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A Mirror Too Honest  Novel Cover

A Mirror Too Honest

‎ ‎ ‎Sophia Hayes has perfected the art of control. In the high-pressure world of The Metropolitan, she's the youngest senior journalist ever hired-an achievement built on ruthless discipline, flawless execution, and a reputation that makes even seasoned reporters double-check their facts before speaking to her. She is sharp. Unshakeable. Precise to the bone. Her life runs on deadlines, color-coded calendars, and emotional walls tall enough to withstand anything. ‎ ‎Dean Mercer is everything she isn't-and everything she doesn't have time for. A wildly successful illustrator whose comic series Love Is a Mess has a cult following online, Dean lives in a world where structure is optional and inspiration is everything. His apartment is chaos. His sleep schedule is chaos. His heart is chaos. He creates brilliance in messy strokes but hides his deepest truths behind humor, charm, and a smile that masks more wounds than he lets on. ‎ ‎So when the magazine pairs them for a high-stakes project-a revolutionary feature blending investigative journalism with illustrated storytelling-everyone expects disaster. Sophia expects worse. ‎ ‎Their assignment: explore modern love through real stories across the city. Raw, unfiltered, unpredictable love. ‎ ‎Exactly the kind of assignment that makes Sophia want to run. ‎ ‎Dean arrives late to their first meeting with coffee stains and excuses. Sophia arrives with a binder thick enough to double as a weapon. Dean studies her timeline like it's written in a foreign language. Sophia studies Dean like he's a problem she needs to solve before he derails everything she's built. ‎ ‎Their partnership begins in sparks-sharp, heated, dangerous sparks. ‎Arguments disguised as discussions. ‎Discussions disguised as power struggles. ‎Power struggles disguised as creative differences. ‎ ‎But tension has a habit of twisting into something else when the nights grow long. ‎ ‎As they dive into the city-interviewing strangers whose love stories survived decades, storms, heartbreaks, second chances-something shifts between them. Slowly. Quietly. Against both of their wills. ‎ ‎Sophia begins to see past Dean's easy humor to the man underneath-the one who fears failing the people he cares about, who draws comics because it's the only way he knows how to tell the truth. And Dean sees the cracks in Sophia's armor-the vulnerability she protects like a secret, the softness she doesn't show, the fire in her that the world misunderstands as coldness. ‎ ‎Their conversations deepen. Their arguments soften. Their laughter blends. ‎And the chemistry-the kind they both pretend not to notice-tightens around them like an invisible thread. ‎ ‎But the closer they get, the heavier the air becomes. Because both of them are hiding something. ‎ ‎Sophia hides her fear of losing control. ‎Dean hides his fear of being the reason someone gets hurt. ‎ ‎And the feature they're creating-meant to uncover the truth about modern love-begins exposing truths they never meant to reveal. About each other. About themselves. ‎ ‎Their late-night work sessions grow intimate, electric. Their stories blur with the stories they're collecting. Dean sketches Sophia without meaning to-capturing expressions she never lets the world see. Sophia writes notes about him she can't bring herself to delete. Something real starts forming in the space between them, fragile but undeniable. ‎ ‎Until the past they both buried finds them. ‎ ‎A mistake from Dean's life-one he thought he'd left behind-reaches the editorial floor at the worst possible time. A detail with enough weight to derail the feature, shatter their progress, and wound the one person who finally saw him clearly. ‎ ‎Sophia's instinct is survival. Run before she gets hurt. Seal her heart before it cracks open. Dean's instinct is retreat. Protect her from the version of himself he fears is still true. ‎ ‎Deadlines tighten. Trust fractures. ‎Their work stalls, their communication splinters, and the connection they've been dancing around threatens to snap under the strain. ‎ ‎But desire doesn't listen to logic. ‎And hearts don't obey deadlines. ‎ ‎Even as they pull away, they keep orbiting each other-drawn back together by an ache neither can extinguish. Their arguments deepen into something rawer, heavier. Their silence holds more meaning than their words. ‎ ‎They must choose: ‎fight for the story that could define their careers... ‎or fight for the connection that could rewrite their futures. ‎ ‎And when an unexpected message, a truth revealed too late, and one irreversible decision collide, they're forced to confront the question their feature was meant to answer: ‎ ‎What does love look like today- ‎and can two people living at opposite rhythms find it before it slips through their fingers? ‎ ‎On the edge of losing their partnership... ‎their second chance... ‎and each other... ‎ ‎
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Chapter 5

CHAPTER 5 - THE WALK THAT WASN'T SUPPOSED TO MATTER

The sun had dipped low, painting the city in streaks of gold and purple, when Sophia finally agreed-reluctantly-to take a walk with Dean.

