เข้าสู่ระบบThe gas station appears just as the needle on my fuel gauge dips into the red.
My stomach grumbles, but I’m pretty sure there’s no actual food to be found here. It’s the kind of place that looks like it exists only to sell gas, cigarettes, and stale coffee.
A single pump leans against a cracked slab of pavement, and a neon OPEN sign flickers in the window.
I pull in and kill the engine. The silence is so thick it makes my ears ring.
Inside, the air smells like old gum and gasoline. The walls are lined with dusty candy and faded postcards. A man stands behind the counter—middle-aged, flannel shirt half-buttoned, eyes tired but curious.
“Afternoon,” he says. His voice is slow, stretched out like the rest of this place.
“Hi,” I say. “Can I get thirty on pump one?”
He nods, rings me up. As he hands back my change, I unfold my map and lay it on the counter between us.
“Do you know how far I am from Hucow Hollow?”
His hand pauses mid-air. His eyes narrow.
“Huco—what?”
I tap the map. “Here. It’s marked right there. Says it’s about forty miles west of here.”
He leans closer, squinting at the paper like it might bite him. Then he straightens and meets my gaze with something tight behind his eyes.
“There’s nothin’ out that way.”
I blink. “But—this says—”
“That map’s wrong,” he says, firm now.
“But it’s official,” I press. “It came with a legal notice. I inherited some land out there.”
He doesn’t answer right away. Just folds his arms and stares past me. Then he gives me that look.
Pity. I’ve seen it often.
It’s the I’m-sorry-your-boyfriend-cheated-on-you look, the I’m-sorry-you-lost-your-job look, the I’m-sorry-you’re-getting-evicted look.
And now it’s the I’m-sorry-someone-scammed-you-into-thinking-you-inherited-hundreds-of-acres-of-land,-but-you-really-should-have-seen-that-one-coming-and-are-you-stupid look.
Finally, he says, “If I were you, miss, I’d turn back. Ain’t nothin’ west of here but woods and bad roads. GPS won’t help you, and cell service gets spottier the deeper you go.”
Tears well in my eyes, but I force them back.
I think about Rex in the car. I run my fingers over the map in front of me. A little voice in my head insists that something is waiting out there.
“I think I have to see for myself,” I say, softer than I mean to. But it’s true. Whatever this is, it’s mine. And it might not be much, but it’s more than I’ve got.
If it’s nothing but land, I’ll sell it and start fresh in a new city.
The man exhales as if he’s just given up an argument and slides the map back toward me with two fingers.
He looks at me for a moment, then turns and snatches an official map from a pile and hands it to me.
“Free with fuel purchase,” he mutters.
I fold my map carefully, like it might fall apart if I’m not gentle enough, then gladly take his as well.
At least if this is a big joke, then his map will get me out of there.
He watches me until I leave.
* * *
Back in the car, I sit in silence for a long time, staring at the map the guy gave me. I trace my fingers along the road I’m heading to. Where my map has much more detail, this more official map shows nothing but open field. There are no roads marked on it as though the rest of the world just passes it by.
The sun is high in the sky. Rex leans slightly toward the passenger side window, angling toward the light.
The keys to the Hollow feel heavy in my pocket.
I pull out my map again.
There’s a road that leads west from here that matches the road on the attendant’s map. But then there’s another road that isn’t. It’s narrow, and winding off the main road to a little X near the bottom of the page that calls to me like a heartbeat.
Hucow Hollow.
Even the name hums in the back of my throat now, like something half-remembered and just out of reach.
I grip the steering wheel, turn the key, and head out of town.
