Chapter 2: Something's Off With the Air
The world hadn't ended. Not in the way people expected. No fire raining from the sky. No angels blowing trumpets. No blood oceans or horsemen galloping down the freeway. Just the same morning gridlock on Eastridge Avenue, the same white noise of espresso machines screaming in corner cafes, the same looped synth - pop playlist that every shop owner swore was different. Spoiler: it wasn't. People still scrolled through headlines like they were swiping through a dating app — war, floods, heatwaves, disappearances, whatever. Blink. Gone. Refresh. Next. The city didn't stop. It groaned and sparked and kept humming like it always had, wrapped in neon and exhaust fumes and that weird mix of human energy and unspoken dread. But underneath it all, buried under the Spotify ads and 5G signals and non - stop construction — something buzzed. And Aria Solenne felt it like an itch just under her skin. She moved through the streets like she belonged and didn't at the same time. Headphones in. Hood up. Face unreadable. She blended in the way shadows did — only noticeable if you were really looking. The subway was the usual chaos. Elbows. Coffee breath. One guy yelling at a poster for reasons only he understood. She didn't flinch when someone jostled her. Not even when they got too close. She just shifted her weight and slipped her fingers around the handle of the small blade in her coat. Instinct. Habit. Insurance. The train window caught her reflection. She didn't like how it looked back. Same girl. Same face. But it felt… delayed. Slightly out of sync. Like watching herself in a livestream with a lag. She turned away. The bookstore was where her day officially started. Gutter & Spine — crammed between a hipster plant shop selling overpriced succulents and a vape lounge that moonlighted as a spoken word bar. The kind of place G****e Maps forgot, which suited Aria fine. She pushed open the door and paused. No chime. That wasn't right. She looked up. The little silver bell above the door was still there, still dangling from the hook. But it hadn't made a sound. Like the air was too thick for noise. Inside, it was quiet. Too quiet. "Mrs. Yune?" Aria called, setting her bag down behind the counter. No answer. That was weirder. The old woman never missed a shift. Ever. Even on days she probably should have stayed home. Even on the day of Aria's interview, when the sky had opened up and flooded half the street, she had been there, sipping tea like the storm couldn't touch her. Her mug was on the desk now. Half full. Cold. The chair pushed slightly out. Notebook open. Blank page. Aria frowned, unease tugging at the edge of her gut. She poured two cups of tea anyway — white jasmine with ginseng, just like always. Set one down at the register, hoping muscle memory would make everything feel less off. It didn't. The second cup stayed untouched. Steam curling upward like it was looking for something. Or someone. By eleven, the tea had cooled. By noon, the porcelain cracked with a sharp snap when she moved it. Aria muttered, "What the hell…" She cleaned it up slowly, deliberately. Anything to keep her hands moving. To keep her from thinking about how it felt like the whole bookstore was… holding its breath. She wandered into the back aisles. The mythology section was a mess — again. Probably some college kid hunting for ancient conspiracies to turn into a thesis. Her fingers skimmed the titles. Worn, faded, some crumbling at the spine. One caught her eye. Legends of the End Times. Okay. A little on the nose. She pulled it out. The book snapped open like it had been waiting for her. Pages fluttered violently — way too violently for the still air. Most were gone. Torn out. Clean edges, not ragged. Deliberate. Only one page remained. Scrawled in handwriting that wasn't printed: She will bloom when all else dies. Aria stared. The ink bled at the edges. Not like water damage. Like tears. She ran her fingers over the words. Heat pulsed under her skin. A soft flicker in her chest. Familiar. Uncomfortable. She shoved the book closed and stuck it under the counter. Enough weird for one shift. The rest of the afternoon crawled. Barely any customers. Just the low hum of the heater and the occasional groan of pipes older than her apartment building. She finally locked up at six, grabbed her stuff, and stepped into the street just as the rain picked up again. Drizzle soaked her hoodie in seconds. Great. Aria tugged it tighter and walked fast, hands shoved deep into her pockets. Her boots splashed through puddles the color of old coffee. She passed a digital billboard overhead. The screen flickered, half - glitched. ZONE A: TEMPORARY MONITORING SYMPTOM HOTLINE: XXX Nobody looked up. Nobody ever did. A voice barked prices from