"I don't see why we need this," she said, trying to sound firm. "It's a feature on love, not a nature documentary."

Dean, as always, was grinning. "It's called research, Sophia. Inspiration comes from observing people. And streets. And-well, maybe even pigeons if they're lucky."

She shot him a glare, but didn't walk away. That was progress, of a sort.

They left the café behind, walking in silence at first. Not awkward silence, but charged silence. The kind that buzzes under your skin.

Sophia had her notebook in hand. Dean had his sketchpad. Neither spoke for a few blocks, listening instead to the rhythm of the city-the low hum of traffic, the faint sound of laughter from a playground, the wind teasing leaves from trees lining the avenue.

Finally, Dean broke the quiet.

"You ever notice," he said softly, "how couples can look completely different but still... work?"

Sophia frowned. "What does that mean?"

"I mean... some people are so opposite, so chaotic and structured at the same time... and somehow, they click." He glanced at her, eyebrow slightly raised. "Kind of like... you know... us?"

Sophia's jaw tightened. She focused on the notebook in her hand, pretending to scribble something important.

"Do you think opposites attract?" he continued, casual but probing.

She didn't answer.

Dean smirked faintly. "Or maybe we just attract trouble."

She felt a shiver-not from the wind.

They turned into a small park, half-hidden between two apartment blocks. The benches were mostly empty, and the autumn leaves crunched underfoot as they walked along the winding path.

Dean stopped suddenly. "Here," he said, motioning to a large oak. "Sit. Observe."

Sophia hesitated, then followed him. They settled on the bench together-slightly too close, but not enough for either of them to comment.

"You know," Dean said, stretching his legs, "I never thought a walk could be... informative."

"Really?" Sophia replied, trying to keep her voice neutral. "You're the one who wanted to see pigeons for inspiration."

He chuckled softly. "Pigeons can teach you about balance. Survival. Commitment. And chaos."

Sophia stared at him. "You're insane."

He smiled, calm, open, and dangerous all at once. "Maybe. But so are you."

The words weren't meant as a compliment. Yet, somehow, they landed like one anyway.

They walked in silence for a while after that, each lost in thought. Sophia noted the couples on benches, the parents chasing toddlers, the teens skating clumsily on the path. Every detail was a potential paragraph. Every glance, a potential quote.

And then Dean stopped abruptly.

"What is it?" she asked, noticing the unusual seriousness in his eyes.

"Nothing," he said quickly, but she didn't believe him.

"Dean," she pressed.

He sighed, leaning back against a tree. "It's just... look at them," he said, gesturing vaguely to a young couple laughing on a blanket. "They look... normal. Simple. Happy. And you know what? I don't think it's because they're perfect. I think it's because they accept the chaos."

Sophia's chest tightened. The way he said "chaos" made her heart beat faster. She looked away, trying not to notice how warm the late-afternoon sunlight made his hair glint gold.

"Dean... this is just research," she said quickly. "Nothing else."

"Research," he echoed softly, but she heard something else there. Something unspoken. Something fragile. Something dangerous.

They stopped at a fountain, its water shimmering under the sunset. Dean leaned over the edge, sketching a rough outline of a couple sitting nearby. Sophia couldn't stop herself from peeking.

"You're... really good at that," she admitted softly.

Dean glanced up, surprised by the sincerity in her tone. "Thanks," he said. "You're... good at observing things you don't want to admit matter."

She froze. "What does that mean?"

"Nothing," he said quickly, closing his sketchpad. "Just... don't think about it."

She did think about it. Of course, she thought about it. Every word, every glance, every subtle shift in his tone lodged itself in her mind like a quiet alarm.

They walked again, quieter this time. The city seemed to pause around them, holding its breath.

"You know," Dean said suddenly, voice barely above the wind, "I didn't want to like this walk."

