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You can find more information here~ Word Count: 5.4k || Original World + Slow-Burn Genre - Supernatural Mystery, Romantic Undercurrents _________________________________________
Chapter One: Found & Lost Again
The sun hits Manere Bay like a slap, bleaching the whitewashed town until Nyra feels half-melted just walking uphill. Even the shade seems to glare. The streets loop and tangle like the place couldnât decide where to endâveins twisting toward the sea, then folding back on themselves. Tourists swarm the market square in linen and sunglasses, all open-mouthed awe. Locals slip around them like water around rocksânever touching, never lingering. Every shopfront begs for a photo; every alley is someoneâs shortcut.
Nyra hates crowds. But, in spite; she hates being lost more.
Her boots crunch broken shells and shards of blue tile as she checks the ledgerâs addressâhalf a street name and a tangle of numbers, more riddle than direction. She trails a finger along stucco walls, scanning for anything familiar. Everythingâs paintedâsills in cobalt, doors in burnished gold, whole walls in terracotta. The air smells of salt and burning sage, with music threading through it: strings, a womanâs laughter, waves slapping stone.
Near a sun-bleached fountain, she stumbles. A girlâsmall, frizzy-haired, more shadow than shapeâwatches her from behind the rim. A shard of glass spins in the water.
âYouâre real this time,â the girl says, voice flat, oddly sure. âI wasnât sure.â
Nyra blinks. A question catches in her throat. But before she can speak, the girl dusts off her knees and slips into a crowd. Nyra stares after her, then tightens her grip on the ledger.
Just a kid, she tells herself. Just a weird, sun-dazed kid.
The path winds deeper into the townâs ribs, past music, into a snarl of side streets where the sea-lavender grows thick and unseen chimes rattle softly. Buildings blur togetherâwhite domes, arched doorwaysâbut here the paint peels, the salt heavier.
She slows at the sight of a sign, half-choked in vines, swinging on rusted chains.
Vale & Vine.
She lets out a short, bitter laugh.
âReally, Dad? Couldnât even name your double life something new?â
She stands still, sea wind twisting around her, the old sign creaking above. She tries to picture her father here. Her mother in the doorway, arms full of flowers. But nothing fits. The place is shuttered, taken back by time and green. Her pulse falters. For the first time since landing, something cracksârecognition, regret, and a sharp, unwelcome ache.
She presses her palm to the door.
Nothing.
She closes her eyes. Breathes in salt, sage, loss.
âIâm here,â she whispers. âSo⌠now what?â
The door doesnât budge. Not to pressure, not to coaxing. Not even when Nyra mutters her fatherâs name as if it was a key. She steps back, lips pressed tight, eyeing the salt-stained threshold. Someoneâlong ago, probablyâscrawled a warding.. Glyph?â across the stone in rust-colored ink. Itâs cracked now. Faded like it gave up trying to keep anything out.
âGuess Iâm not welcome either,â she mutters.
Sheâs already turning to leave when a breeze slides down the alleyâheavier than sea wind, scented with lavender and ironâand drops something small at her feet.
A pressed flower. Sea-lavender. Flat, brittle, and pale as ash.
She bends to pick it upâthen freezes.
Tucked behind a loose plank at the base of the doorframe is a folded slip of paper. Hidden so neatly it couldâve been there for years... or just tucked in this morning.
Nyra hesitates. Then reaches in and pulls it free.
The paper is soft with age, sealed with a wax stamp sheâs never seen: a vine curling through a crescent moon, pressed into violet-grey wax.
She breaks the seal.
âIf youâve come looking for answers, find the one place we never finished. Bring salt. And donât trust the smiling ones. â Câ
Nyraâs pulse jolts like someone just whispered in her ear. The note is unsignedâbut it doesnât need to be. She knows that crooked tilt in the C. Her father never fixed the way he wrote his name after the break in his hand. She remembers it in receipts, notes, the old grocery list above the counter.
