The trap never looked like one. That was what made it effective.
It showed up as an opportunity, sounded like good news, and felt like an answered prayer.
Clara accepted it without hesitation.
Two weeks after her interview, the official offer arrived.
Baltimore Crest Marketing Firm — Junior Marketing Analyst.
She read the email over and over until the words blurred.
Her hands started shaking.
“Mama!” she called, rushing into the kitchen.
Beatrice turned from the stove, spoon in hand. “What is it?”
“I got the job. It’s official.”
For a moment, Beatrice just stood there. Then tears filled her eyes. They embraced tightly, laughing and crying at the same time.
That night, Beatrice cooked jollof rice with chicken. Not because it was easy, but because moments like this deserved something special. Hope itself felt worth it.
Above them, Shomer watched.
“She’s rising,” he whispered. But his light flickered slightly.
He could feel it now. Resistance. Invisible tension pulling at the path ahead.
Something was aligning. Just not in her favor.
Clara moved into a small shared apartment near her new workplace in Baltimore.
On her first night alone, she called her mother.
“Hello, Mama… how are you?”
“I’m fine, dear Clara.”
“Are you eating and resting?” she asked.
“Yes.”
Some of it wasn’t entirely true, but Clara chose to believe it. Peace mattered more than details.
Her first week at Baltimore Crest was overwhelming. New systems, new expectations, new faces.
But she adjusted quickly.
She arrived early, stayed late, took notes no one asked for, and asked questions others avoided.
People began to notice.
“Miss Bennett is sharp,” one supervisor said. “She pays attention to details.”
Praise started small, then became more open.
Lydia was there too. Transferred into a nearby firm in the same city. Quietly. Deliberately.
On Clara’s first day, Lydia approached with a bright smile.
“Oh my God! What a coincidence!” she said, hugging her.
Clara returned the hug warmly. “I’m so happy you’re here.”
Lydia smiled, but inside, something colder settled.
You won’t be for long.
Weeks passed. Clara’s name started appearing in meetings.
“Let Clara handle the projections.”
“She understands the data.”
“She catches errors quickly.”
Her progress was steady. Visible.
And it didn’t go unnoticed.
Across the office, Lydia watched it all. Quietly. Carefully.
What Clara was gaining in weeks, Lydia had spent years trying to earn.
It felt unfair. And worse, it felt replaceable.
One Friday evening, the office was almost empty. Lydia walked over to Clara’s desk.
“Hey,” she said casually. “My system’s acting up. Can you help me submit this file?”
Clara didn’t hesitate. “Sure.”
She rolled her chair over, logged into Lydia’s system, reviewed the file, and nodded.
“Looks fine. Just upload it through the client portal.”
Clara entered the credentials, uploaded the file, and logged out.
Simple. Routine. Nothing unusual.
But Lydia was watching closely, memorizing every step. Every click. Every detail.
“Thanks,” Lydia said with a soft smile.
Above the building, Shomer stiffened.
A disturbance moved through the air. Subtle, but intentional.
“Deception is forming,” he murmured.
He tried to trace it, but it scattered. His vision blurred. Static crept in again.
He reached toward Clara, but the bond flickered.
Her growing stress, though quiet, was draining him. Her stability was no longer steady enough to fully sustain him.
For the first time, he couldn’t see the full picture. And that unsettled him.
A week later, everything collapsed.
Baltimore Crest’s largest client reported massive financial losses. Millions were gone.
Incorrect projections. Faulty analysis.
The office turned tense overnight. Whispers spread. Meetings were called. Faces changed.
Clara felt it before she understood it. Something was wrong.
Then she was summoned.
The boardroom felt colder than usual.
Executives sat along one side of the table. Her manager avoided her eyes.
“Clara,” he said carefully, “we need you to explain something.”
A tablet slid toward her.
On the screen were her login credentials and a timestamp tied to the failed submission.
Her chest tightened.
“I didn’t submit this,” she said quietly.
No one moved.
“These are your credentials,” the director replied.
“I know… but I didn’t do this.” Her thoughts raced back to Lydia, the file, the login.
She turned slowly.
Lydia sat at the far end of the table, head slightly lowered, hands folded. Calm. Quiet. Unshaken.
Clara’s voice trembled. “There must be a mistake.”
“The system shows no breach,” another executive said. “No external interference.”
“But I would never—”
“Intent doesn’t change the outcome,” her manager interrupted softly. “The evidence stands.”
Silence pressed down on her.
She felt trapped. Small. Powerless.
Above them, Shomer felt it all at once.
The fall. The confusion. The despair flooding her spirit.
“No,” he whispered.
His wings strained, light cracking along their edges.
He tried to intervene, to nudge someone’s thoughts, to spark doubt, but the laws that bound him held firm.
Free will. Human consequence.
“Why can’t I reach her?” he cried into the void. No answer came.
Clara packed her desk in silence.
No outburst. No protest. Just a box, a letter, and quiet eyes watching her leave.
The elevator ride down felt endless.
When the doors opened, the outside air hit her face. Cold. Sharp. Unforgiving.
She walked home in the rain without an umbrella. No tears, no anger. Just silence inside her.
Shomer descended as close as he could.
His light surged, unstable.
“I know she’s innocent,” he whispered.
But in the human world, truth wasn’t always what mattered. Evidence could be shaped. Systems could be manipulated.
Clara stepped into her apartment, set the box down, and sat on the edge of her bed.
She stared at the wall for a long time.
Then she whispered, “I’m tired.”
Not angry. Not broken. Just tired.
And that quiet exhaustion struck Shomer harder than tears ever could.
In the higher realm, alarms rang.
Costus rose from his throne. “The guardian weakens.”
Lumen stepped forward. “Her spirit is fracturing.”
Vigilis watched calmly. “The bond is no longer stable.”
Costus’s eyes sharpened. “Then we escalate.”
Shomer’s name echoed through the chamber.
Summoned. Judged. Cornered.
On Earth, Clara lay down slowly and closed her eyes.
For the first time in a long while, she didn’t pray.
In the spiritual realm, a gate began to open, light and matter folding together.
And Costus gave a final command.
“Prepare him for mortality.”