"You mean... with me?" Sophia asked, trying to keep the edge out of her voice.

Dean laughed softly, a warm, low sound that made her chest tighten. "Yeah. With you. I thought it'd be annoying. Forced. Awkward. But it's... not."

Her stomach twisted. "It's not what?"

"Not awful," he said simply. "Maybe even... nice."

Sophia swallowed, heart racing. She wanted to argue. She wanted to deny it. But the words stuck in her throat.

They reached the edge of the park, where the path narrowed between two buildings. The air felt colder, sharper.

Sophia sensed it first. A movement at the far edge. A shadow lingering, watching.

"Dean..." she whispered.

He turned sharply, eyes scanning the alleyway. "Stay close," he murmured.

The figure remained just out of reach, hood up, hands buried in pockets. Silent. Observing. Menacing.

Sophia's chest tightened. The earlier warnings-the messages, the strange notes, the sense of being followed-all clicked into a horrifying pattern.

Dean glanced at her. "We can't let them see us panic."

She nodded, heart pounding. But deep down, she knew: this wasn't over.

Dean instinctively brushed a hand against hers-not deliberately, not romantically, but protective.

Sophia flinched.

Their eyes met, long enough to notice the unspoken, dangerous tension that had been building for days.

"We should go," Dean said quietly. "Fast."

She nodded. "Yes. Fast."

As they hurried down the street, shadows flitted between lampposts. Every step felt heavy. Every corner, potentially dangerous.

And yet... amidst the fear, amidst the chaos, there was something small but undeniable between them: trust. A connection that neither wanted to admit but neither could deny.

It was fragile. Dangerous. And entirely too real.

As they reached the main street, a car slowly rolled by. The passenger window lowered slightly, and a face they didn't recognize stared at them.

Then, just as quickly, it vanished into the city lights.

Sophia's stomach dropped.

Dean grabbed her hand-not a brush this time, but firmly. "They're closer than we think," he said.

Sophia's breath caught. She nodded, heart hammering. "And I think... this is only getting started."

The city lights shimmered around them, but in the shadows, someone-or something-was waiting. Watching. Calculating.

And whatever it was, it didn't care about their deadlines, their drafts, or their slowly growing, dangerously complicated feelings.

It only cared about stopping them.

The walk meant for inspiration has shifted their relationship in subtle, undeniable ways-but the lurking danger is closer than ever. Someone is watching, following, and the threat is no longer abstract.

The streets had grown darker as Sophia and Dean moved briskly, staying near the glow of streetlights, their shadows stretching long behind them.

Sophia's hand still tingled from Dean's grip. Not his brush of accidental closeness earlier, but this-intentional, protective. Her pulse raced, though she told herself it wasn't the danger that did it.

"Dean," she whispered, voice low. "How do we... deal with this?"

He glanced at her, jaw tight, expression unreadable. "We keep moving. Stick together. Don't panic. And most importantly-don't let them know what scares us."

She nodded, though the words did little to calm her. Panic had already found its way into her chest, winding around her ribcage like barbed wire.

They turned a corner. A car's headlights glinted off wet asphalt, the rain from earlier leaving puddles that reflected the neon signs. For a fleeting second, Sophia thought she saw the figure again-a shadow slipping between buildings, watching.

"Did you see that?" she asked sharply.

Dean's eyes flicked to the same spot. "Yeah. They're close."

Her stomach clenched. The earlier warnings-the notes, the messages, the stranger in the café-made sense now. This wasn't random. This was targeted. Deliberate.

She swallowed hard. "Why us?"

Dean didn't answer immediately. Instead, he scanned the street, calculating. Then he said quietly, "I don't know. But whoever this is... they're not here to talk. And they're patient. Very patient."

Sophia's mind raced. Each step they took felt heavier. Each shadow flicker, sharper. She gripped her notebook like a shield, her fingers trembling.

Dean noticed. He stopped, turning to her. "Hey," he said softly, "look at me. Breathe. We've handled worse than unknown threats."

"Worse?" she said, voice tight. "Dean, we don't even know what this is yet!"

He reached out, brushing a strand of hair from her face. The contact was brief, professional in intent, yet electricity sparked between them anyway. Her heart skipped.