âWhat the hell, DadâŚâ
She leans her head against the door. Cool wood. Sun-warmed frame. No sound from insideâbut something hums beneath the floorboards. Low and steady. Not fear. Something older. A memory that isnât hers. She steps back again and looks up at the sign.
Vale & Vine.
 Same name. Same letters. But this one came first.
âSo what else didnât you tell me?â she says. âWhat else did you leave behind?â
Far off, the windchimes stutter. Something creaks behind the buildingâor beneath it. She folds the note and tucks it into the back of her ledger. Then turns and walks into the light, almost back into the hum of a town that insists nothing here is strange.Â
The sun wonât shut up. Itâs in her eyes, in her mouth, crawling across her scalp like fingers made of sweat and salt. The alley feels tighter nowâclaustrophobic, like grief thatâs gone soft at the edges, the kind that settles in walls like mildew. Nyraâs hands shake as she folds the note. She fumbles it into her ledgerâs back pocket, misses, swears, and shoves it in crooked.
âFuck this place,â she mutters. The sign above the door creaks like itâs laughing. âAnd fuck you, too.â She kicks the base of the door. It thudsâmore insulted than injured. A puff of crushed sea-lavender escapes from under the frame, like a sigh.
âI crossed godsdamn oceans for this? Dug through death certificates, fought with boat schedules, sat through three-hour transfersâfor a shack full of fuck-all and riddles?â She paces the alley, tugging her dark brown, almost black hair into a tie thatâs no longer there.
âAnd why wouldnât it be locked?â she snaps. âThatâd be too fucking normal, right?â
 She throws her arms wide, spins in a slow, sarcastic circle.
âOh yes, welcome to Manereâpopulation: liars and floral decay! Hereâs your inheritance, NyyYRRaaa: a broken building, a cryptic note, and a town full of strangers who donât even know your name.â She stops. Breathing hard. Mouth dry. The salt air stings her tongue. Her pulse roars in her ears, but it canât drown out the whisper in her head:
You shouldnât have come. He left for a reason.
She leans back against the hot wall and slides down, crouching at the edge of the alley. Arms on her knees. Eyes burningâbut nothing falls. Not yet. Maybe later. Maybe never.
âGoddammit, Dad,â she says, her voice small. âYou couldâve left a key. A map. One honest fucking sentence.â
Her voice cracks. She swallows it.Â
Thenâsharp breath. Palms slap against her thighs. She pushes up fast, dizzy with it.
âNope. Nope. Weâre not spiraling. Weâre problem-solving.â
She points at the door like itâs a witness.
âYou left me a building. Buildings have doors. Doors have owners. Owners have records.â
She stalks back toward the main road, weaving past tourists with gelato and loud shirts. None of them see her. They never do.
Halfway up the next street, she stops cold.
âWho the hell even runs this town?â She doesnât know. But someone does. Someone with a key, a file, a name.
 And if theyâre not in whatever counts as a city office or Tribunal station around here?
Sheâll knock on every door from the market to the sea until one of them admits they knew her father. â â â
The map is crumpled in her fist before she makes it past the bakery.
Itâs useless. Half the names are smeared, the handwriting lazy and crooked. More doodle than direction. At the next corner, she chucks it into a rosemary planter gone half-wilted.
âIâll figure it out without you, thanks.â
Heat rolls off the white stone like breath. Manere Bay exhales slow, heavyâtoo old to rush, too proud to explain itself.
She weaves through narrow alleys and cobbled slopes, ignoring every color-coded placard and smug painted arrow. Her boots thud against uneven stone, brushing past faded banners singed by salt and time. The air smells like citrus, sun oil, and sharp seaweed. Vendors hawk rosemary-wrapped sardines, coral-carved trinkets, necklaces made of hand-blown salt beads that hum if you listen close. Everywhere she turns, thereâs movementâa quiet language of side-eyes, practiced friendliness, and too much silence. Tourists haggle over ceramic gulls. Two old women trace glyphs on their bread before biting. Kids race past a weathered mural, buckets sloshing seawater and plastic crabs.
Itâs beautiful. And it makes her sick.