a fruit cart nearby. The same vendor as always — a woman in a puff jacket with gold hoops and an AI - linked payment ring. "Three for five. Cash only. Don't trust the cloud. That shit steals your face." Aria grabbed a couple of apples. As she handed over cash, the woman squinted at her. "You want the red ones? Girl, nah. Bad week for red. Take green." "…Why?" "Rot's been weird lately. Stuff looks fine outside, then boom — spores. I'm tellin' you, bad energy in the soil or something." Aria blinked. "Spore apples?" The woman just shrugged. "You didn't hear it from me." Aria muttered a thanks and walked off. She bit into one apple half a block later. Regretted it immediately. Soft. Mushy. The inside was black and caved in. She gagged, spit it out into the gutter, and dumped the rest into the nearest bin. By the time she reached her building, her hoodie was soaked through and her nerves were frayed. She trudged up five flights, kicked her boots off inside, and froze. Something felt… off. She closed the door behind her slowly. The apartment was still. Not quiet — still. Air too heavy. The smell of something floral. Faint. Sweet. Wrong. Her eyes drifted to the bookshelf. The flower was back. No — flowers, plural. Two of them now. Deep crimson. Growing directly from the spine of Sea Glass Psalms, like they had rooted themselves into the poetry. No pot. No soil. Just… existing. Aria moved closer, slowly. She hadn't touched them. Couldn't. Something inside her said don't. Not because she was scared of plants, but because these weren't plants. Not really. They hadn't wilted. Not even a little. She turned toward the mirror by the window. Same antique mirror left by the last tenant. Slightly warped. She'd been meaning to throw it out for months. Every time she got close to doing it, something stopped her. Tonight, it had a crack. Tiny. Fresh. Like a split in the surface of the world. She stepped forward. Her reflection blinked half a beat late. Not enough to prove anything. Enough to feel it. She tilted her head. The reflection didn't. She whispered, "Nope." The mirror said nothing. Just stared. Not at her. Through her. The air shifted. Not temperature — pressure. Her ears popped slightly. And then, like a voice without words, something whispered. It wasn't sound. It was a knowing. She turned back toward the flowers. The petals curled. Listening. Her knees buckled slightly. She reached for the arm of the couch and sat down hard. Her phone. She yanked it out of her pocket. No bars. No Wi - Fi. No message. Just dead space. Like the city had been unplugged. She muttered under her breath, "Okay, no. We are not doing this today." The mirror watched. The flowers pulsed — once — like a heartbeat. She wanted to move. She didn't. She whispered, "What are you?" The flowers didn't answer. Neither did the mirror. But the wind outside picked up. Shrieked once across the building like it was clawing at the windows. Then silence. She stayed there, still, breathing slow. At some point, her phone buzzed. She nearly dropped it. One new message. Jules: You good? Heard Yune's MIA. Weird stuff in the city? Aria stared at the screen, thumbs hovering. She typed: Aria: I don't know. Something's wrong. Something's coming. She hit send. Put the phone down. Looked up. The mirror crack had grown. A web now. Spreading outward like ice. Her reflection blinked again — delayed. This time, Aria didn't blink at all. The flowers shifted gently, as if reacting to the thought she hadn't spoken. The air felt electric. Alive. Not fear. Not quite. Anticipation. The whisper came again. This time, it was clear. One word. Right into her bones. "Bloom."Chapter 10: Packing ShadowsAria moved around her small apartment with a strange kind of numb determination. The rain from last night still clung to the windows, streaks running down the glass like tears, but inside, she was busy packing the few things she could carry. Clothes folded into a battered duffel bag, notebooks stacked carefully, the sketchbook tucked away like a secret. Every item was a piece of the life she was leaving behind — her normal, cracked and fragile as it was.Selene sat silently in the living room, arms crossed, watching without saying a word. Her green eyes flicked occasionally toward Aria, but she didn't speak. She'd learned patience during her two years preparing for this moment — the rebirth, the awakening, the storm coming — and yet, every time she looked at Aria, she felt like she was facing something new. This Aria was different, fragile but fierce, tangled up in secrets neither of them fully understood yet.Selene thought about the cat. Piper. The way Ar