"You're panicking," he said gently. "And panicking doesn't help."

Sophia's cheeks warmed-not from exertion. Not entirely. She pulled her hand from his, but the pulse of contact lingered longer than it should.

They reached the edge of the city center, where the streets were emptier, the alleys narrower, and the shadows deeper.

Dean slowed, motioning for Sophia to follow behind him. "Stay close," he whispered. "If we split up, it's over. I don't want to lose sight of you."

Her stomach fluttered-not just from fear. The words had layers she wasn't ready to confront.

"I'm not losing sight of you either," she said softly, surprising even herself.

Dean's lips twitched. He didn't respond verbally. But his eyes softened, holding hers just a fraction too long before scanning the street ahead again.

The figure emerged. Hood up, hands in pockets, moving with calculated ease.

Sophia froze.

Dean stepped in front of her, blocking the path instinctively. His presence was a shield, firm and grounded, and it gave her a sliver of courage.

The stranger reached into their coat pocket-not an overtly threatening move, but enough to make Sophia's chest tighten. Dean's hand went to hers, gripping firmly. Not in panic, but in readiness.

The figure dropped a folded note at Dean's feet, then disappeared into the alley, blending into the shadows.

Dean picked up the note. Sophia leaned in. Her hands were shaking.

Four words, written in jagged black ink:

"You're too close now."

Her breath caught.

Dean's eyes darkened. "This isn't about our work anymore."

Her stomach sank. "No. It's about us. Somehow."

Dean didn't respond. He just scanned the street again, tension coiled in every muscle.

They continued walking, slower now. The danger hung close, but there was another tension between them, too-one they could no longer ignore.

Sophia's notebook felt heavy in her hand. Dean's sketchpad was silent beside her.

And then, without thinking, she spoke. "Dean... I don't know if I'm afraid of the danger or... of feeling something for you."

The words tumbled out before she could stop them.

Dean stopped mid-step. He looked at her-really looked. His brow furrowed slightly, and his mouth opened as if he wanted to respond, but words failed him.

"You... what?" he whispered, voice rough.

"I don't know," she admitted. "But... something's happening. I don't want it to. And yet... it is."

Dean's gaze softened. His hand reached out again-not in the protective stance of moments ago, but for her hand, finally, deliberately.

She let him take it.

Their fingers intertwined naturally, almost easily, and the city's chaos-the shadows, the unknown threat-seemed to fade, leaving only this moment suspended in time.

Her heartbeat thundered. She wanted to pull away, but the warmth of his hand, the steadiness, the connection... it anchored her.

Dean whispered softly, almost reverently, "You're not alone. Not here. Not ever, if I can help it."

Her chest tightened, emotions swirling like a storm. She wanted to believe him. She wanted to hate that she did.

And then-just as quickly-the moment shattered.

A sudden sound-a muffled shout, a scrape against metal-echoed from the alley they had just passed.

Dean's grip tightened around her hand instinctively. "Move," he commanded.

They ran, weaving through the streets, the city now feeling hostile and alive. Every shadow seemed to move with intent. Every flicker of movement made Sophia's heart pound like a drum.

And then, a figure emerged at the next corner-hood up, taller this time, more deliberate. Blocking the path. Watching. Waiting.

Dean shoved her behind him. "Stay close," he ordered.

The figure didn't move closer. Just stood. Observed. A warning. A message.

Sophia's chest heaved. "Who... what do they want?"

Dean didn't answer. His eyes never left the figure. His voice was low, steady, commanding: "Whatever it is... it's not over. And they're testing us."

Her pulse skyrocketed. She looked up at him, their hands still intertwined, and realized-terrifyingly, painfully-that no matter what danger lurked outside, no matter what threat pursued them... she couldn't pull away.

Not from him. Not now.

Not ever.

The stranger suddenly moved, disappearing into the darkness, leaving only a folded note at Dean's feet once again.

Dean picked it up. Sophia leaned closer.

Three words, written hastily:

"Next time-watch."

Sophia's blood ran cold.

Dean's jaw clenched. "They're not done. And neither is this."

Her stomach dropped. Their walk, meant for inspiration, had shifted something small, fragile, and dangerously real... into something undeniable.

And now, the danger wasn't just around them. It was closing in.

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