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Chapter 144

  Myra’s boots spshed through the rain-filled puddles on the deserted road, each step echoing in the otherwise silent downpour. The wind howled through the trees, their branches thrashing wildly, but Myra pressed on, her cloak clinging to her like a second skin. The anticipation of seeing Freya, the desperate need to expin the misunderstanding in the vilge square, fueled her frantic pace. The cold rain seeped into her boots, chilling her feet, but the icy dread gripping her heart was far colder.

  Finally, through the sheets of rain, the familiar silhouette of the antique shop emerged. A faint, warm glow emanated from the windows, a beacon in the storm-darkened night. Freya is there, Myra thought, her heart leaping with a renewed surge of hope. She quickened her steps, eager to reach the sanctuary within, a pce that had come to feel like a shared haven, a space where their two worlds could briefly intertwine.

  But as she drew closer, a chilling sight stopped her abruptly in her tracks. The rge wooden entrance door of the antique shop, usually secured with heavy bolts against the night and any unwelcome intrusion, stood wide open, swaying slightly in the wind. A sense of dread washed over Myra, extinguishing the warmth of her anticipation. The sight assaulted her senses, the gaping darkness within the doorway feeling like a physical manifestation of something terribly amiss. A metallic tang, faint but distinct, hung in the rain-soaked air near the entrance, a subtle yet arming scent that pricked at her unease.

  The surrounding area seemed eerily still despite the raging storm. The rain continued to pour relentlessly, blurring the edges of everything, and the wind whistled through the open doorway, carrying with it a sense of emptiness that sent a shiver down Myra’s spine. “Freya?” she called out hesitantly, her voice barely audible above the roar of the storm. The only response was the mournful creaking of the open door and the relentless drumming of the rain. A cold premonition settled deep in her heart. Something was terribly wrong. Her breath caught in her throat, a knot of fear tightening in her stomach. The silence from within the usually comforting shop was deafening, amplifying the storm's threatening symphony.

  A strangled cry escaped Myra’s lips as the sight of the open door confirmed her worst fears. “Freya!” she screamed, her voice raw with panic, the sound swallowed by the tempestuous night. She didn’t hesitate, bursting through the doorway and into the dimly lit shop. The scent inside was thick with the musty odor of old paper and wood, but beneath it, a faint, sharper scent lingered, a metallic sharpness that made her nostrils fre with growing arm. Her eyes darted around the chaotic scene, struggling to make sense of the disarray.

  The scene that greeted her was one of utter chaos. Antique furniture y overturned, delicate porcein was shattered on the floor, its sharp edges glinting in the dim light, and books were scattered like fallen leaves across the worn wooden pnks. The air felt heavy with a lingering tension, a ghost of the violence that had clearly taken pce. “Freya!” Myra called out again, her voice echoing through the ravaged space, her heart pounding with a terror she had never known before. A wave of dizziness washed over her, the sight of such destruction in Freya's usually meticulously ordered space sending a jolt of pure fear through her.

  She frantically searched every corner of the shop, her bare hands brushing against broken gss and overturned objects, the cold shards pricking her skin. She checked Freya’s private chamber, the bed empty, the air cold and still, devoid of Freya's unique scent. Every room, every nook and cranny yielded the same devastating result: Freya was gone. The silence in Freya's room was the most terrifying of all, a hollow void where her presence should have been palpable. Myra's fingers trembled as she ran them over the smooth, cold surface of Freya's abandoned desk.

  Then, amidst the debris on the floor, Myra’s eyes fell upon a crumpled piece of parchment. Her fingers trembled uncontrolbly as she picked it up and carefully unfolded it. The elegant, unfamiliar script sent a shiver of foreboding down her spine, a cold dread that had nothing to do with the dampness of her clothes. It was a letter, and the name scrawled at the bottom in a flourish that spoke of dark intent made Myra’s blood run cold: Amelia Valerius. The paper felt strangely cold to the touch, almost radiating a malevolent energy.

  As she scanned the contents, the possessive tone, the veiled threats that seemed to writhe on the page, the unmistakable cim over Freya, Myra’s heart sank with a sickening certainty. The pieces clicked into pce, painting a devastating picture of what had transpired. Freya hadn't abandoned her; she had been taken. Taken back to a life Myra knew nothing about, a life that seemed determined to keep them apart. The joy and hope of the past few weeks dissolved into a crushing wave of despair and a desperate, terrifying realization of the forces she was up against. The words on the page blurred through the tears that welled in her eyes, each sylble a hammer blow to her fragile hope.

  The reality crashed down on Myra with brutal force. Freya was gone. The letter, with its possessive cims, felt like a cruel confirmation of her deepest fears. A wave of crushing despair washed over her, and hot tears streamed down her face, mingling with the cold rain that still clung to her shes. She left me, Myra thought, her heart twisting with a pain so intense it felt physically unbearable, a sharp, tearing sensation in her chest. After everything we shared… she just left. The scent of Freya, so recently a comforting presence in the shop, now seemed faint and fading, like a ghost slipping away.

  Guilt and self-recrimination gnawed at her. I should have come sooner, she sobbed, sinking to her knees amidst the wreckage, the rough wood splinters digging into her skin unnoticed. If I hadn’t stayed away, if I had been here… maybe this wouldn’t have happened. The what-ifs echoed in her mind, each one a sharp stab of regret, a relentless litany of her own perceived failures. The vibrant connection she had felt with Freya now seemed like a cruel illusion, leaving behind only a hollow ache in her soul and the crushing weight of her loss. “Freya… you’re gone,” she whispered into the empty shop, her voice choked with tears, the sound swallowed by the vast, echoing emptiness. “You’re really gone.”

  Myra remained kneeling amidst the shattered remnants of the antique shop, the cold seeping through her soaked clothes, mirroring the icy grip on her heart. It's gone, she thought, the realization a dull ache that spread through her entire being. That fragile, precious thing we built, that unexpected warmth that blossomed in the shadows... it's just slipped away like smoke in the wind. Each overturned piece of furniture, each shard of broken porcein, felt like a physical representation of their fractured connection. The scent of Freya, once a comforting anchor in this strange, timeless pce, now seemed faint and ephemeral, a ghost of a promise that had been cruelly broken.

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