CHAPTER 4
I didn’t sleep that night. It wasn’t the kind of restlessness that came from too much coffee or a stressful assignment. It was deeper—like my body had already decided sleep was dangerous. Every time I closed my eyes, Lana’s face stared back at me, not the smiling one from memory, but the bound, terrified one in the photo. Her eyes pleading. The rope tight around her arms. The background behind her still a blur of shadows and dust, and the red smear on the floor just visible if you dared to look long enough. I lay curled under my duvet, holding the photo beneath my pillow. The longer I kept it close, the more unreal it felt. Like a cursed object. If I looked at it too long, I might start seeing things. Hearing things. I didn’t turn on the light again. I didn’t want to see it. But I also didn’t want to forget it was real. That someone had slipped it into my locker. That Lana—missing for months—might still be alive. Or worse, had been alive. I counted the hours in fragments of shadow. 3:19 a.m. I sat up. My room was wrapped in dim blue hues, the window cracked open just enough to let in the cool night air. My phone buzzed softly. I snatched it up, heartbeat tapping in my ears. A message. Unknown number: Did you like what you saw? My throat dried. I didn’t reply. I couldn’t. I just stared, the words sinking into my skin like a toxin. My fingers hovered above the keyboard. Me: Who is this? The response came immediately. Unknown: You already know. No name. No hint. Just that. I deleted the conversation. Not because I wanted to forget, but because I knew someone was watching. I didn’t sleep the rest of the night. ⸻ By morning, I was a ghost in my own house. I walked past my mother in the kitchen without a word, afraid if I opened my mouth, she’d see right through me. She was on the phone, her coffee in one hand, one heel already on, the other clutched in her elbow. “—no, she hasn’t said a word about it. Honestly, I think she’s bottling everything up again.” Pause. “Mm-hmm. Yeah, I know. Like before.” Before what? I kept walking. Breakfast was a blur. I didn’t eat. The smell of toast made my stomach turn. I heard my brother Dylan playing a game in the living room, the gunfire echoing faintly through the walls, and my mother’s voice trailing behind me as she spoke in lowered tones, as if she thought my silence couldn’t hear her. I grabbed my bag, the photo still folded inside, and slipped out the door. ⸻ The walk to school was longer than usual. Or maybe time had just slowed to match the storm inside my chest. Everything looked normal. Birds perched on telephone wires. Sprinklers hissed over lawns. Cars rolled lazily through intersections. And yet, something was off. It was the way the air sat heavy. How my shadow felt one step behind me, not beside. How every stranger’s glance lingered half a second too long, like they were watching for something. Like they knew. When I reached the school gate, the weight in my backpack seemed to double. I felt the photo there, tucked in a biology notebook. I thought about Lana again. Her laugh, her hair always messy in that effortless way. Her voice, too loud during assemblies. And then I thought about the photo, the rope, her bare knees on that dirty floor. What had she been wearing that day? Where had she gone after school? I never asked. ⸻ Inside, everything buzzed with the usual Monday rhythm. Mr. Graham yelled about overdue homework. Morgan blabbed about a new piercing. Group chats pinged with half-hearted gossip. I moved through the noise like a mute swimmer—numb, distant, drowning in silence. I only snapped back when someone said her name. “—Lana. You remember her?” a girl was whispering behind me as I reached my locker. I froze, pretending to scroll through my phone. “Yeah. I heard someone saw her. Like, recently. On West Street. Just standing there, dazed.” “That’s a lie. She’s dead, Cass.” “Maybe. Maybe not.” My stomach turned cold. I opened my locker slowly, but no new notes were waiting. No new photos. Just my books, stacked neatly. But that didn’t calm me. It made me feel watched. ⸻ Third period. I didn’t take any notes. I kept glancing around the classroom, looking for any face that seemed out of place. No one looked back. No one seemed to care. Except for one. A boy I didn’t recognize. Back corner. Hoodie drawn up, pen idle. He wasn’t writing. He was watching me. I didn’t stare long enough to be obvious, but I felt his gaze like a hand on my shoulder. When the bell