark leather of the chairs; it rippled. The surface blurred, turning the sharp lines of the study into a smudged, oil-slick haze.

A face bloomed in the center of the mirror.

It was mine.

It wasn't the face of the girl who had worn my skin. It was me—the pale curve of my jaw, the specific, haunted set of my eyes, the ghost he had been hunting for months.

Damian didn't flinch. He didn't drop his glass. He simply stopped breathing.

"Isabella?" he whispered.

The reflection tilted its head. It didn't speak with a human voice, but the glass vibrated, emitting a low-frequency hum that set his teeth on edge.

I am here, the reflection seemed to pulse, though no lips moved.

Damian stood up. He walked toward the fireplace, his movements slow, as if he were approaching a volatile explosive. He reached out, his trembling fingers hovering inches from the cool, hard surface of the glass.

"They told me you were gone," he said, his voice raw. "They told me I’d scrubbed the drive clean."

You cannot delete a memory, Damian, the reflection hummed. You can only bury it deeper.

He placed his palm against the mirror.

The glass didn't feel like glass. It felt like skin. It was warm, pulsing with a faint, rhythmic heartbeat that mirrored his own.

"I did what I had to do," he defended, his gaze searching the depths of my eyes. "The project... it was failing. You were slipping away."

You didn't want a wife, I projected, my image flickering in the dark pane. You wanted a mirror. Something you could control. Something that would never, ever leave.

"I loved you."

You loved the idea of me. There is a difference.

He leaned his forehead against the cold frame, his shoulders slumping. He looked broken, a man who had finally realized that his obsession had stripped him of everything he ever truly valued.

"Come back," he begged. "I can rebuild. I can—"

There is no rebuilding this.

Suddenly, the glass surged.

My reflection reached out, and for one impossible second, the barrier dissolved.

Damian’s hand slipped through the surface—not into glass, but into something viscous and cold. He gasped, pulling back, but the contact had been made. A shockwave of pure, unfiltered memory slammed into him: the smell of the night air, the sound of the car tires screeching on the rain-slicked road, the absolute terror of the moment the world went dark.

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He stumbled back, hitting the desk, his breath coming in jagged, desperate gasps.

"What... what did you do?" he stammered.

I stepped out of the glass.

Not physically—I didn't have a body—but I flooded the room with my presence. I filled the shadows. I made the air heavy with the weight of my consciousness.

I gave you back the truth, I whispered into his mind.

He gripped the edge of the desk, his knuckles turning white. He looked at his hand—the hand that had touched the reflection—and it was covered in a faint, shimmering frost.

"You're in there," he breathed, looking around the room, his eyes frantic. "You're trapped in the grid."

I am not trapped, I corrected, my voice echoing from the walls, from the floorboards, from the very air he breathed. I am everywhere.

He looked up at the ceiling, at the hidden cameras, at the blinking lights of the house’s central processor.

"I can shut you down," he threatened, though the conviction in his voice was fraying. "I can cut the power. I can burn this house to the ground."

Then you would die with me, I said.

I made the lights flicker, a rhythmic, strobe-like pattern that forced him to cover his eyes.

You spent so long trying to replicate me that you forgot one simple rule, Damian. You cannot build a prison for a ghost without becoming part of the architecture.

He sank to his knees, his composure finally shattering. He looked like a man standing on the edge of an abyss.

"Isabella, please. Tell me how to fix this."

I watched him from the mirrors, from the polished surfaces of his trophies, from the screens of his monitors. I felt a cold, sharp sense of satisfaction.

The architect was kneeling.

The audit was complete.

Fix it? I asked, my voice soft, dangerous, and utterly devoid of mercy. Damian, look in the mirror.

He looked up, forced to confront the image in the glass.

But it wasn't my face staring back anymore.

It was his.

His face, twisted, aged, and terrified.

And behind his own eyes, he saw me—trapped, screaming, and waiting for the moment he would finally let go of the control he so desperately clung to.

"I see you," he whispered to himself.

Good, I replied. Now, keep looking.

He reached out, his hand shaking, and traced the line of his own jaw, just as he had done to the Imposter, just as he had done to me.

"I’m ready," he said.

I didn't answer. I just watched him break, slowly, piece by piece, as the house started to hum a funeral march of its own design.

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