The girl stared at the man before her. She saw him beforeâin her dreamsâbut he was covered in blood there. She blinked when he smiled at her.
âHello, sweetheart. Are you lost?â he asked, watching her stare at him.
The girl swallowed a scream. What was she going to do? He was talking to her; she never saw him speak to her. What does she say to the man who is going to kill her mother?
âNo,â she whispered.
The man looked around them, trying to find her parents, but he wonât find them. She came here alone. She had to see if her dream was real. Ever since she could draw, sheâs had dreams about things that were to come. Itâs hard to believe a seven-year-old doesnât just have a wild imaginationâbut her paintings are real. Her dreamsâeven those she has while awakeâare real.
He looked at her again, and that smile came again. He was real. But what did she do now? Should she stop him?
But how? Sheâs only a seven-year-old little girl who left her home in search of the man she dreamed was going to kill her mother.
âShould I get an officer to help?â he asked, still watching her.
She shook her head. âIâm not lost. My daddy knows where I am. We will meet up soon. Thank you, though.â
Why was she being nice to him? Heâs going to take everything away from her if she canât stop him.
He nodded. âI will wait with you. Donât want you getting lostâ¦.â
âNo!â she cried out.
The manâs eyes opened wider, and he stared at her. âOkayâ¦.â
He didnât get to finish because she took off in the opposite direction, hoping and praying he wouldnât chase her.
The girl huffed and puffed as she ran down the street, so familiar she knew where she was going in the dark without looking. She snuck through the back gate and tip-toed up to the porch. She looked around to make sure no one had followed her, then slipped into the house and fell to her bottom on the floor after she closed the door.
âPhew, that was close.â
âAirie, what are you doing sitting on the floor?â
Airianna Williams looked up at her mother and smiled. âI was thirsty, then I thought I heard something outside, but it was just a catâ¦.â
Britney Williams smiled down at her daughter. The girl has the biggest imagination and is constantly drawing the craziest things. Though her drawings were remarkable for her age, they were usually gloomy, and the girl insisted they were actual events. Once, sheâd seen something on the news that was in one of her daughterâs drawingsâbut it had to be a coincidence. Maybe the girl had seen something about it on the news. That was the only way Britney could explain it.
âCome along, back to bed.â Britney smiled and held her hand out to her daughter.
Airianna took her motherâs hand, and they went up to her room together. Her mother tucked her in and gave her a goodnight kiss.
Little did Airianna know that would be the last goodnight kiss she would receive from her mother.
~ð®~
I never said she was yours!â
âWhy else would she come out in the middle of the night looking for me?!â
The loud voices woke Airianna from a terrible nightmare. But what was going on downstairs was scarier than her dream. She leaped out of bed and snuck downstairs. She walked down the hall into the living room and saw the man from earlier standing in the middle of the room, holding her motherâs arm roughly.
âI didnât know she left the house. She⦠she has dreams and sometimes sleepwalks.â
Airianna blinked. The man was here because of her. Sheâd gone out looking for him, and he followed her. But why does he have hold of her mother, and why does he look so angry with her? Does her mother know her killer?
âWhat kind of bullshit is that?â the man asked angrily.
Airianna watched her mother huff out a lung full of air.
âShe has dreams and thinks theyâre real. Itâs not the first time she has gone after one of her dreams.â
The man dropped her arm and turned away. âWhy didnât you tell me? She must have dreamed that Iâm her father.â
âAndy, sheâs not yours. I swear, sheâs notâ¦.â
The man turned on her, anger in his eyes. âDonât lie to me, Britney!â
âIâm not!â
âSheâs the same age our child would be if you hadnât faked your miscarriage!â
âI didnât fake it! I lost our baby. It wasnât until months later that I got pregnant with Airianna. My husband is her father!â
Andy sneered at her, âyou didnât wait long to get hitched after you lost my child.â
Britney backed away from him. âYou changed,â she whispered. âYou werenât the man I thought you wereâ¦.â
âYou killed our child!â
She slowly shook her head, âno, Andy. You did.â
Andy stopped, his mouth opening and closing as he glared at her. âHow dare you blame meâ¦.â
Britney squealed when he grabbed her arm and shook her.
âI want my daughter,â he growled in her face.
Airianna watched tears run down her motherâs face. Was this crazy man really her father?
âSheâs not yours,â Britney cried.
âYou were a slut eight years ago, and you are a slut today,â Andy snarled in her face.
Britney sniffled. âI wasnât one then, and Iâm not one nowâ¦.â Britney screamed as she flew across the room.
âBullshit!â Andy bellowed.
Britney whimpered as she crumpled to the floor against the wall.
âMommy!â Airianna cried out as she ran out of her hiding place.
âAirie, sweetheart, hide,â Britney cried.
âCome here!â Andy sneered, grabbing hold of Airiannaâs arm.
âLet go of me!â Airianna screeched, kicking the man in the shin.
âSon-of-aâ¦.â The man let her go and rubbed his shin.
Airianna ran to her mother and knelt beside her. âMommy,â she cried.
âRun, Airie, you need to run.â Britney looked up into her daughterâs grey eyes.