Chapter 9: Breaking PointAria jolted awake, heart already racing like it had never stopped beating from some forgotten nightmare. Her breath came fast, damp hair clinging to her forehead. The rain outside was still going, soft now, more like static against the glass than an actual storm.Her apartment smelled like damp earth and charged air — like the ground right before lightning hits.She sat up slowly, wincing. Her limbs were stiff, like she'd slept with tension coiled too tight. She looked toward the window.The flowers were different.The four glowing red blossoms — the ones that had pulsed gently for weeks, always four, no more — had changed.There were six now.Two new petals had unfurled overnight. Quietly. Without warning.She blinked, breath catching. The fifth looked newer, less confident in its shape, but the sixth… The sixth pulsed stronger than the others. Brighter. And underneath that red light, the glass of the window had started to fog.She moved closer, barefoot on
Chapter 8: Even If She Wasn't Mine, She WasAria had just turned eighteen.Selene didn't know where she'd gone at first, not until she tracked her back to the apartment building through the rain. The lights were off. The blinds were only half - drawn. From across the street, hidden under the shadows of the tree line, Selene stood watching.Inside, Aria lay curled up on her bed. Her shoulders shook with quiet sobs, her hands covering her face. She didn't move. She didn't even flinch when lightning cracked the sky wide open.Selene's fingers twitched by her side. She wanted to break in. Crawl through the window. Wrap her arms around her. Wipe those tears away and whisper, Tell me who hurt you. I'll take care of it.But she didn't move. Not yet. Not when she was still supposed to be a stranger.She didn't know what exactly happened at first — only that Aria had come home heartbroken. She would find out the rest later.Aria had gone to a fan - service event.To see Elara.Aria had worn so
Chapter 7: I Watched You Before You Knew MeSelene's first breath after the rebirth wasn't calm — it was fire threading through her blood, ice cracking in her bones. Her body shook as if the earth itself had snapped back into her chest. She opened her eyes, not to light, but to memory.The first name in her mind was Aria.She didn't know why. Just that it rang like a bell every time her heart beat. Aria. Her Aria. The girl she hadn't even met yet.She started watching. Quietly. From afar.At seventeen, Aria Solenne was still human. Still untouched by the supernatural storm brewing beneath her skin. She didn't know the weight she carried in her blood or the danger that bloomed every time she smiled.Selene did.She'd stand outside the school gates sometimes, eyes hidden behind mirrored sunglasses, hoodie pulled low, pretending to check her phone while watching Aria laugh with her friends. Selene hated how easily Aria trusted the world. And she loved it, too.There were moments when fat
Chapter 6: When the Sky Starts to BleedThe morning dragged itself out like the sky was caught between a sigh and a storm. Rain fell in slow, uneven drops, wetting the cracked sidewalks and washing the city in a soft gray haze. Aria pulled her umbrella low over her head, its worn nylon barely keeping the chill off. The streets were almost empty, quiet except for the steady tap of rain on pavement and the distant hum of a city reluctant to wake.She moved with a weight pressing down on her chest — like the sky was folding in on itself and she was caught in the middle. She didn't know where she was going. Not really. Her boots splashed through puddles, careless and cold, as if the water couldn't reach inside her.Passing the old bookstore next to the café — a place usually closed on Mondays — Aria blinked. The door was cracked open, just enough for a shadow to slip through. She stopped, heart skipping. The air smelled of damp paper and something sharper underneath. Metal? Static?"Mrs.
Chapter 5: The Girl in the Fever DreamShe was sixteen. Technically "emancipated." Practically just a girl with keys, a name that wasn't hers anymore, and an apartment no one was supposed to know about. And still, somehow — Uncle Raymond found her.She didn't know how. Maybe Evan had followed her one day, or maybe one of those fake "family friends" had given her up. Either way, they were at her door. Loud, entitled, and pushing."You think you're grown now, huh?" Raymond's voice was smooth, practiced, fake concern dripping from every syllable. "I'm just worried about you, honey. You're not answering calls. I thought maybe you needed help managing everything."Aria didn't answer. She stood behind the door, breath held, phone clutched in her hand but no one to call. The lawyer said the trust was hers. But if Raymond pushed hard enough, if he found a judge —"Come on, Aria. Be smart. You don't even know how to handle money. Let me help you."His fist pounded once, hard.She flinched."Da