CHAPTER ONE: THE BLACKOUT
Angel had always known her life was different.
Not in the way people liked to romanticizeâno secret adventures, no hidden talents she could brag about. Just quiet. Controlled. Predictable.
Too predictable.
For sixteen years, her world had been carefully contained within the walls of her home. Lessons at the dining table. Books stacked neatly in corners. Her motherâs voice guiding every subject, every schedule, every hour.
No distractions.
No outsiders.
No real life.
And now, suddenlyâ
âThatâs not fair!â Angelâs voice cracked through the living room, sharp and louder than she intended.
Her mother didnât flinch.
âYouâre starting school on Monday, Angel,â she said calmly, folding a piece of laundry as if they werenât standing in the middle of an argument that felt like it was tearing something open inside her daughter. âThis isnât a discussion anymore.â
Angel stared at her in disbelief.
âNot a discussion?â she repeated. âYouâve kept me at home my entire life, and nowânow you just decide Iâm going to walk into a school full of strangers like itâs normal?â
âIt is normal.â
âNo, itâs not!â Angel snapped. âNot for me!â
The room felt smaller. Tighter.
Her chest rose and fell too quickly.
From the couch, her older brother shifted slightly.
âAngelâŚâ muttered, running a hand through his hair. At nineteen, he carried himself with a kind of quiet detachmentâas if heâd already figured out something the rest of them hadnât. âItâs just school. Youâll survive.â
She turned to him, eyes flashing.
âOh, thatâs easy for you to say. You actually went to school. You had friends. You had a life.â
Aaron shrugged. âAnd now Iâm fine.â
âThatâs not the point!â
âThen what is?â he shot back, though not unkindly.
Angel hesitated.
Because she didnât know how to explain it.
How do you tell someone that the world outside your house doesnât just feel unfamiliarâit feels wrong?
Like you donât belong in it?
Like something is waiting?
Her mother finally looked up, her expression softeningâbut only slightly.
âThis is for your own good, Angel.â
That sentence.
Angel hated that sentence.
âYou donât get to decide that!â she said, her voice shaking now. âYou donât get to just throw me out there like Iâm some experiment!â
âIâm not throwing you anywhere,â her mother replied, more firmly now. âIâm giving you a chance to live a normal life.â
Normal.
The word echoed in Angelâs head like an insult.
âI donât want your version of normal!â she snapped.
Silence fell.
Heavy. Thick.
Even Aaron sat up straighter now.
Something in the air had changed.
Angel felt it before she understood it.
A strange pressureâbuilding slowly in her chest, spreading outward like heat under her skin.
Her hands trembled.
Her heartbeat quickened.
âAngelâŚâ her mother said carefully. âCalm down.â
But it was already too late.
âI am calm,â Angel whispered, though her voice betrayed her.
The lights flickered.
Aaron frowned. âDid you seeââ
âStop it,â her mother said, sharper now, though it wasnât clear who she was talking to.
Angelâs breathing grew uneven.
Something was wrong.
Very wrong.
Her reflection in the nearby mirror caught her eyeâand for a second, just a secondâ
It didnât move the way she did.
Her stomach dropped.
âWhat is happeningâŚ?â she whispered.
The pressure inside her surged.
Her vision blurred.
Her mother took a step toward her. âAngelââ
And thenâ
Everything went black.
â
When she opened her eyes again, the silence was different.
Deeper.
Colder.
Angel inhaled sharply, her breath visible in the air.
She froze.
This wasnât her house.
She was standing outside.
Gravel crunched faintly beneath her shoes as she shifted her weight. The air carried a damp chill, the kind that seeped into your bones and refused to leave.
Slowly, she looked up.
And her breath caught in her throat.
The mansion loomed before her.
Massive. Dark. Watching.
Tall windows stretched upward like hollow eyes, reflecting nothing but darkness. The stone walls were blackened with age, vines crawling across them like veins. The iron gates behind her stood open, unmoving, as if they had been waiting for her.
Angelâs heart began to pound.
âNoâŚâ she whispered.
She knew this place.
Everyone did.
The Blackthorne mansion.
No one came here.
No one talked about it.
And yetâ
She was standing right in front of it.
A cold wind brushed past her, carrying something faint.
A whisper.
She turned sharply.
âHello?â
Nothing.
Of course.
Swallowing hard, she looked back at the mansion.
The front doors were slightly open.
Just enough.
Darkness spilled out from within like it was alive.
âI need to go homeâŚâ she murmured.
But her feet didnât move.
Insteadâ
They stepped forward.
One step.
Then another.
As if something inside her was pulling her closer.
â
The door creaked as she pushed it open.
The sound echoed unnaturally loud, bouncing off unseen walls and disappearing into the depths of the house.
Inside, the air was colder.
Still.
Dust floated through thin beams of moonlight. The grand staircase curved upward into darkness, its railing coated in age and silence.
Angel hugged her arms tightly around herself.
âI shouldnât be hereâŚâ
But she kept walking.
The house twisted around herâhallways stretching too long, corners bending in ways they shouldnât. Doors appeared and disappeared when she wasnât looking directly at them.
And thenâ
She found it.
A door unlike the others.
Dark wood. Covered in carved symbols that seemed to shift when she tried to focus on them.
Her pulse quickened.
Something about it felt⌠important.
Dangerous.
She reached out slowly.
Her fingers hovered over the handle.
âDonât open it,â she whispered to herself.
And thenâ
She did.
â
The room beyond was untouched.
Candles burst into flame the moment she stepped inside.
Angel gasped, stumbling back slightly.
âI didnâtââ
The flames flickered wildly before settling into a steady glow.
At the center of the room stood a single table.
And on itâ
A book.
Large. Ancient. Bound in cracked black leather.
It felt wrong.
And yetâ
She couldnât look away.
Her feet moved on their own.
Closer.
Closer.
âDonât touch itâŚâ she whispered.
But her hand lifted anyway.
The moment her fingers brushed the coverâ
A sharp jolt shot through her body.
Angel gasped, her knees nearly buckling as a surge of energy rushed through her veins.
The candles flared violently.
The book grew warm beneath her touch.
Alive.
Her breathing became uneven.
Slowlyâhesitantlyâshe opened it.
The pages flipped on their own.
Faster.
Faster.
Until suddenlyâ
They stopped.
Silence fell.
Angelâs eyes dropped to the page.
Simple words stared back at her.
Clear.
Waiting.
Her lips parted.
And before she could stop herselfâ
She read them aloud.
âUmbra vex⌠nocta riseâŚâ
The temperature dropped instantly.
The shadows shifted.
Angelâs heart slammed against her chest.
âI didnât mean toââ
The shadows peeled away from the walls.
Lifting.
Twisting.
Rising like living smoke.
They circled her slowly.
Watching.
Waiting.
A voice whispered from everywhere at onceâ
âYou called.â
Terror gripped her.
âI didnâtâ I didnât mean to!â
But the shadows moved closer.
And something inside her responded.
That same force.
That anger.
That power.
Her hands trembled.
But this timeâ
She didnât fight it.
The shadows stilled.
Then slowlyâ
They bowed.
Silence fell.
Heavy.
Absolute.
Angel stood at the center, breathing hard, her eyes wide.
Not just with fear.
But with something else.
Something deeper.
Because the shadows werenât attacking her.
They were obeying her.
â
Miles awayâ
Something ancient stirred.
And for the first time in yearsâ
It smiled.