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Chapter 19 - The Offer

People always imagine that when somebody disappears, everyone notices immediately.

That isn't true.

Sometimes people disappear slowly.

A missed text.

A cancelled hangout.

A phone call that goes unanswered.

A week becomes two.

Two becomes three.

And eventually you realize you haven't actually seen them in a long time.

That's what happened with Sia.

At first we weren't worried.

Sia was older than us.

She had her own life.

Her own responsibilities.

Graduation coming up.

Work.

Family.

Normal things.

Then the weeks kept passing.

She stopped showing up.

Stopped answering most messages.

Stopped calling.

When she did respond, it was short.

One sentence.

Maybe two.

"Busy."

"Can't today."

"Talk later."

Later never came.

"Okay, this is getting weird."

Hashim tossed his phone onto the table.

We were sitting in a booth at a diner after school.

The same diner we'd been meeting at more and more lately.

Not because the food was good.

It wasn't.

But it was crowded.

Bright.

Safe.

"I called her three times yesterday," he said.

"No answer."

Samiya frowned.

"She answered me."

Everyone looked at her.

"When?"

I asked.

"Three days ago."

"Three days ago?" Hashim repeated.

"Yeah."

"What'd she say?"

Samiya looked down at her phone.

"Just said she was fine."

Neems raised an eyebrow.

"That's it?"

"That's literally it."

The conversation died after that.

Not because nobody cared.

Because nobody knew what to do.

Sia was the responsible one.

The mature one.

The one who usually checked on us.

If she wanted space, who were we to force it?

Still.

Something felt wrong.

I wanted to focus on something else.

Something productive.

Something that might actually give us answers.

The missing people.

The sealed reports.

The disappearances.

The people who had seen this thing before us.

If this had happened before, then maybe somebody had left something behind.

A clue.

A mistake.

Anything.

So I looked at Neems.

"Wanna go with me tomorrow?"

"Where?"

"To talk to one of the families."

Hashim nearly choked on his drink.

"You're doing what?"

"We have names."

I pulled out a folder.

"Missing persons."

Samiya immediately looked uncomfortable.

"Jamal…"

"What?"

"You can't just show up at somebody's house and ask about their dead family member."

"They aren't confirmed dead."

"That somehow makes it worse."

Hashim nodded immediately.

"Yeah, that's serial killer behavior."

I ignored him.

Neems looked between everybody.

Then sighed.

"Honestly?"

"What?"

I asked.

"I'm curious."

That got a small smile out of me.

"Good."

"You're still weird for this though."

"Fair."

The next afternoon we drove across town.

Well.

Neems drove.

Because unlike me, she actually had somebody willing to let her practice behind the wheel.

The address belonged to the sister of one of the missing people from 1987.

The same disappearance we'd found while digging through old records.

The house was small.

Old.

Quiet.

The kind of place that looked like it had been there longer than the neighborhood around it.

Standing on the porch suddenly felt a lot harder than it had in my head.

Neems stared at me.

"Why have you been looking at me like that this entire time?"

I asked

"Because i'm worried you're going to say something stupid."

Neems answered.

"I won't."

"You absolutely will."

Before I could defend myself, the door opened.

An older woman stood there.

Gray hair.

Tired eyes.

Suspicious expression.

"Can I help you?"

I nodded.

"Hello ma'am."

Good start.

Then I ruined it.

"In 1987 your brother disappeared in the woods and was never found. Can you tell us everything about that?"

Silence.

Neems closed her eyes.

"Oh my God."

The woman stared at me.

Then pointed toward the street.

"Get off my porch."

"What?"

"I'm not talking to reporters."

"We aren't reporters—"

"Leave."

The door slammed.

Neems immediately turned toward me.

"You're an idiot."

"I was being direct."

"You opened with her missing brother!"

"I thought she'd appreciate honesty."

"Nobody appreciates honesty that much."

We started walking away.

Then stopped.

Because Neems turned around.

"Wait."

"What are you doing?"

I asked.

She ignored me.

Walked back up the porch.

Knocked again.

Nothing.

She knocked harder.

Still nothing.