Eventually the alleys open into a circular plazaâuneven, sun-drenched. Two stairways lead down to the marina. Four more twist upward into the townâs ribs. This is the heart of it. The hum beneath the performance of normal.
Nyra spots a bench in partial shade and drops onto it. The marble scorches through her clothes. She pulls out a battered tin, flips it open, lights a half-crushed cigarette with a salt-strike match. It hisses like it knows better.
Bad habit. You said youâd stop.
But her fatherâs voice is long gone. And habits donât quit just because the ghosts that shamed them died.
The first drag hits sharpâpainful, welcome. A breath she owns. Her foot taps out of sync with the distant mandolin music.
Then the crowd laughs.
Sharp, delighted, sudden.
Nyra looks up.
A man in a pinstriped coat and coal-black bowler hat balances on an upturned bucketâone foot raised, the other barely touching the rim, arms out like heâs steadying an invisible tray.
He doesnât blink.
Then he drops into a full split, pops back up, and juggles nothingâcatching air with exaggerated effort. No paint. No props. Skin pale as bone. The crowd claps. He turns, removes an invisible hat, and pulls out a pressed sea-lavender bloom. Hands it to a toddler like itâs a coronation.
Then he sees her.
Nyra freezes mid-drag. The mime goes stillâhead tilted, shaded lenses glinting like mirrors.
âNo,â she mutters.
He steps off the bucket. The crowd parts around him like they know.
âAbsolutely not.â She flicks ash, stands, tries to walkâbut heâs already there.
âJesus,â she breathes, stumbling back.
He doesnât touch her. Doesnât even mime hello. Just reaches into one of his many coat pockets and pulls outâ
A wooden music box. Palm-sized. Weathered. A salt-cracked winding key. A carved vine curling around the top.
Nyra stares. âYouâre joking.â
He offers it again. Head cocked, waiting for a laugh.
âFine,â she mutters, taking it. âIf a clown pops out, Iâm setting it on fire.â
The mime grins. Mimes zipping his lips, locks them, swallows the key.
âCharming.â
She motions vaguely toward the rooftops.
âYou seem like someone who knows weird shit. How do I get into a building that doesnât want to open?â
He strokes an imaginary beard. Taps his lips. Mimes knocking. Nothing. Mimes pouring salt. Drawing a glyph. Snaps.
Nyra squints. âSalt. Glyph. Great. Let me just find the nearest wizard kiosk.â
He cups his hand to his ear, inviting more.
âDonât mess with me, mime-boy. Iâm two bad moments from a full breakdown. Be useful, or go back to juggling ghosts.â
He bows.
Thenâpulling out a chalk stick from nowhereâhe gently tucks it into her vest pocket. Steps back. Taps his chest. Points to her heart. Taps the music box.
Then vanishes into the crowd. Just gone.
Nyra slumps back onto the bench. Lights her second cigarette.
âI hate this town.â
â â âÂ
The box is warm in her palm. It hums faintlyânot with music, but with tension. Like something built to play, then forgot how halfway through. Nyra turns it over. No latch. Just a dull brass winding key on the side, and a vine motif clumsily etched into the top.
âOf course itâs a plant,â she mutters, brushing off a bit of lint. âEverything in this town is either floral, cursed, or full of ghosts in drag.â
She glances up.
The mime is half-hidden under a painted awning, miming a tug-of-war with an invisible squid. His face is all pantomimed panic. The tourists howl. Someone claps like itâs genius. A phone snaps a photo.
And yetâheâs still watching her.
Right in the middle of the act.
Nyra narrows her eyes, then looks down at the box again.
âAlriiiggght⌠Letâs see what your creepy little jack-in-the-box does.â
She cradles it, hooks a finger under the tiny brass key, and winds.
Click. Click. Click. She opens the lid.
Nothing.
Not a note. Not a lock of hair. No sound, no lavender dust, no mystery trinket waiting inside. Just empty wood.
âYouâve got to be kidding me.â
She stares at it for three more seconds. Then snaps the lid shut and tosses it onto the bench beside her with a loud crack. She stands so fast her knees pop.