rang, I waited until everyone stood, then turned to glance at him. He was already gone. I checked my phone again. No messages. Not yet. ⸻ At lunch, I went outside. I didn’t sit with the usual group. Instead, I wandered to the old science wing—the part of campus no one used anymore. The windows were boarded. The doors chained. But there was a bench still tucked beneath a rusted stairwell. I sat there. Alone. Listening. After a few minutes, I heard footsteps crunching gravel. I tensed. The boy from class. Closer now, I saw him clearer—tan skin, sharp jaw, dark eyes too old for his face. He stopped a few feet from me and didn’t say anything. “Were you following me?” I asked, louder than I meant. He gave a slow shake of his head. “No. But I think we’re both looking for the same thing.” My chest locked. “What are you talking about?” He sat on the ground, cross-legged, like it was the most natural thing. “Lana.” I didn’t move. Didn’t breathe. “What do you know?” I asked. “I know she didn’t run away.” He looked up at me, his voice low. “I know she tried to tell someone something. And they shut her up.” I stood slowly. “Who are you?” “Eli.” He tilted his head. “You don’t remember me, do you?” I shook my head. “Freshman year,” he said. “We had gym together. You laughed at my terrible volleyball skills.” That felt like a lifetime ago. “I’m sorry.” “Don’t be,” he said. “Just listen. I think whoever did this—whoever sent you that photo—is trying to get inside your head.” “How do you know about the photo?” His mouth pressed into a line. “Because I got one too. Last month. A picture of me… asleep.” My skin crawled. “What do they want?” I whispered. He stood. “Fear. Obedience. Maybe they want to see who cracks first. But Jasmine…” He paused. “You can’t show them fear. That’s how they win.” I didn’t know whether to believe him. But I didn’t walk away. ⸻ That night, I didn’t go home right after school. I waited. Watched. Eli walked in one direction. I walked in another. Just to be safe. Just in case we were being watched. Instead of going home, I took the long route to the old bus depot. The one near the train tracks, where everything smells like rust and mold. It’s where the photo looked like it might’ve been taken—same cracked floors, same flickering overhead lights. I walked along the edge, heart hammering, until I reached the back wall. It was there. The red smear. Faded, but real. I reached down and touched the concrete. Still cold. Still silent. Still screaming. There was a tag on the wall. Spray-painted in hurried strokes. WITNESS ME I stepped back. Something moved behind me. I spun— But no one was there. Only the wind. Only the night. Only the sound of my own breath. ⸻ Back at home, I climbed the stairs slowly. My mother was in her room, door half-closed, light leaking out into the hallway. I heard her talking to someone again. “No. She’s not okay. She’s quiet again. Just like when she was little.” Pause. “She’s seeing things, maybe. Or remembering things she shouldn’t.” My hand froze on the doorknob to my room. Remembering things? I opened my door. Locked it. Pulled the photo from my bag. I stared at it until the lines blurred. Who are you, Lana? And what did you see?CHAPTER 6 308 days before my life was caught short The morning after the dream—or the message, or whatever it had been—arrived in layers of muted light and silence. My body felt weighed down as though I’d lived out the events of the night instead of dreaming them. I stared at the ceiling for a long time, trying to make sense of the photo, of Lana, of the feeling that something cold had crept into the edges of my life and made a home there. I didn’t tell anyone. Not yet. The photo remained tucked in the back of my notebook, hidden beneath a fold of looseleaf paper that had once held my English notes but now seemed to carry the heaviness of a secret. I didn’t dare touch it again that morning. I barely wanted to look at it. Instead, I pulled myself through the motions of getting ready—pulling on a hoodie, tugging my hair into a bun, skipping breakfast. My mother was in the kitchen humming off-key to a song on the radio,
