LOGINWilla Roane dies the same night she catches her boyfriend in bed with her sister. Instead of waking in peace, she’s dragged onto a ghostly bus and informed—by a mocking intercom—that she’s entered the Survival Game: a twisted show where the dead are thrown into lethal, terrifying worlds for the cruel amusement of an unseen audience. The rule is simple: survive each round… or your soul is erased forever. Her only ally is Corvin Thorne, the devastatingly beautiful stranger who yanked her off the road and onto the bus. A hybrid vampire–werewolf with a past soaked in blood, Corvin is bound by a wicked secret contract to keep Willa alive… or forfeit his own soul to the game. As they descend deeper into the nightmare realms—from a monster-ruled Dracula Castle to ruined neon cities—Willa realizes she is the key. The deadly worlds are twisting around her darkest fears and fantasies, turning her own horror stories into elaborate traps. She isn’t just a player; she’s the author of the chaos. And the man sworn to protect her may be the only thing she can’t control. Now Willa must rely on the dangerous man she’s falling for, a man who swore he would never love again. The heat between them is undeniable, but as their bond deepens, it’s impossible to tell which is more dangerous: the monsters hunting them… or the love that could destroy them both. Love might be beautiful—but in this game, it’s never sweet. It’s a weapon, a weakness, and the one thing that might rewrite the rules of Hell itself: desire. ---
View MoreBehind them, the pen in her bag hummed once, faint and content.Ahead of them, the night stretched, full of nothing more threatening than closed cafés and overwatered plants in shop windows.They walked on, hand in hand, unafraid of the next stop.A few nights later, the city outside was hushed under a thin veil of mist. Streetlights blurred at the edges; car noise was a dull, distant hiss. In the apartment, the only light came from the lamp on Willa’s desk and the soft blue spill of her laptop screen.She sat forward in her chair, shoulders hunched in the way she’d promised herself to unlearn, fingers poised over the keys.The manuscript file was open.*Bus to Nowhere – Draft 4*.Chapter 32.The last one.On the page, Mara and her monster analog had survived their version of the game. The system had been torn down and rebuilt. The bus had become a symbol, not a sentence.There was one scene left.One line, really.The one that would tell readers what kind of story this had been all a
Somewhere far above, in a small apartment smelling of coffee and cheap candles, a real pen sat in a chipped mug on a writer’s desk, very slightly warm to the touch.The theater was half‑empty.Wednesday, late showing, a movie that had been out just long enough to slide from “must see” to “we’ll catch it eventually.” The air smelled like butter‑flavored chemicals and overpriced candy. The seats were the kind that had ambitions of being recliners and had fallen just short.Willa sat in the dark beside Corvin, paper tub of popcorn between them, feeling almost smug about how extraordinarily unremarkable the evening was.No hidden objectives.No warning banners.Just previews and stale air‑conditioning and a teenager two rows down who kept whisper‑arguing with his date about whether horror “counted as cinema.”“This is research,” Willa murmured, leaning toward Corvin. “For my professional development.”“Mm,” he said. “Of course. Very serious work.”He passed her the soda.His fingers brush
At the moment?” she said. “Yeah. I think I am.”And the story—At least this version of it—Was finally reaching someone other than the game.Far from Willa’s apartment, past the edges of any sky she could see from her window, something moved through a space that wasn’t quite a world and wasn’t quite nothing.Not the white void she’d drifted in.Not the nightmare mash‑up the Game had built.A structure.Subtle.Most living souls would never touch it awake. They’d skim its surface in dreams, in déjà vu, in the strange clarity of near‑death experiences.Inside, souls moved.Not in buses.Not herded through arenas.One at a time, or in small clusters, they stepped into rooms that felt half‑memory, half‑metaphor.A classroom that smelled of chalk and old shame, where a man who’d never finished his degree sat opposite a younger version of himself and finally said, out loud, that his worth hadn’t hinged on a piece of paper.A quiet kitchen, late at night, where a woman stood at a sink and s
She was writing the next one herself.Two weeks later, Willa found herself standing on a familiar porch, staring at a door she’d once dreaded.Her parents’ house hadn’t changed much.Same faded welcome mat.Same slightly crooked porch light.The same potted plant her mother kept insisting wasn’t dead yet.What had changed was the weight in her chest.Before, coming home had felt like stepping into a role she didn’t remember auditioning for: Dutiful Daughter, Minimizer of Achievements, Emotional Shock Absorber.Now, she had a partner who’d kissed her forehead at the train station, squeezed her hand, and said, “Call me if you need extraction,” with a smile that told her he believed she could handle this—and that he’d happily be the getaway driver if she decided she didn’t want to.She rang the bell.Her mother opened the door, apron on, flour on one cheek.“Willa!” she exclaimed, pulling her into a hug that smelled like cinnamon and cleaning spray. “You’re late. I thought you’d missed t






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