âI shouldâve stayed home,â she mutters, already moving. âShouldâve taken the ferry the second it looked weird. Shouldâve thrown the ledger into the sea and bought an apartment haunted by a normal ghost with decent boundaries.â
She turns, just once.
The mime is mid-routine again, pretending to fish something out of a bucket. Andâstillâstaring straight at her.
He winks.
Nyra raises both hands, flipping him off with both fingers before turning on her heel.
The crowd parts just enough to let her through. One of the staircases rises aheadânarrow, warped, shaded. It curls upward into the tighter coils of the town, where houses cling to stone like salt-stained barnacles. She climbs slow, boots ringing on each step. Her skin itches. Her neck burns. Sheâs still muttering.
âFirst the shopâs locked. Then the mimeâs a magician. Now Iâm out of butts.â She sighs heavily.
The road levels out. A breeze drifts past, cool and brief. The higher streets are narrower, cluttered. Tighter merchant stalls: woven talismans, carved sigils, bowls of salt-slick marbles. A woman fans herself behind sea-glass earrings that whisper when the wind shifts. Nyra eyes them. And the storefronts aheadâquaint, suspicious. Beads for curtains. Wind chimes. One has a chalkboard sign:
Herbs, Spirits, & Unrelated Advice.
She sighs again.
âAlright, weird little town,â she mutters. âLetâs see what youâve got behind door number one.â â â âÂ
The door to the apothecary doesnât creak. It hisses open, like itâs trying a little too hard to be magical. Cool air hits her collarbones. Nyra exhales like sheâs been holding her breath since the town swallowed her whole. Inside, the light filters through dusty green glass, soft and bent. A chill clings to the stone floor and fingers her spine. Itâs quiet. Cooler. Even kind of⌠gorgeous.
Still bullshit.
Dried herbs hang overhead like tangled windchimes. Wicker baskets overflow with mystic tea pouches. Jars shimmer with oils and powders labeled in whatâs either Latin or a very committed imitation.
A chalkboard by the door reads: Mercury in brew. Mint to settle. Basil for truth.
Nyra mutters, âAnd overpriced chamomile to scam bored tourists.â
A woman in a wide-brimmed hat hums at a bottle labeled Night-binder Elixir. A couple argues in whispers near a shelf of powdersâdebating whether mirrorshade dust is edible. A girl with festival braids dabs salt balm under her eyes and giggles.
Nyra rolls her eyes and heads for the back.
The counter curves like a crescent moonâdark wood, rune-burnt drawers, strips of woven sea grass. Behind it, a figure leans over a tray of glowing stones. Sorting, maybe. Or just playing. He looks up as she approaches.
Young. Late twenties. Skin the color of clay after summer rain. Hair tied back in a loose knot, smudged with dust. His eyes are pale-not-paleâlike moonstone trying to be friendly.
âNeed help?â he asks. Voice calm. Too calm. Rehearsed calm.
âThat depends,â Nyra says, matching his tone. âDo you sell crowbars?â
He blinks. âNot exactly.â
âDidnât think so. Iâm not here for tinctures or tea blends named after celestial bodies. I need into a building. My building. Inherited. Locked tight.â
He studies her a moment. âIs it a physical lock?â
âItâs a door⌠It opensâŚâ She pauses. âOr itâs supposed toâŚ. Unless someone enchanted it to mock grieving daughters, yeah, Iâd say physical.â
Without a word, he reaches under the counter and slides forward a dish of wax-wrapped chalk sticks and thyme thread.
Nyra groans. âOh my god. Not you too.â
âExcuse me?â
âThe mime already gave me magic chalk. Or possibly cursed soap.â She stares down at her vest, where he had stashed it earlier in his own creepy mime way. â This townâs obsessed with chalk, riddles, and whimsical bullshit.â She adds, her face half cracked into a smile before looking back at him.
He doesnât react. Just watches. Her smile drops.
