"What. The fuck," Keira groaned awake, shoulder screaming as she realized she'd been cuddling her spiked bat like it was a stuffed toy. "Brilliant. Hug your murder stick to sleep like a fucked-up five-year-old. No wonder your ribs feel like glass." She shifted, and sure enough - one of the spikes had broken skin. A slow bleed, nothing dramatic, but it stung like hell. "Tough bitch, downgraded to self-harm via snuggle-bat. Gold star, Keira."...
Amy blinked awake to the soft light of morning leaking through thin curtains. Her head felt heavy, her body sluggish, like she hadn't truly slept at all. She groaned, rolled over... And froze. She was back in her bedroom. Same peeling wallpaper, same lopsided desk shoved against the wall, chat log with Void wide open on the computer screen, same suffocating smell of mildew and smoke.
Her chest tightened. No warm couch, no faint hum of a city outside. No Void. No Keira. No dumplings. Just the oppressive silence of the house she'd sworn she'd never return to. A horrible acidic thought crept in: "I imagined it all. Every second. None of it was real."...
Streets were mostly dead, lamps casting faint orange light, producing lonely shadows over cracked pavement. Void stuffed her hands into her hoodie pockets, leading the way at a lazy pace. Amy walked just half a step behind, her bag strap twisted tight in her fingers like she was afraid it might float away without her.
For a while, it was just the footsteps and occasional hum of a passing tram in the distance. Then Amy broke the silence...
This entire park was too clean for Void's taste. It wasn't exactly a chrome district or one of those gutted oldyards where you could hear the ghosts rattle in the chain-link fences. It was a patch of green wedged between housing blocks, with neat benches, playground swings that squeaked like they were lubricating themselves out of spite, and the sound of children instead of gunmetal.
Void stood under the crooked shadow of a chestnut tree, hood half-up, hair flaring magenta in the late summer light. 16:00 sharp. She was a woman of clocks and precision. When you told someone to meet you at four, you didn't stroll in at 16:17 or "whenever PKP decides to bless you." You showed up, or you didn't. And Amy had not...
Amy woke to the sound of cupboard doors slamming. Not just one, but three in quick succession - the percussive rhythm that meant her mother had been awake for a while, already wound up. Her heart sank before she even rolled out of bed. Morning hadn't started, and already it felt ruined.
The chat log with Void was still up on her computer. Amy hadn't shut the PC down after Void signed off. The words sat there like a challenge she couldn't blink away: tomorrow. 4pm. szczecin. bohdana zaleskiego. playground. swings still creak if you breathe on them. She'd read that line at least twenty times since the message dropped, her stomach coiling tighter every time. Szczecin. Given the distance to Gdynia it might as well have been another planet...