She waited until the forest swallowed the sound of his steps, then forced herself to move. Every part of her screamed run the other way, but the compass, the symbol, Mariam’s warning — they all pointed in the same direction: answers lay with him.
Ameera slipped from the thicket, careful to step only where his boots had pressed the ground, masking her trail with his. The forest grew darker as she followed, the canopy thickening until the daylight fractured into slivers.
He moved with precision, never hesitating, as if he knew the forest’s secrets. Twice, he paused to glance behind him — not enough to catch her outright, but enough to make her wonder if he wanted her close.
Then the trees opened into a narrow clearing, ringed with moss-covered stones. At the center stood a crude structure of branches and rope, like a shelter built in haste. Smoke curled faintly from a pit of embers at its base.
And scattered around it, half-hidden under tarps, were belongings Ameera recognized immediately — Mariam’s water flask, Farruk ’s carved arrows, Abu’s torn jacket.
Her breath caught. The figure stepped into the clearing, set the compass on a stone, and finally lowered his hood.
It was Abu.
But his face… gaunt, hollow-eyed, lips cracked, like he hadn’t slept in days. And when he looked up, his gaze wasn’t relief at seeing her. It was something colder.
“Finally,” he whispered, voice rough. “You made it.”Ameera’s throat tightened. Relief and suspicion warred inside her, but the sight of the others’ belongings scattered like trophies kept her rooted in caution.
“Abu…” Her voice cracked, low and wary. “Where are they?”
He tilted his head, almost smiling, though his eyes didn’t match it. “Alive. For now.”
Her fists clenched at her sides. “What did you do to them?”
Abu let out a hollow laugh. “Me? You think I brought us here to kill them? No, Ameera. I brought us here to survive.” He stepped closer, shadows painting his gaunt features. “This forest isn’t empty. It’s alive — and it doesn’t let people just walk out. Haven’t you felt it? The silence? The way it turns us around?”
Ameera ’s skin prickled. She thought of Farruk’s spirals, Mariam’s warning, the shifting compass.
Abu’s voice lowered. “I found something. The ranger station is real — but it’s not what I thought. It’s old, abandoned… and there are journals inside. Whoever was here before us, they wrote about the forest. About how it feeds on confusion, on trust breaking apart.” He leaned in, eyes burning. “The only way to beat it is to play by its rules. That’s what I’ve been doing.”
Her pulse raced. “What rules?”
Abu smiled then — thin, sharp. “One must be the hunter. The others… the hunted.”
Ameera’s stomach churned. “You’re insane,” she whispered, though a part of her hated how steady his words had sounded.
Abu didn’t flinch. Instead, he stepped back toward the stone where the compass lay, his hand brushing over it like it was sacred. “Am I? Think about it. Mariam was already breaking — rationing scraps like we were children. Farruk was carving signs, leaving trails for the forest to twist against us. They weren’t strong enough. But you…” His eyes locked onto hers. “You’re different.”
Her jaw tightened. “Different how?”
“You see patterns. You don’t ignore the silence, the shifts. You’re smart enough to hide when you should, bold enough to follow when it matters. The forest hasn’t swallowed you because it knows you can play.” He spread his arms, voice low but urgent. “If you stand with me, Ameera, we can control it. Hunter and hunter. Not prey.”
The firelight cast jagged shadows across his face, making him look both hollowed and alive all at once.
Ameera’s heart pounded in her chest. She thought of Mariam’s note: Don’t trust him. She thought of Farruk’s warning marks. But she also thought of the endless trees, the way out twisting further from reach.
Abu’s voice dropped to a whisper, almost pleading. “Choose. Me… or the forest.”
Ameera forced her face into stillness, though her pulse thundered like war drums in her ears. Abu’s eyes searched her, hungry for her answer, and she knew one wrong flicker of doubt would brand her prey.
So she nodded. Slowly.
“You’re right,” she said, her voice quiet, controlled. “The others were weak. But I’m still here.”
Abu’s shoulders sagged with relief, and for the first time in days, a smile — a real one — cracked across his gaunt face. “I knew it. I knew you’d see.” He stepped closer, lowering his voice conspiratorially. “We’ll find the station again. We’ll finish what the others couldn’t. Together.”