He's tall and unapologetically masculine. His shirtsleeves are rolled up to his elbows, broad forearms flexing as he drives a nail into the wooden beam with deliberate force. His jeans are worn and fit his toned legs like they were tailored just for him. There’s a tool belt slung low on his hips.I stop a few feet away, unsure if I should call out.He senses me before I speak.His head turns slowly, eyes locking with mine.And something shifts in the air. While the birds are singing, the silence between us deepens. My skin prickles.He’s... beautiful.Not in any way I can rationalize. There’s something about him that defies explanation. His face is hard angles and dusky shadows, hair dark and tousled. His gaze is molten steel—cool on the surface, but something dangerous swirls just beneath.“Hello.” I say, my voice smaller than I intend.He doesn’t respond right away. Just studies me. Like he’s trying to figure out what I’m doing here.“Elunara,” he finally says.The sound of my name
The fog swallows everything.I clutch the strap of my bag a little tighter. My breath clouds in front of me, though it’s not particularly cold. Just… damp. Heavy. The kind of atmosphere that seeps into you and whispers into your ears so hushed that you can’t quite make out the words.I shake my head. It’s just nerves. First-time property owner jitters.I’m still hungry, but there’s no way I’m stopping to pull that sandwich out now, so I continue on.I pause when I think I hear something—faint and low. A whisper. No, not quite a voice. More like… the idea of a voice. Almost like the trees themselves are trying to tell me something.I square my shoulders. Nope. Not doing that.Even though I can’t see five feet in front of my face, I know the land stretches far beyond what I can see because I’ve inherited hundreds of acres of it.No wonder no one comes out here. With my luck, I’ve inherited hundreds of acres of permanent fog. I snort unexpectedly at that.What takes the shadowy shape of
I drive pass a barbershop with a spinning red-and-white pole, and a thrift store with mannequins posed and draped in vintage fashion.Then I see it—a stone building with ivy curling up its sides. The sign out front reads: Hadley Township Public Library. The windows are dark, but the sign on the door is flipped to OPEN.I park half a block away and lock the car out of habit. Rex sits in the passenger seat, wilted but defiant.The bell above the door chimes as I step inside. The scent of old paper and lemon polish hits me like a wave. There’s something comforting in it.It’s quiet. Not silent, but close. Dust motes float in shafts of light slanting through stained-glass windows at the back. Rows of books stretch out like narrow hallways, dim and waiting.Behind a wide oak desk, a woman looks up. She’s maybe in her sixties, hair pulled into a bun so tight it gives me a headache just looking at it. She wears a buttoned cardigan the color of dusty rose and has the kind of sharp eyes that c
The next town is small. The kind that still has newspaper boxes and window displays that haven’t changed since the ‘80s. There’s a post office with peeling paint and a diner called “Dot’s” with hand-painted specials in the window.As if on cue, my stomach roars to life with a grumble. My last meal was yesterday’s drive-thru cheeseburger.Dot’s it is.I reach into my backpack and pull out a fistful of one-dollar bills. The last of my cash I found as I was packing up my place.The metal trim around the roof has rusted. There’s a line of mismatched chairs on the front porch. I pull into the empty spot near the door and shut off the engine.A small bell jingles above the door when I step inside, and instantly my nostrils fill with the delicious scent of grease. The comforting hum of an old ceiling fan whirs above faded checkerboard tiles.Booths line the far wall, each with green vinyl cushions cracked at the seams. The counter stretches across the left side, its surface worn smooth by ye
The gas station appears just as the needle on my fuel gauge dips into the red.My stomach grumbles, but I’m pretty sure there’s no actual food to be found here. It’s the kind of place that looks like it exists only to sell gas, cigarettes, and stale coffee.A single pump leans against a cracked slab of pavement, and a neon OPEN sign flickers in the window.I pull in and kill the engine. The silence is so thick it makes my ears ring.Inside, the air smells like old gum and gasoline. The walls are lined with dusty candy and faded postcards. A man stands behind the counter—middle-aged, flannel shirt half-buttoned, eyes tired but curious.“Afternoon,” he says. His voice is slow, stretched out like the rest of this place.“Hi,” I say. “Can I get thirty on pump one?”He nods, rings me up. As he hands back my change, I unfold my map and lay it on the counter between us.“Do you know how far I am from Hucow Hollow?”His hand pauses mid-air. His eyes narrow.“Huco—what?”I tap the map. “Here.
There’s a difference between loneliness and solitude.Solitude is chosen.Loneliness? That’s what settles in your bones when your boyfriend leaves you for someone with a smaller waistline and fewer opinions, and your manager fires you for being “too emotional with customers” after a woman screams at you over a tepid latte. Loneliness is the sound of your name not being called, day after day, by anyone who gives a damn.Today, loneliness comes with a red sticker on a plain white envelope.It’s the only thing in my mailbox. Heavy with official-looking lettering and a little barcode on the front.Certified Mail—Signature Required.I run my thumb along the edge of the envelope and squint at the return address: a law office I’ve never heard of in a town I’ve never been to.The building groans as I step back into the apartment.My landlord still hasn’t fixed the door, or the heat, or the leak under the kitchen sink that smells like wet dog and despair. The eviction notice is still stuck to







