CHAPTER TWO
Amara spun around, eyes wide. Standing in the doorway was a man she didn’t recognize. Tall, with dark features mostly hidden in shadow. His presence was commanding, and his gaze pinned her to the spot like a nail to a wall.
"Who are you?" Amara demanded, her voice shaking despite her effort to sound steady.
The man smiled slowly, his lips barely curving. “You’re already playing. You just don’t know the rules yet.”
She instinctively took a step back, the box with the key still in her hands. Her heart pounded against her ribs like it was trying to break out. Her apartment was small, and the hallway behind him was clear—no signs of forced entry. The realization that he had entered unnoticed wrapped around her like a noose.
“How did you get in here?” she snapped, louder now.
“That’s not the question you should be asking,” he replied, voice calm as silk. “The real question is—how far are you willing to go?”
“For what?” she asked, dread threading through her words.
He took a single step forward and pulled a folded sheet of paper from the inside of his coat. With eerie calm, he placed it on her coffee table. Then he straightened, looked her directly in the eyes, and said, “The next piece.”
Amara didn’t move. The space between them felt charged, like a wire stretched too tight.
“What do you want from me?”
The man tilted his head slightly. “Want? I want nothing. But The Game… it wants everything.”
Her breath hitched. That word again—Game. It sounded ridiculous, childish even. But nothing about this felt like a game. Nothing about it felt playful.
“What game?” she asked, her voice smaller now.
He gave her a smile that didn’t reach his eyes. “One that started long before this moment. Long before you even knew you were a piece on the board.”
And then, just as suddenly as he had appeared, he turned and walked down the hallway. She darted to the door and looked out—empty. No trace of him. It was as if he’d melted into the walls.
She locked the door, bolted it, and leaned against it, trying to catch her breath. Her hands trembled as she reached for the paper he had left. It was thick and black, the kind of luxurious stationery used for wedding invitations or secret societies. Silver ink gleamed across the center:
“Tomorrow. 7 PM. The old Bellwood Theatre. Bring the key. Come alone.”
She read it again. And again. Her pulse thudded in her ears.
---
The rest of the evening felt unreal. She barely spoke during her short call with Tanya, making excuses about being tired. She didn’t eat. Couldn’t sleep. Every time she closed her eyes, she saw that man’s silhouette in the doorway. Every creak of the building made her flinch.
She held the key in her hand, feeling its cool weight, its sharp edges. It didn’t look special. Just an antique brass key with no markings.
But it had opened something.
And it was about to open something else.
---
The next day passed in a blur. She tried to write, to focus on her freelance article, but the words wouldn’t come. Her mind kept flashing to the man’s voice, to the silver writing, to that strange calm that had chilled the air in her apartment.
By 6:30 PM, she was dressed in black—hoodie, jeans, and sneakers. She slipped the key onto a cord and tucked it beneath her shirt. Her phone was fully charged. In her pocket, a flashlight and a small folding knife. She wasn’t sure if it would help, but it made her feel a little less helpless.
Bellwood Theatre was a corpse of a building. Once a thriving art-deco performance space, it had closed more than a decade ago. A fire had gutted part of the roof, and its interior had decayed ever since.
She found the emergency exit along the side, hidden behind overgrown bushes. The lock was rusted, but when she inserted the key, it turned with a soft click that sent a shiver down her spine.
The door creaked open.
The air inside was cold and thick with dust, the scent of mildew and burnt wood mingling into something foul. Her flashlight cut a narrow beam through the dark. She stepped carefully into the main auditorium, her footfalls crunching on debris.
Faded velvet seats stood like grave markers. Curtains hung in tatters. A chandelier lay shattered across the aisle, its crystals scattered like teeth.
And at the center of the stage sat a single, pristine chair.
It didn’t belong here.
It was modern, sleek, out of place in the decaying grandeur. Resting on its seat was a crimson envelope sealed with wax. This time, the symbol wasn’t a simple spiral or sigil—it was a mask.
A chill ran down her spine.
She climbed onto the stage, boots scuffing the warped wood, and picked up the envelope. It was heavier than expected. Inside was a black-and-white photo—and something else.
She turned over the photo first.
A girl, maybe six or seven, stood in a narrow hallway. Her back to the camera. The wallpaper behind her was peeling, and in the mirror on the far wall stood a faceless figure in a long coat.
She froze.
That hallway.
That wallpaper.
That mirror.
It was her.
The hallway from the foster home she lived in at age seven. The place she had buried deep in the vault of her memory. The one where shadows whispered behind closed doors, and dreams turned to nightmares every time the lights went out.
Her hand shook.
She flipped the photo.
“What you see is not always what is.”
The voice of the past whispered through her mind like static. Mrs. Bell, her foster mother, scolding her for lying. But Amara hadn’t lied. She had seen him. The man in the hallway. The one no one else believed existed. The one who had no face.
Her chest tightened.
The envelope still had something inside.
She reached in and pulled out a small silver key, old but clean. It was attached to a faded tag with smudged writing.
Apartment 3C.
Her stomach dropped.
That was her room. At the Bellwood foster home.
The room she hadn’t stepped into since the night she ran.
The floor beneath her felt unsteady. She stumbled back, her flashlight beam swinging wildly until it landed on the tall mirror propped up beside the stage.
She hadn’t seen it before.
Dusty, cracked, and covered in cobwebs, the mirror was easily eight feet tall. Her reflection looked back at her—wide eyes, pale skin, hoodie slightly askew.
But something was off.
She raised her hand.
So did her reflection.
She tilted her head.
So did it.
But when she leaned slightly forward…
The reflection leaned slightly back.
Her breath caught.
She took a step closer, and her reflection froze. It blinked once—wrong. Out of sync. Like a glitch.
She dropped her flashlight with a gasp, and the beam tumbled across the floor. She stared at the mirror, chest heaving.
But now, her reflection was still again.
Just… normal.
She picked up her flashlight slowly and backed away from the mirror, heart pounding.
Her phone buzzed.
Unknown Number: “You’ve opened the first door. Now face the mirror.”
Her eyes flicked to the mirror again.
Face the mirror?
What did that mean?
What would happen if she touched it? Stepped through it?
The silver key in her hand burned cold.
---
Back at her apartment, Amara slammed the door behind her and locked it, bolted it, and slid a chair beneath the handle.
She placed the key on the table beside the first one. Brass and silver. One from the unknown. One from the past.
The photo sat beside them. And in the corner of her mind, old memories scratched to be let out.
She remembered the creak of the stairs at night.
The cold breath on her neck.
The voice that told her to stay quiet.
She had spent years trying to forget. Building walls. Rewriting the story in her head.
But someone was tearing those walls down.
And they weren’t stopping.
Her phone buzzed again.
Unknown Number: “You’re getting closer. The next move is yours.”
She stared at the message, then slowly looked up into the mirror on her wall. Her reflection looked back—tired, afraid.
But not broken.
Amara stood and walked to the mirror. She stared at her reflection and pulled the keys from around her neck. Her fingers curled around the silver one—the one marked Apartment 3C.
She remembered what it had been like to hide under that bed, listening to the creaks outside her door. Remembered the mask on the wall that sometimes blinked when she looked away.
She remembered the night she ran barefoot into the rain, never looking back.
But now the past was looking for her.
And she wouldn’t hide this time.