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Special Birthday Celebration: A Couple’s Unforgettable Evening Dinner

**A Memorable Birthday Dinner: A Couples Special Celebration**
Emily was returning home with her husband from the restaurant where theyd celebrated his birthday. It had been a lovely evening, filled with relatives and colleaguesmany of whom Emily had never met before. But if James had chosen to invite them, she trusted his judgment.
Emily wasnt one to argue with her husband. She disliked drama and confrontation, finding it easier to agree than to insist she was right.
“Emily, do you have the keys? Can you grab them?”
She rummaged through her handbag, then tensed as a sharp pain shot through her finger. She yanked her hand back, dropping the bag.
“What was that?”
“Something stung me.”
“With all the junk in there, Im not surprised.”
Emily bit back a retort, carefully retrieving the keys. By the time they stepped inside, shed forgotten the incident entirely. Her legs ached from the long evening, and all she wanted was a hot shower and bed. But the next morning, her finger throbbedred, swollen. Memories of the night before resurfaced, and she emptied her bag onto the bed. At the bottom lay a large, rusted needle.
“What on earth?”
She couldnt fathom how it got there. Disgusted, she tossed it in the bin and bandaged the wound. By lunchtime, fever had set in.
She called James. “I dont feel right. Fever, headacheeverythings sore. That needle I found? It mustve been dirty.”
“You should see a doctor. It could be tetanus.”
“Dont be dramatic. I cleaned it. Ill be fine.”
She wasnt. By evening, she barely made it home before collapsing onto the sofa. In her dreams, her late grandmotherMargaret, whod passed when Emily was smallappeared. Though her face was unfamiliar, Emily knew it was her.
Margaret led her through a field, pointing out herbs for a cleansing tea. “Someone wishes you harm,” she whispered. “But you must survive. Time is short.”
Emily woke drenched in sweat. Only minutes had passed. The front door creakedJames was home. He gasped when he saw her. “Look at yourself!”
The mirror reflected a stranger: tangled hair, sunken eyes, ghostly skin. “Whats happening to me?”
She told him of the dream. “Gran had answers”
“Emily, were going to the hospital.”
“No! She said doctors cant help.”
They foughttheir first real argument. James even threatened to carry her out. When she resisted, she fell, grazing her arm. Furious, he snatched her bag and stormed out.
He returned near midnight, remorseful. Her only request: “Take me to Grans village.”
Morning revealed her worsening state. “Please,” James begged. “This is madness.”
But they went. Exhausted, she collapsed in the field from her dream, gathering the herbs Margaret had shown her. Back home, James prepared the tea. Sip by sip, strength returneduntil she staggered to the bathroom, her urine black. “The poisons leaving,” she murmured.
That night, Margaret visited again, smiling. “The rusted needle carried a curse. The tea helps, but not forever. We must find who did thisits tied to James.”
The next day, Emily bought needles, whispering the charm Margaret taught her over the largest one. She slipped it into Jamess briefcase.
That evening, he frowned. “Oddest thingSarah from accounting reached into my bag and pricked herself. She glared like she wanted me dead.”
“Sarah? Was she at your birthday?”
“A colleague. Nothing more.”
The pieces clicked.
As James ate, Emily dreamed once more. Margaret explained: Sarah, using dark magic, sought to replace her.
Days later, James mentioned Sarah was on medical leavedoctors baffled.
The following weekend, Emily visited Margarets grave, tidying the overgrown plot. As she placed flowers, a breeze brushed her shoulderswarm, like a hand.
“Thank you, Gran,” she whispered. “Without you, I wouldnt be here.”
