A flat black cap is on the manâs head, creating a shadow over his eyes. Worn black leather gloves are on his hands, which are at his sides, and he stands only a few feet away, wearing a creaseless black trench coat. I have a feeling heâs staring at me, but I canât tell due to the brim of his hat being so low.
âWho are you?â the man asks, voice gruff.
His voice. I know that voice. I just heard it moments ago, in my apartment. Itâs deep, an English accentâa dialect Iâm not familiar with. Iâve heard many people with all kinds of accents, thanks to my line of work, but not his. His is different and hard to forgetâa voice that has haunted my dreams and played tricks with my mind.
I try to find the words to speak, but my tongue feels like a dead fish in my mouth.
The man moves forward, only now his hands arenât empty. Thereâs a silver handgun in one of them, and heâs pointing it right down at me. The gun is twice the size of a regular handgun, the barrel so wide I can see into it without squinting an eye.
I throw my hands in the air. âNoâwait!â
âI asked who you were.â
âIâIâm Willow. Willow Austin.â
âAnd where did you come from, Willow Austin?â he asks, the gun hovering inches from my face.
âIâI donât know. I landed here, and thatâthat wolf started chasing me! If Iâm not supposed to be here, Iâm sorry! Iâll leave, I swear, j-just please donât kill me!â
The man remains steady with the gun, and he tilts his head upward. When he does, I see his eyes. Icy blue, surrounded by thick, dark lashes. His eyes are both intimidating and alluring as he glares down at me.
âAre you from Ripple Hills?â he demands.
âIâno, I donât know what that is.â
He squints his eyes, only slightly. âVanora? Did Alora send you?â
âPlease,â I plead. âI donât know what youâre talking about. I donât even know where I am!â
The wolf growls at my outburst.
âOi!â he shouts at the wolf. His eyes donât leave mine. âHome. Now, Cerberus.â
The wolf doesnât hesitate to dash away. As it does, the man lowers the gun and steps back. âGet up.â
I do as Iâm told, wincing as I bring myself to stand. I face him and angle my chin upward a bit because heâs tall. Really tall. His jaw ticks as he looks me all over.
âYouâre not dressed like youâre from Ripple or Vanora. Where are you from and why the hell are you on my property?â
âI told you,â I breathe raggedly. âIâI ended up here somehow. I really donât know.â
He narrows his eyes at me, angling his head. âHave we met before?â
âIâ¦I donât think soâ¦unless you work with Townsend a lot too, then maybe. Probably through Lou Ann.â
âLou Ann?â He raises a brow.
âMy boss.â
He stares at me blankly.
âUmâ¦Iâm sorryâ¦do you happen to have, like umâ¦a cellphone or something I can use?â
âA cellphone?â he asks, frowning now.
âYesâlike an iPhone or something? Even an Android? iPad?â
He grimaces, and by the way his jaw ticks repeatedly, I can tell heâs becoming aggravated. Okay, I get that weâre kind of in the middle of nowhere, but how the hell does he not know what a cellphone is?
âWhat territory are you from?â he demands.
âTerritory? I, uhâ¦Â What? I donât understand the question. Iâm so confused right now.â I swallow hard. âLook, I just want to go home,â I tell him, holding my hands up. âThatâs it. I donât want any trouble.â
âSo you do have a home. Where?â
âUmâ¦an apartmentâ¦in North Carolina.â
âWhat the hell is a North Carolina?â
âOh, God.â I scoff, then I laugh because this man canât be serious. Iâm standing in front of a person who doesnât even know what state weâre in, who owns a wolf, and has a gun. All red flags.
âIâm sorry, were you born under a rock? How do you not know what North Carolina is?â
He frowns but doesnât respond. Instead, he lifts his gun again and aims it directly at my face, and I throw my trembling hands in the air.
âTurn around and walk.â
âIâwhere am I supposed to go?â
âFollow the path north.â
âNorthâ¦north. Umâ¦okay.â I turn around with a limp and hobble through the forest until I spot the path. I can either go left or right. Right feels like going north, so I turn that direction, but he clears his throat. I glance back, and he points the other way with the gun.
âYep. Got it,â I whisper.
I limp my way along the path, and within two or three minutes, an iron gate appears. It reminds me of the gate that was in my dreams. Only thereâs no heavy fog, and I can see what lies ahead very clearly: landâlots of land. The grass is cut neatly, and a rocky path leads to a gothic black castle. It stands tall, the tips of the dark roof flirting with the gray clouds in the sky. I stop walking to take in the view, my jaw nearly dropping. Where the hell am I?
âThereâs an exit that way. Go to your North Carolina and donât come back,â the man says behind me. I turn a fraction to look at him. He still has the gun pointed at me.
âYouâre going to let me go?â
âI donât care where you go, just donât ever come back here.â
I swallow hard, but the saliva is rough going down. I wobble to the right where heâs pointing, and though I donât see an exit, I donât care. Itâs better getting lost than being faced with a gun that size again.
I need to find help from someone nicer than this asshole.
âWhat was that?â
I spin around and face the man again. Heâs lowered his gun a bit, just enough to see me clearly past his hand.
âWhat was what?â I ask.
âYou just said something.â
I frown. âI didnât say anything.â
âI heard you speak,â he retorts.
âIâI didnât say a word.â
Frustrated, he lowers the gun. âDo that again.â
âDo what?â
âThink about something.â
âUmâ¦okay.â I swallow hard and try to think of something random. Or clever. Faye would know what to think of. Knowing her, sheâd think of a penguin or a baby chickâ¦or books. She loves books.
Who the hell is Faye?
I shift my gaze up. âSheâs my best friend.â
âWhat?â he asks, shock written all over his face.
âYou asked who Faye isâ¦â
âI didnât ask that out loud.â He looks at me sideways. Then as if a realization dawns on him, his blue eyes expand. âShit.â His throat bobs. âYouâre that voice,â he says. âYouâre her.â
âWho?â
The man looks me up and down, as if seeing me for the first time.
You can hear me.
My eyes stretch when I hear his voice, loud and clear, despite his lips not moving.
âH-how are you doing that?â
âShit,â he curses again. The man clears his throat and tucks his gun away, then digs into his trench coat. He opens a silver case and plucks out what looks like a cigarette, except itâs all black. Pressing it between his lips, he lights it with a silver lighter, inhales, and then puffs out a large cloud of smoke. It doesnât smell like an ordinary cigarette. Itâs scent is sweeter, like maple syrup and spices.
âYouâre her,â he says, nodding. âYouâre that other voice in my head.â He gives his head a shake. âAll this time I thought I was insane.â
This conversation is starting to feel real, and itâs weird, so I say, âMaybe weâre just dreaming?â
âTrust me,â he rasps, pulling from his cigarette thing again. âThis is no dream.â
âWhat do you mean?â
He drops his eyes to my foot, and I look with him at the caked dirt and blood. âYouâre bleeding. Follow me.â He walks past me toward the castle-like home.
I hesitate a moment as he marches away without looking back. I peer over my shoulder at the forest that was behind us, then toward whichever exit he pointed at that I still canât make out, and figure itâs probably best to follow him than to wander around, lost. I donât know this man, and I donât know where I am, but he has shelterâ¦and possibly a phone.
He also has a gun, I think to myself.
âDonât worry about the gun,â he calls out, still walking toward the castle. âI wonât use it on you unless you make me.â