Chapter 4: Cracks in the Light

765 Words
The first crack appeared where no one could see it. It didn’t make a sound. No glass shattered. No alarm rang. It just flickered. Clara noticed it on a rainy Monday morning at the bus stop, umbrella in one hand, folder in the other. Her phone blinked, went black, then came back on. Blink. Freeze. Black. She frowned. “That’s strange.” Battery ninety-two percent. Signal full. Everything should have been normal. Except it wasn’t. She tapped the screen. Nothing. Then suddenly, it lit up again. She exhaled. “Maybe I’m just tired.” She had been saying that a lot lately. Ever since graduation. Ever since hope started feeling fragile instead of bright. Rain ran off the bus, forming slow streams along the metal. The air smelled of wet pavement and diesel. Clara stared at her reflection in the dark screen. She looked thinner, more alert, as if expecting disaster. Across the street, traffic lights flickered, then steadied. She didn’t notice. Above her, hidden in the mist, Shomer hovered. His edges wavered. Rain passed through him like smoke. “Stability dropping,” he murmured. He tried to straighten his wings, but they thinned instead. Since the council meeting, the pressure had been constant, invisible, binding. The bond between guardian and human was supposed to flow freely. Now it strained, and something else pressed in. He felt watched. Not by Costus, but by something closer, darker. Clara’s interview in Baltimore was set for noon. She arrived twenty minutes early. Her mother’s voice echoed in her head: If you’re on time, you’re late. If you’re early, you’re prepared. She sat in the reception area, knees together, folder on her lap. Glass walls, neutral art, faint polish scent. She rehearsed silently: I am hardworking. I adapt quickly. I believe in growth. Her palms were damp. The elevator doors opened. Lydia stepped out—sunglasses, heels, calm. She wasn’t supposed to be there. She spotted Clara and smiled. Not warmly. Strategically. “She doesn’t even know how lucky she is,” Lydia whispered to herself. In the spiritual realm, Vigilis appeared beside Shomer. “You are flickering,” the Watcher said quietly. “I can manage,” Shomer replied. “You are tethered too tightly.” “She needs stability,” Shomer said. “And you need restraint.” Shomer didn’t argue. The Watcher was right. The interview went better than Clara expected. The manager nodded, smiled at her portfolio, asked thoughtful questions. She answered clearly, confidently. By the time she stepped outside into the gray afternoon, she felt lighter. She texted her mother. Clara: I think it went well! Beatrice: God is with you. Clara pressed the phone to her chest. Gratitude warmed her. Unseen, someone watched from across the street. That evening, an email arrived: Provisional Acceptance. Clara read it again and again. She screamed. “Mama!” Beatrice rushed in. “What happened?” “I got it!” They hugged, laughed, cried, and danced barefoot in the kitchen. Hope returned like sunlight breaking through clouds. Across town, Lydia stared at Clara’s post: Blessed beyond words. “She doesn’t even know how to struggle,” she muttered. “I did everything right.” Her phone buzzed. A message from her supervisor at GreenWay Mart: We are reviewing staff placements. Transfers are possible. Cold formed behind her eyes. A plan. Patient. Precise. Dangerous. Above Clara, Shomer stiffened. A ripple moved through the air. Not joy. Not despair. Intent. “Malice,” he whispered. He tried to trace it, but static clouded his vision. For the first time since her childhood, he couldn’t see clearly around her. “Who is interfering?” he breathed. No answer came. That night, Clara dreamed. She stood on glass. Light stretched endlessly around her. The glass cracked beneath her feet. Thin lines spread outward. Darkness moved beneath the surface, alive, waiting. She reached out instinctively. “Help me.” The light flickered. No one answered. Then she fell. She woke, heart pounding. Her phone lay silent on the nightstand. She reached for it. The screen flickered once, then steadied. Something felt wrong, but she didn’t know what. In the higher realm, Costus watched. Expressionless. “Phase one has begun,” he said. Lumen’s glow dimmed slightly. “Must she suffer first?” “Yes.” Vigilis stayed silent. Suffering reveals weakness. Weakness reveals choice. Across the city, Lydia sat at her laptop. A company portal glowed. She typed deliberately: Clara Bennett’s Employee File. A notification appeared: Access Granted. In the faint reflection of her screen, her smile didn’t look entirely human.
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