Chapter One – The Ordinary Life

495 Words
The rain hadn’t stopped in three days. It slicked the streets in silver ribbons, beading on the cracked pavement and dripping from the rusted fire escapes that clung like iron scars to the buildings. Elena Cross hunched her shoulders against it, her thin coat offering little protection as she wove through the crowd outside Ashmoor Station. The air smelled of diesel, wet concrete, and too many people crushed into too little space. She hated this part of the city—the choking rush-hour, the endless scuffle of shoes on tile, the faint tang of ozone from the subway below. Yet it was her life. Ordinary. Forgettable. By day, she was a data clerk in a corporate tower with windows so tinted they reflected the city’s skyline instead of revealing anything inside. Her job was the kind that devoured hours without leaving a mark: typing, filing, ghosting through spreadsheets until numbers blurred into one another. She told herself she didn’t mind. She told herself she was fine. Her phone buzzed in her pocket. Marissa. Elena’s lips tugged upward despite the rain. Her best friend since high school—the only person who hadn’t disappeared when her family fractured, when her parents’ divorce hollowed their home into silence. Marissa had always been there, bright-eyed, unstoppable, dragging Elena into laughter when she’d have rather melted into the wallpaper. > You’re late again. Drinks or no drinks? Elena typed back, fingers stiff from the cold: On my way. Don’t drink all the gin before I get there. She shoved the phone away and kept walking, her boots splashing through puddles. The bar sat two blocks from her apartment, wedged between a laundromat and a pawnshop with flickering neon. Inside, the air was warm and thick with music—low jazz, smoky and lazy. Marissa was already at the counter, golden hair catching the dim light like a halo, glass in hand, grin sharp enough to cut. “You’re late,” she said, sliding a second drink across the bar. “Again.” Elena shrugged, sliding onto the stool. “The city doesn’t bend for me.” “It should.” Marissa’s smirk softened. “Someday, it will.” Elena laughed, though she didn’t believe it. She sipped the gin—it burned, but pleasantly so—and let herself breathe. For a moment, the world narrowed to this: rain beyond the glass, warmth at her side, and the one person who still anchored her. And yet—something flickered at the edge of her vision. A shadow where none should be. A prickle along the back of her neck, like unseen eyes in the room. She turned, scanning the bar. Nothing but strangers hunched over drinks, faces blurred by dim light. She shook it off. Just exhaustion. Just the rain pressing against her skull. Marissa was watching her. “You okay?” “Fine,” Elena lied. But the unease lingered. Like the night was holding its breath. ---
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