Then suddenly—

the door flew open.

The woman appeared holding a cane.

"You better get off my porch, you little brats!"

Neems immediately put both hands up.

"Wait!"

The woman paused.

"We aren't reporters."

"Then what do you want?"

Neems swallowed.

Then spoke carefully.

"The reason we're here is because we think something—or someone—took your brother."

The woman's expression changed slightly.

"And we think the same thing is after us."

Silence.

"If we don't figure out what happened to him…"

Neems hesitated.

"…we might be next."

For a moment nobody spoke.

Then the woman stepped aside.

"Come in."

The house smelled old.

Not bad.

Just lived in.

Family photos covered the walls.

Boxes stacked near shelves.

Years of memories packed into every room.

The woman sat slowly in a chair.

"My brother's name was Michael."

Neems and I exchanged a glance.

For the first time all day—

somebody was actually talking.

"He went into those woods one night."

The woman looked down.

"Way too late."

"How late?" I asked.

She thought for a second.

"Near midnight."

Neems looked at me instantly.

I looked right back.

Neither of us needed to explain why that mattered.

Midnight.

Always midnight.

The woman continued.

"When he came home…"

She shook her head.

"…he wasn't the same."

"What do you mean?" Neems asked quietly.

"He was terrified."

The room felt colder.

"He kept saying something was following him."

Neither of us interrupted.

"He stopped talking to friends."

"He barely talked to family."

"He'd lock himself in his room for hours."

The more she spoke—

the more familiar it sounded.

Not identical.

But familiar.

Fear.

Isolation.

Obsession.

The woman stood up.

"One day I finally went into his room."

"What did you find?" I asked.

She laughed sadly.

"A mess."

Her eyes drifted toward a distant memory.

"Sticky notes."

"Photos."

"Old newspaper clippings."

"Strings connecting things."

The image hit me immediately.

An evidence board.

Just like ours.

Just like Sia's.

My stomach tightened.

"He spent months trying to understand what happened to him."

Nobody spoke.

Then came the worst part.

"One night he walked up to me."

The woman folded her hands together.

"He said he was going somewhere."

"He told me if he didn't come back…"

Her voice cracked.

"…not to look for him."

Neems froze.

"Why?"

The woman looked directly at us.

"He said if I went looking…"

"…it might come after me too."

Silence swallowed the room.

"That was the last time I ever saw him."

The drive home felt different.

Neither of us spoke for several minutes.

The city rolled past outside the windows.

Finally Neems broke the silence.

"Do you think that'll happen to us?"

"What?"

"The obsession."

I stared out the window.

"I don't know."

"That guy basically went insane."

"Yeah."

More silence.

Then I shook my head.

"Maybe.."

"Maybe not."

Neems glanced over.

"Why?"

Because unlike that kid—

we weren't alone.

"We all saw it together."

"The cave."

"The Listener."

"The Walker."

"We've had each other's backs since the beginning."

Neems smiled weakly.

"That's surprisingly wholesome."

"Don't tell Hashim I said something wholesome."

"Too late."

For the first time that day—

we laughed.

A small laugh.

But real.

And neither of us noticed how wrong that conversation actually was.

Because while we were talking about whether this thing could break a person's mind—

it already had.

Weeks ago.

And somewhere in the woods—

beneath stone.

Beneath earth.

Beneath darkness.

Sia Moore stood inside a cave that shouldn't exist.

The pale light illuminated the walls.

The discarded objects.

The impossible depth.

And for the first time since the beginning—

she stood before the source.

The voice.

The Listener.

She didn't run.

Didn't panic.

Didn't look away.

"I'm tired."

The cave answered with silence.

Good.

She was tired of being afraid.

Tired of waiting.

Tired of watching her friends fall apart.

"Take me instead."

The words echoed through the cave.

A pause.

Then something listened.

"Leave them alone."

For a moment—

nothing happened.

And then the cave smiled.

Not literally.

Something worse.

Because Sia realized it understood every word she said.

And deep down—

it had never intended to make a deal.

THIS WEDNESDAY: 

CHAPTER 20: "What We Lose"

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