Mag-log inWinter in Ireland lingers in the rain.There’s no sight of the glittering high society I left behind here. No suffocating rumors. No whispers waiting to swallow you whole.I wear a thick cream cashmere coat and carry a small bouquet of chamomile I just bought at the market. The tiny white flowers are dotted with rain, fragile and clean.It matches how I feel.Quiet. Steady.I push open the door to an old pub at the end of the lane.A fireplace crackles inside. Oak wood pops and snaps. Somewhere in the background, bagpipes play softly. The warmth wraps around me the moment I step in.I breathe it in.And for a second, the old cold buried deep in my bones eases.There was a time when my hands shook so badly I couldn’t even hold silverware. Now I greet the round-faced landlady with ease.“The usual,” I say. “Hot milk. No sugar.”She smiles and hands it over.“Oh, by the way. That guy came again today.”My hand pauses for barely a second.The surface of the milk doesn’t even
Overnight, the balance of power in the capital shifted.Ryan Spencer, the powerful chairman of the Spencer Group, vanished from his heavily guarded villa.No ransom call. No threat. No trace.Just one chilling rumor made its way through the company: someone powerful had stepped in.As if an invisible hand had quietly erased every trace of Ryan Spencer’s existence.…When Ryan woke up again, he was staring at the ceiling of an abandoned building.The walls were peeling. Cold wind swept through the hollow space, carrying the first bite of autumn.“You’re awake.”A firm voice echoed through the empty room.Ryan realized he was tied to a chair, hands bound behind his back. He struggled to lift his head and saw a man standing in the shadows.The man wore a black suit.And the moment Ryan saw his face, his pupils shrank.The eyes. The features.He looked almost exactly like Jane.But where Jane’s face had once been soft, this man’s held no warmth at all. Only cold authority. T
The huge villa fell into a dead silence again.This time, no one came to disturb him.Ryan stood in the center of the empty living room and looked around.Nothing had changed. The furniture was exactly the same.And yet the place felt unbearably hollow.The lights were all on, bright as ever, but they couldn’t touch the darkness inside him.“Jane?”He called out cautiously.No answer.Only his own voice bouncing off the cold walls.He staggered toward the liquor cabinet, his hands shaking so badly he could barely hold the bottle.The neck of the bottle knocked against the marble counter and shattered.He didn’t care that his palm was cut by the glass. He lifted the jagged bottle and took a hard gulp straight from it.The liquor burned all the way down.It scorched his throat, his chest, his stomach.Tears sprang to his eyes from the sting.He slid down along the cabinet and collapsed onto the floor, clutching the broken bottle.Through blurred vision, he thought he saw
On the third day after Jane disappeared, Ryan had nearly turned the entire city upside down.He used every connection the Spencer family had. He even called in massive favors to gain access to aviation records.Airports. High-speed rail stations. Highway toll checkpoints. Every camera near the psychiatric hospital that night.Nothing.No footage. No records.Jane, carried away by those men in black, had vanished like a drop of water swallowed by the ocean.That was when real fear finally hit him.It felt like someone had torn a piece out of his heart, leaving behind a bleeding hole that wouldn’t close.In his office, cigarette butts piled up in the ashtray like a small mountain.His stubble had grown dark and rough. His eyes were bloodshot.He paced like a trapped animal, restless and on edge.“Mr. Spencer… we still can’t find anything.”His assistant kept his head down, voice shaking.“Ms. Nelson’s files, her medical records… even her household registration information. I
The dust slowly settled.The hallway lights flickered twice with a sharp buzz before returning to that lifeless, sterile white.The shadow of the boy, who had seemed capable of tearing the world apart just seconds ago, turned transparent the moment he crossed the doorway.Like sand slipping through open fingers, he dissolved little by little… then gently sank back into Jane’s body.Ryan stood frozen.His pupils widened. The suffocating emptiness still lodged in his throat.But when he looked again, there was no one there.Just Jane, unconscious on the floor.And the iron door, twisted out of shape, hung crooked on its hinges.“That… that student in the uniform. Did you see him?”Ryan’s voice trembled as he grabbed Wendy’s arm.Wendy was already pale with fear. She struggled out of his grip, her voice breaking.“What student? Ryan, are you out of your mind?“The door blew open by itself! This place is cursed. I’m leaving!”She didn’t even try to keep up her usual composure
I listened to the boy.Without a second of hesitation, I scrambled to my feet, pushing myself up off the floor.Ignoring the gasps behind me, I ran out of the banquet hall like I’d lost my mind.I didn’t know where I was going. I just kept running.At some point, a stiff card had been pressed into my hand.Under the dim streetlights, I saw what it was.A one-way ticket to the south.Departure time: two hours from now.I clutched it like it was the only way out and made it to the boarding gate just before final call.Then a warm hand clamped down hard on my shoulder.“Jane!”Ryan had caught up. Wendy was right behind him, breathing heavily.I held up the ticket, tears streaming down my face.“Ryan, let me go… please.“If I don’t leave, I’ll die.”He stared at the ticket, something like confusion flashing in his eyes.Maybe it was how real the ticket looked.Maybe it was how determined I must have seemed.His grip loosened, just slightly.For a split second, he looked l







