LOGINEliana forgot how to breathe.The sight of her father standing in that kitchen doorway shattered every thought in her head at once. For a moment, the realm around her disappeared completely. The dark water, the floating doors, the trapped souls beneath the surface—none of it mattered anymore.Only him.Only the man she had buried six years ago.Warm light spilled from the kitchen behind him, wrapping around his figure like sunlight through glass. The smell of fried plantains and pepper soup drifted through the air, rich and familiar enough to make her chest ache. Even the sound of the old ceiling fan creaking above the dining table hit her like a punch to the ribs.It was real, too real.“Eliana?” her father called again, smiling softly. “Are you just going to stand there?”Her throat tightened painfully.The voice was perfect.A trembling breath escaped her lips. “Dad…”Behind her, the spirit guide remained silent.For once, he did not interrupt her thoughts or throw one of his cold
Eliana forced herself to stop. She squinted at the distant mirror. The image was hazy, but he was right—the Eliana in the hospital bed wasn't just stable. She was sitting up. Laughing. Her mother hugged her, and there were balloons by the window, and sunlight streaming in, and everything was perfect.Too perfect."It never happened," Eliana realized, her throat tight."No," her guide agreed. "But you want it to. The labyrinth knows."The mirror with the false healing began to hum. The glass rippled like water, and suddenly Eliana felt an irresistible pull toward it, a magnetic longing that ached in her bones. Step through, the hum seemed to whisper. Step through and stay. Stay where it's safe. Where she's happy. Where you're whole.Her foot moved forward without her permission."No." The boy grabbed her hand, anchoring her. "Psalm said the wanting is the trap. The wanting is always the trap."Eliana closed her eyes. The humming grew louder, drilling into her skull, promising peace, pr
The darkness swallowed everything.For a moment, Eliana existed in pure nothing—no floor beneath her feet, no walls, no screaming creature, no crying mother. Just the suffocating black and the echo of that final, terrible beep burning through her skull."No," she breathed into the void. "No, no, no—"She started running. She didn't know where, didn't care. Her legs pumped against an invisible surface, her hands clawed at empty air. "Take me back! Let me see her!"No one answered.Somewhere in the dark, she could hear her own heartbeat—or maybe it was the phantom memory of the hospital monitor, slowing, fading, stopping. She couldn't tell anymore. The boundary between her body and this place had dissolved completely, and she was dissolving with it."Please," she whispered. Tears burned her eyes, then froze against her skin. "Please, I can't leave her like that. I can't—"A hand caught her wrist.She whirled, expecting the creature, expecting those cracked porcelain fingers and that too
Eliana’s scream tore through the collapsing hallway as the creature tightened its grip around her ankle. Its fingers were ice-cold, unnaturally long, and strong enough to drag her backward across the floor no matter how hard she fought. The thing looked exactly like her, but wrong in every possible way. Its limbs bent strangely, its skin was pale and cracked like broken porcelain, and its smile stretched far too wide across its face. Dark liquid leaked from its empty eyes as it crawled toward her with twisted excitement.For one horrifying second, Eliana forgot how to breathe. The monster grinned wider. “You left us behind,” it whispered in her voice. Her stomach twisted violently.The sound wasn’t human. It sounded layered, like several voices were speaking through the same mouth at once. “Eliana!” her spirit guide shouted again, and this time there was unmistakable urgency in his tone. “Move!” That finally snapped her out of her terror.She kicked wildly with her free leg, striking
The world shattered around Eliana like glass.The sound was deafening.One second she was standing inside her mother’s bedroom, surrounded by collapsing memories and the remains of a life she had spent years trying to survive. The next, darkness swallowed everything whole. The floor beneath her feet disappeared completely, and she felt herself falling again.Only this time, there was no ground waiting below.Wind tore past her ears as her body dropped endlessly through blackness. Her stomach twisted violently, panic clawing at her chest while broken pieces of the house floated around her like drifting fragments of a nightmare. She saw flashes as she fell—her mother crying in the kitchen, young Eliana hiding behind the couch, Marcus shouting loud enough to shake the walls. The memories spun around her until she couldn’t tell which way was up anymore.“Eliana.”The voice cut through the chaos.Her spirit guide. Strong hands grabbed her wrist suddenly, stopping her fall so sharply that it
The darkness inside the house felt alive.Eliana stood frozen in the middle of the living room, her breath trapped somewhere between her lungs and throat as the heavy footsteps drew closer. Every instinct inside her screamed to run, yet her body refused to move. The air had changed completely. Just moments ago, the house had felt warm, almost comforting, filled with the scent of home and memories she had spent years missing. Now it felt rotten. Heavy. Like the walls themselves remembered things she had desperately tried to forget.The footsteps stopped and silence swallowed the room again. Then came the sound of something dragging across the floor. Her stomach twisted painfully. No, she screamed.No, no, no. She screamed louder again this time because she knew that sound too. It was a sound of a bottle.Glass scraping slowly against the tiles and her chest tightened so hard it hurt.“Eliana.” The voice came again, lower this time.It was dangerously calm.Every hair on her body stood upS