CHAPTER 5 309 days before I stopped trusting my own memories, I woke to a silence so thick it felt like sound had been scraped from the air. No birdsong. No cars. Just the soft buzz of electricity and the eerie tick of the clock on my wall, like a countdown I hadn’t noticed was running. I didn’t want to get out of bed. I didn’t want to move at all. The weight of the photo beneath my mattress made me feel like I was sleeping above a grave. Lana’s face hovered behind my eyelids, the same expression every time—terrified, as if someone had called her name just before the picture was taken. I hadn’t dreamed. I hadn’t slept, not really. But somehow, I felt haunted. And things only got worse when I checked my phone. Eli: Meet me behind the library at lunch. Don’t bring the photo. I didn’t respond. But I’d be there. ⸻ At school, people moved around me like wind—heard, not seen. I passed Morgan in the hall and she waved, but I didn’t wave back. The silence inside me was l
CHAPTER 4 I didn’t sleep that night. It wasn’t the kind of restlessness that came from too much coffee or a stressful assignment. It was deeper—like my body had already decided sleep was dangerous. Every time I closed my eyes, Lana’s face stared back at me, not the smiling one from memory, but the bound, terrified one in the photo. Her eyes pleading. The rope tight around her arms. The background behind her still a blur of shadows and dust, and the red smear on the floor just visible if you dared to look long enough. I lay curled under my duvet, holding the photo beneath my pillow. The longer I kept it close, the more unreal it felt. Like a cursed object. If I looked at it too long, I might start seeing things. Hearing things. I didn’t turn on the light again. I didn’t want to see it. But I also didn’t want to forget it was real. That someone had slipped it into my locker. That Lana—missing for months—might still be alive. Or worse, had been alive. I counted the hours in fra
CHAPTER 3 The next day at school, I cornered Daniel after AP English. He was alone, leaning against the lockers, pretending to scroll through his phone like the hallway wasn’t pulsing with whispers. “Hey,” I said. He looked up, and for a split second, something flinched in his expression—surprise, maybe. Or guilt. “Well, if it isn’t the ghost of Brianna’s best friend,” he said, flashing that practiced grin. I held up my phone and tapped the screen. The photo. The one from my window. The smirk faded. “Where’d you get that?” “You tell me.” He looked around. “Is this a threat?” “No. It’s a warning.” Daniel straightened. “I don’t know what game you’re playing, Jasmine, but dragging me into it is a mistake.” “You were at the pool.” “I left before anything happened.” “Did you see her?” He met my eyes. “No.” Lie. I leaned in closer. “I think someone pushed her. And I think you know who.” Daniel’s jaw clenched. “Back
CHAPTER 2 310 days before my life was caught short. The morning after my poetry notebook reappeared, I skipped breakfast. Gloria was already halfway through a rant about utility bills and my missing laundry, but her voice sounded distant, like I was listening through water. I slipped on my uniform, stuffed the mysterious notebook deep into my backpack, and left the house before she could ask why I looked like I hadn’t slept. Because I hadn’t. Again. The dreams were worse now—less like dreams and more like memories I didn’t remember making. Last night, I’d found myself back in that same hallway, only now it was underwater. Everything moved in slow motion. The walls bled shadows. And there were voices—not just Brianna’s this time, but others. Distant, urgent, unintelligible. I didn’t understand what they were saying, but I knew they were meant for me. At school, no one seemed to notice that I was falling apart. That’s the thing about high school. You could be a ghost and n
CHAPTER 1 313 days before my life was caught short. I didn’t feel dead yet. I still had dreams, bad skin, a phone that wouldn’t stop buzzing, and a mother who yelled from downstairs like her voice could split plaster. In other words, I was still a teenage girl, barely holding it together, trying to pretend I understood what it meant to be alive. The clock on my nightstand read 6:02 AM, glowing a violent red. I hadn’t slept. Not really. There was a stiffness behind my eyes from staying up too late doom-scrolling through social media, avoiding thoughts I couldn’t name. Outside my window, the morning light had just begun bleeding into the sky, soft and uncertain. “Jasmine! You’re going to be late!” That was my mother. Gloria. Loud since 1978. A woman who could make panic sound like poetry. “I’m up!” I shouted back. I wasn’t. Not really. But I dragged myself out of bed anyway and padded across the floor to the mirror. My reflection stared back at me like it was already mou