âSo youâre not looking for metaphysical advice.â
âIâm looking for a locksmith. Or a registry. Or literally anyone in charge who doesnât hand out crystals like coupons.â
He leans on the counter. Doesnât push the chalk closer. Doesnât pull it back.
âThereâs no registry. Not officially.â
âOf course not.â
âAs for a locksmithâtry Lyriaâs parlour, three streets over. She trades in more than fabric if you know how to ask.â
âWhat does that even mean?â
âExactly what it sounds like.â
Nyra pinches the bridge of her nose. âJesus Christ. Is everyone here allergic to straight answers?â
âDepends whoâs asking.â
She meets his eyes again. This time, something flickers at the corner of his mouth. Not a smileâjust recognition.
âNameâs Corin,â he says. âI help out here. And youâreâŚâ
âSomeone who didnât ask for a quest, thanks.â
âGood. Weâre fresh out of chosen ones.â
That pulls a dry laugh from herâinstantly regretted.
âLook. Thanks. For the almost-help. Iâll try Lyria or whatever shadow market locksmith exists in this salt-stained escape room.â
Corin nods, no judgment.
âYouâll want to wait until the ferry bells ring. Thatâs when people stop pretending.â
She takes a moment to look at him clearly, trying to read his intentions. He stares blankly at her, like what he said wasnât straight out of a Steven King novel.Â
âThatâs ominous.â
âEverything here is.â
Nyra turns without another word, dazed- confused and a little pissed off. â â âÂ
 Outside, the heat hits like a slap. Her cigarette tin rattles in her pocket like a second heartbeat. The wax chalk from the mime taps against it with every step. The town stretches ahead, long and looping, its streets folding in on themselves like ribbons in water. Nyraâs half-convinced the buildings shift when youâre not looking. Signs tilt. Shadows bend the wrong way. The salt in the air clings to her skin like a second shirtâand sheâs pretty sure three streets over was two. Or five. Or none at all.
Corinâs words echo in her head: âWait until the ferry bells ring. Thatâs when people stop pretending.â
She scoffs. Pretending would be a relief.
Her boots thud against uneven cobbles as she climbs toward where Lyriaâs Parlour is supposed to beâold stone underfoot, sea wind nudging her back. Everything smells like lemon peel and dust. Her head throbs from the heat, the crowd, and the lingering thought that none of this is real.
And yet too much of it is.
Sheâs halfway across a narrow walkway where two roads intersect like a broken compass when she stumblesâcatches her boot on something hard, deliberate, out of place.
âShitâ!â
She hits the ground, palm-first. Her ledger spills from her satchel, chalk skittering across stone.
Thenâ
She looks up.
Right into the eyes of a girl crouched in front of her.
Barefoot. Wild curls. Mirror shard in one hand like itâs priceless.
Itâs that kid. Again.
The girl tilts her head. Her pupils are wide and unblinking. Her expression unreadable.
Nyra glances down. The stone she tripped on isnât a stone at allâitâs carved. Sun-worn. Part of a faint circular rune embedded in the walkway. A threshold marker, maybe. Or something older.
Before Nyra can speak, the girl does.
âThis part of the road doesnât like being walked twice.â
Nyra stares. âWhat?â
âIt remembers. Even if you donât.â
The girl lifts the mirror shard, one finger extended toward the rune like she might touch it. Then stops. Blinks. Pulls back.
Nyraâs frustration spikes, bitter at the back of her throat.
âLook, kid, Iâm not in the mood for cryptic fairytale horseshit today, alright?â
But the girlâs faceâstill, tilted, watching like a reflectionâmakes her hesitate.
Not frightened. Not even present. Just there.
Nyra draws back. Her breath catches, rising onto her knees.
âSorry. I justâŚâ
She reaches out, instinctiveâwhether to steady the girl or herself, sheâs not sure.
Her hand meets air.
The girl is gone.
No footsteps. No retreat. Just absence. The mirror shard spins once on the stone where she stood, then clinks and topples flat.
Nyraâs hand trembles as she stands. Her chalk is scraped. Palms raw.