âNo, Mommy. I saw this in a dream. Heâs going to kill you,â Airianna whispered.
Britney looked past her daughter to the man she once loved. Before he destroyed her and their unborn child. Andy had accused her back then of being a slut and tossed her across the room when she denied itâjust like he did tonight. She has never cheated on anyone, but he believed the rumors.
Heâd beaten her until sheâd miscarried their unborn child. Sheâd left him immediately and got with Airiannaâs father months later. Sheâd known him a while and hadnât known he had a crush on her.
When she got pregnant again, he offered to marry her and take care of her and their child. Sheâd agreed and never regretted it in all this time. But now, now she regretted not turning Andy in for what he did to her and their child. Now he thinks Airianna is his. She canât let him take her.
âRun,â she told her daughter for the third time.
Airianna shook her head, âheâs going to hurt youâ¦.â
Britney placed her hand against her daughterâs cheek. âGo get help. Maybe you can stop this dream from coming trueâ¦.â
Airianna turned and looked at the man, then turned back to her mother. She knows she wonât find anyone in time to help her mother. Her dreams are never wrong.
âGo.â Britney hissed as she tried to stand.
âMommy,â Airianna whimpered.
âGo, baby girl. Find help.â
Airianna watched her mother get to her feet and tried not to panic when she leaned her back against the wall, pain evident on her face.
âGo,â Britney growled.
Airianna ran around the corner into the hall and headed for the front door. But she didnât leave the house. She had to find a way to save her mother. Airianna ran into her fatherâs office and found the safe under his desk. She knew the combinationâbecause she paid more attention than her parents thought she did. Airianna knew one day she would need to get into this safe. She opened it and pulled out her fatherâs gun. She had no clue how to use it, but she was going to try her hardest to save her mother.
When she returned to the living room, the man her mother called Andy was beating her. Blood was everywhere, and her mother wasnât trying to fight him off. She lifted the gun and aimed it at the man.
âYou wonât get away with it,â the seven-year-old said, then pulled the trigger.
The man hollered in pain as he fell away from Airiannaâs mother. Airianna dropped the pistol and cried as she covered her ears. They were ringing so loud she couldnât hear anything around her. She continued to scream as the pain in her hand and shoulder grew stronger, and the ringing continued until she felt dizzy and started to fall over. She watched as the man held his chest and looked at her, his face full of surprise and anger. He moved toward her, but before he reached her, he fell face-first onto the floor.
The last thing Airianna saw before everything went black was her motherâs eyes looking at her from the floor.
~ð®~
âMommy?â
âAirianna, dear heart.â
âMommy?â Airianna whispered again.
She was scared. She couldnât hear anything; everything sounded like the ocean.
âAirianna?â
âMommy,â Airianna cried, âI canât hear you. Where are you, Mommy?â
âOh, Airianna, love. Can you hear me?â
âMommy!â Airianna screamed as she sat up in bed.
âAirianna, my dear one.â
Airianna opened her eyes and stared at her father, who stood over her, wiping her forehead with a cloth.
âDaddy?â
âOh, sweet thing.â
âDaddy, I canât hear you. I only hear the ocean.â
Jeremy Williams sighed as he pulled his daughter into his arms. The horrible scene he had come home to last week rushed through his mind for the thousandth time. His wife was on the floorâbloody and not breathing. The man he knew to be her ex was lying over her feet where it seemed she had tripped him. The amount of blood everywhere. And their sweet little girl lying on the floor, his gun on the floor beside her. She must have tried to save her mother.
The doctors had said there may be damage to her eardrums from the gun, but they wouldnât know how bad until she woke.
âDaddy, all I can hear is the ocean,â his little girl cried.
Jeremy looked down into his daughterâs eyes and got lost in the deep grey. She had inherited his motherâs eyes. That was how he had known from the moment she was born that she was truly his daughter.
Then when she started drawing things that came to be, he knew sheâd been gifted with the Williams sight.
âMommy, whereâs Mommy?â Airianna begged.
Jeremy frowned as he reached for the notepad heâd purchased when heâd learned his daughter may be deaf. Tears streamed down his cheeks as he wrote on the paper.
Airianna didnât need to read her daddyâs words on the paper when she saw the tears. Her mommy was gone, and it was all her fault. She started to cry. Without finishing his answer, her father pulled her into his arms and held her as if he would never let her go.
~ð®~
Airianna Williams told herstory to the police, leaving out her dreams, just like her mother always told her to do. They believed the grieving little girl and filed it as self-defense.
Airianna grew up without her loving mother to give her motherly advice. But she had her father for anything and everything she needed. Being deaf wasnât so bad. She didnât hear the snarky comments from the mean children and could pretend she didnât hear or understand her teachers when they asked her to come up front.
When she started painting her dreams, her father helped her solve the ones they were able to. She didnât understand why he believed her; until she turned eighteen, and he told her of their family heritage. Her mother was a non-believer, so he had had to keep it a secret.
He explained that she could not be told until she turned eighteen. Her father warned her about talking to the police about it, and she promised she would never tell another living soul.
Until the day she saw himâand knew she had to save him.