She wasn't in her modern apartment. She was staring at a 1970s-style living room. Cardboard packing boxes were stacked haphazardly against the silk-papered walls. The opulent space looked like it had been ransacked.
The memories settled, cold and heavy in her stomach.
Memories of a woman named Josephine Sullivan, a life of luxury, and a terrible, self-destructive plan. She had somehow awakened in this stranger's body, inheriting her chaotic existence. She was now the notoriously vain, gold-digging wife she had only just learned about through these fragmented, chilling visions.
Josie placed a trembling hand flat against her lower abdomen. A strange, physical warmth radiated from beneath her palm. There was a heartbeat there. A life. The original host had planned to use this unborn child as a bargaining chip, threatening to abort it to extort a massive divorce settlement.
That exact, foolish plan was destined to lead to her dying penniless and alone in a gutter, a grim future that flashed vividly in her mind's eye as a terrifying premonition.
Josie dragged in a ragged breath. The air smelled of dust and old wood.
She was not going to die in a gutter. She was going to rewrite this miserable destiny. She needed the Sterling family to survive, and they needed her to not be a monster.
Heavy, rhythmic footsteps echoed from the hardwood hallway.
The sound cut through the silence of the townhouse like a drumbeat. Josie froze.
Donovan Sterling stepped into the living room.
His tall, muscular frame cast a long, intimidating shadow over the glass coffee table. He wore a wrinkled military uniform. His broad shoulders were rigid. His jaw was clenched so tight the muscles ticked visibly beneath his skin. He emanated an aura of cold, absolute exhaustion.
Donovan stopped opposite the sofa. His dark eyes locked onto Josie. There was no warmth in them. Only disgust and a lingering, raw pain.
He reached into his uniform jacket. He pulled out a thick manila envelope and tossed it onto the glass coffee table.
The envelope slid across the smooth glass. It stopped exactly two inches away from Josie's fingertips.
"Sign them," Donovan ordered. His voice was raspy, stripped of all emotion. "I want this done."
Josie looked down at the thick stack of papers spilling from the envelope. Divorce papers. This was the exact turning point.
"I arranged for you to keep the townhouse," Donovan stated, his voice dropping an octave. "And the remaining un-frozen bank account. It's enough."
He took a slow step closer. The sheer size of him swallowed the space between them.
"In exchange," Donovan said, his voice turning lethal, "you leave the child alone. You have the baby, you hand it over to my mother, and you walk away."
Josie looked at his hands. His knuckles were white. His fists were clenched so hard they shook slightly. Beneath the cold, terrifying exterior, this man was desperate to save his unborn child.
Josie slowly reached out. Her fingertips brushed the crisp edge of the divorce papers. She picked up the heavy document.
Donovan looked away, staring out the window. His chest expanded with a sharp breath. He was physically bracing himself for her to start screaming, to demand more money, to threaten the baby.
Josie quickly scanned the front page. The alimony terms were incredibly generous for a family facing total bankruptcy. He was ruining himself to pay her off.
She placed the papers back onto the glass table. The heavy thud echoed in the quiet room.
Donovan snapped his gaze back to her. His dark brows furrowed in deep confusion.
"Is the money not enough to satisfy your appetite, Josephine?" he asked sharply.
Josie stood up slowly. Her legs felt weak, but she forced her spine straight. She smoothed the wrinkles from her maternity dress, projecting a quiet, unshakeable dignity.
She looked directly into Donovan's hostile eyes. She didn't blink. She offered a faint, entirely serene smile.
She shook her head slowly.
Donovan stepped forward, closing the distance. "What new game are you playing?"
"I'm not signing the papers," Josie stated clearly. Her voice was steady, lacking any of the original host's shrill hysteria. "I am not getting an abortion. And I am staying as your wife."