âThis fucking town,â she mutters. Softer now. Less anger. More fear.
She exhales, slow, trying to steady her balance, her pulse.
When she looks upâ
The storefront in front of herâthe one that wasnât there a minute agoâbears a sign, curling and weathered:
Lyriaâs Parlour â Fine Tailoring, Minor Alterations, Necessary Revisions
The doorway is framed by salt-bleached curtains. The air smells faintly of anise and fabric. Dresses ripple gently just inside, though the wind is still. No bell. Nyra narrows her eyes.
âRight where I fell,â she murmurs. Coincidence.
Definitely coincidence.
She walks through as the curtains part with a hiss â not from wind, but from fabric under tension.
Lyriaâs Parlour smells of cloves, old paper, and something metallic â like scissors thatâve seen too much truth. The light is dim, filtered through long strands of dyed linen hanging like seaweed. Some drift lazily in still air. Others shift when sheâs not looking. Itâs cooler here. Not like the apothecaryâs clean chill. This is the cool of basements and velvet-lined secrets, the hush of measuring tape drawn tight around a throat. Garments line the walls â too exquisite for a town like this. Salt-pale dresses stitched with mothbone. Tailored coats with blinking buttons. Scarves that flutter like breath. A mannequin near the door wears a jacket Nyra wouldâve stolen as a teen and worn until it fell apart. It looks like it might hiss if touched.
Itâs quiet.
Too quiet.
Except for the couple half-draped on a chaise near the back. Tourists, obviously. She can smell the vacation cologne and bad decisions. Theyâre mid-makeout, laughing, whispering about âprivate tailoringâ like theyâre in a hotel hallway, not someoneâs shop. Nyra snorts and steps deeper inside.
Sheâs halfway to a rack of long coats â embroidery so fine it might be moving â when a voice cuts in behind her, smooth as silk pulled over a blade.
âCareful, darling. The last couple who did that left with matching hexes stitched into their hems. Took weeks before the whispering stopped.â
Nyra spins.
Behind a parted curtain stands a woman in onyx-black silk. Sleeves rolled to the elbow. Thread looped through silver rings on her fingers. Cherrywood-red hair, pulled back in a bun so precise it could cut. No shoes â just feet marked with faint salt lines that glint in the dim light. Her eyes â sharp, smoky, almond-shaped â donât blink when they find Nyra.
âYouâre the Vale girl,â she says. Smooth. Indifferent. Like naming a paint swatch.
Nyra bristles. âIs that what people call me now? âThe Vale girlâ? Sounds like a fairytale.. Or a warning label.â
Lyria arches a brow. Glides forward like someone used to tight spaces and tighter conversations.
âYou donât want the fairytales, dear. Not here. They tend to end with offerings, not weddings.â
Nyra folds her arms, voice taut with exhaustion, not fear. âLook, Iâm not here for riddles or salt-stitched fortunes. I need a locksmith. Or someone who can open a door. Thatâs it.â
Lyria keeps walking until Nyra can smell sage and red wine and something older â bitter-sweet and unnamed.
âAnd what makes you think Iâm either of those things?â
âBecause some guy named Corin told me so.â She takes a deep breath, chest heaving after being in the sun all day. âBecause every time I try to do something normal, someone gives me magic chalk, a cryptic note, or a music box with nothing inside. And Iâm out of patience.â
Lyria studies her a beat too long. Then she smiles.
Not kindly.
âYouâll fit in beautifully.â
She turns on her heel.
âCome. If youâre asking for help, I may as well take your measure. No sense being unprepared when the town starts asking for favors in return.â
âIâm not making deals,â Nyra warns, but follows.
âEveryone says that. The clever ones just donât write them down.â
The curtains swallow them both as the back room yawns open like the inside of a lantern â close, golden, strange. Not warm with heat, but with hush. Velvet-thick and old. Light leaks in from sconces and inverted glass teardrops, glowing amber, then olive, then plum â like the room canât decide what time it is. Mirrors line the walls. All slightly warped â not enough to feel wrong, just enough to make you look away. Dresses, coats, veils hang between them â dyed in colors without names. Some look stitched from regret. Others hang heavy, drooping low as to kiss the ground beneath it. Nyra steps in and feels it: that chill. Not cold.
Exhaustion.
The kind that smells like her fatherâs coat. The kind that curls in her knees and tells her to stop pretending sheâs not tired. She exhales, slow.
âI donât know what Iâm doing anymore,â she mutters to herself, not so much meaning to say it outloud. Lyria glides past and closes the curtain.
âNo one does. Thatâs what makes you interesting.â
âIâm not trying to be interesting. I just want to open a door.â
âThatâs what they all say.â
She gestures to a chalk-marked circle on the floor. Then unspools a tape measure from nowhere â glinting faintly, like starlight caught in thread. Nyra eyes it warily. âWait â what is this?â
âI said Iâd take your measure.â
âYeah, but like⌠metaphorically right?â
âOh no, darling. I meant it exactly.â
Nyra steps into the circle, arms crossed. Lyria is already at her side â swift, practiced. The tape flits from waist to shoulders. She flinches when fingers brush her ribs. Shifts when Lyria kneels to check inseam lines, chalk held like a wand.
âYou always this touchy?â Lyria asks.
âI donât like being handled.â
âThen youâre in the wrong town.â
Nyra glances around â trying not to notice how the wall behind the mirror just shifted color again. Plum. Then dusky lavender.
âHow did you know who I was?â she blurts. âBefore I said anything?â
âYou look like him.â
âThatâs not an answer.â
âAnd yet, it was.â
Nyra groans and steps off the circle. âI just want to know if you can help me or not. Iâm tired of riddles. Iâm tired of flowers. Iâm tired.â
Lyria rolls up the tape and sets it beside a tray of rusted needles and polished buttons.
âWhoâve you spoken to?â
Nyra pauses.
âWhy does that matter?â
âIt always matters. The order. The tone. Who sees you first.â
âAre you seriousââ
âWho.â
Nyra hesitates. The light shifts again â brighter now, but colder.
âA mime,â she mutters.
Lyria lifts a brow. âPantom. Of course.â
âAnd an apothecary. Corin.â Nyra continues.
âHe gave you chalk?â
Nyra shakes her head, rubbing the bottom of her chin nervously.Â
âNah, the other guy did.â After a moment, she continues. âBut, he did try to give me some.â
Lyria runs a finger along a bolted glass case. Inside: a cloak stitched from shadow.
âAnd you thought Iâd give you something different.â
âI thought youâd give me something useful.â
âDid it ever occur to you,â Lyria says, softly, âthat if two people attempt to give you the same thing, it might be exactly what you need?â
Nyraâs voice snaps. âDid it ever occur to you that not everyone wants to be part of your little town play? That maybe I just want to walk into the building I legally inherited without solving a godsdamn prophecy?â
A beat of silence.
Then:
âYou really donât know what youâve inherited, do you?â
Nyra stares. Lyria doesnât blink. Doesnât press.
Instead, she reaches for a small silk pouch and holds it out.
âTake this. Not chalk. Thread. Red. For grounding.â
Nyra stares at it, a cross between awe and bewilderment.
âAre you helping me, or dressing me for a funeral?â
Lyria smiles â not unkind.
âThat depends on which door you open.â
Nyra didnât say thank you. She didnât say anything, really â just dropped a crumpled handful of euro notes on Lyriaâs counter and left the pouch of red thread sitting there. Unopened. Useless. She didnât even take it. Just turned and walked out, jaw clenched so tight she thought she might crack a molar.
No chalk. No thread. No more bullshit.
Her boots scraped the stone path like a threat. She wasnât walking toward anything â just away. Away from the heat and the whispers, the mirrors and the tailor who asked too many questions without offering a single goddamn answer.
âWhat is this place?â she muttered. âDisneyland for dead people?â
She stormed past faded stalls, shoved through tourists laughing too loudly. Her mouth was dry. Her hands shook â not from fear. From dehydration. From rage. From grief.
She wasnât paying attention. Not until she heard the laugh. A soft, feather-light giggle.
Nyra looked up.
Vale & Vine.
Confused, her head twisted around her. Unsure exactly how she even came to be here when the walk around town was at least a couple hours of huffing and sore feet. The alley hadnât changed. Same crooked sign. Same rust-bitten hinges.
And at the base of the steps â just like before â sat the girl. Barefoot. Mirror shard in her lap. Eyes too wide, too still.
Nyra froze. âNo,â she whispered. âAbsolutely not.â
She took a breath. Then walked down the alley, deliberate, each step heavier than the last.
âAlright, thatâs enough,â she called. âI donât know who you are or what you want, but you need to stop following me.â
No response.
âIâm not good with kids, okay? No snacks, no toys, no patience. I will find your parents and tell them youâre haunting strangers.â
Still nothing. Just the stare.
Nyra rolled her neck, her shoulders drooping at her sides. This was it. Too tired to care anymore, she reached the base of the steps and collapsed beside her. Her body sagged under heat and confusion and something she didnât have a name for.
âIâm losing my goddamn mind,â she muttered. âI donât even know why I came here anymore.â
She rubbed her face. Her voice cracked around the edges.
âI just wanted answers. A key. A building that doesnât hate me.â
Silence.
Then that stare again.
Nyra glanced sideways. The girl hadnât moved â still watching.
âWhat?â she snapped. âWhat do you want?â
Nothing.
âI donât have candy. I donât have games. â She glared at the girl in silence but the girls eyes seemed preoccupied, her coat pockets. Nyra followed and threw her hands in the air in exasperation. âWhat!â She paused again, the young girl merely repeated the glances again.
 â Iâm telling you I have nothing- ..whatever.â She reached into her jacket, pulled out the last scraps she hadnât lost yet:
Chalk from the mime
A ferry receipt, water-stained and fading
A pressed lavender flower
Her fatherâs ledger
The creased note
An empty cigarette tin and lighter
She dropped them in a tired little pile.
âThatâs it. Thatâs the grand inheritance. Unless you know how to unlock doors with grief and clutter, be my guest.â
She laughed once â brittle, helpless. The kind that wants to scream but folds inward instead.
And thenâ
The girl moved.
Silently. Intentionally. And in her hands were two things Nyra hadnât given her.
The music box. And the red thread pouch.
Nyra stared.
âHowâ?â
But she didnât finish. Because the girl was already kneeling at the door.
She placed each item carefully:
The chalk arced in a clean, deliberate line
The lavender set dead center
The red thread unspooled in a perfect ring
The music box, silent, anchored the base
Then she lifted the mirror shard â not like a toy now, but like a blade and drew. Not randomly. Not guessing. She drew like someone who knew. Like someone who couldnât read words, but could recite an alphabet made of salt and bone. Nyra watched, transfixed.
âThis canât be real,â she whispered. And thenâ
The door creaked.
A breath. A shudder. A slow, aching groan.
A gap. Just a hairâs width â then more. It opened. Nyra shot to her feet. Stumbled back. The door exhaled a breath of lavender and dust and old, old air. Something like home.
She turned to the girlâ
But she was gone. Again.
No footsteps. No shadow. Just gone. Only the chalk line remained. The pressed flower. And the music box. The rest of her belongings still in a pile by the step.
Nyra didnât move.
She just stood there, staring at the door. Like it had spoken her name for the very first time. ---------------------------------------- Thank you so much for reading! This is my first attempt at a proper chapter. I've only ever written for myself or close friends so, posting this online has me all in my nerves. Next Chapter will be coming within the week, I'm hoping to push 8k words and improve my writing skills and consistency a bit further. Again I'd like to reiterate, this series will be a slow-burn. There will be monster romance and potential smut down the line but I have a lot to do before we get there. Stick with me, I promise it'll be worth it! Han < ^ ^ >















