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I need to get out of here.

“I’m going to bed,” I announced too quickly, pushing back my chair with a screech.

Rankor and Kent both shot me looks of confusion.

“Okay?” Rankor drew out the word.

Kent stood, brushing off his pants as he did. “Let me walk you out.”

I nodded my thanks, and he guided me to the door with a respectful hand on the small of my back, stopping in the hallway once we were out of Rankor’s earshot.

“Don’t worry about the trial,” he said softly, rubbing a hand supportively along my shoulder. “You’re going to be fine.”

“Right. Yeah.” I forced a smile beforebacking away. “Thanks.”

“Thea,” he called after me sharply, and I turned back.

His expression was unreadable. Too careful. Too knowing.

“Is there anything else that has you upset? You seem off lately.”

A shiver ran down my spine. There was a myriad of things that had me upset, and I couldn’t talk to him about a single one.

I shook my head. “No, of course not. Just pre-trial jitters. I’ll see you tomorrow. Goodnight.”

No.

I don’t want to be here.

Music seeped through the realm, dark and melodic. The same grating chords he always played. The melody was maddeningly short and repetitive. I hated it.

I hated his music.

I hated this place.

I hated him.

Did he know I was here? Did he know I was standing at the edge of his river? I didn’t even know how far his magic extended. Was he all-knowing here in this realm? It seemed ridiculous to think that I could avoid him here in the realm he had total dominion over.

In the distance, a low howl pierced the air, then another, and another. Hyrax’s three-headed hound howled for him, and panic overtook me. Spinning on my heel, I broke into a desperate sprint. I didn’t know where I was going; I just knew I couldn’t stay here, couldn’t face him.

I couldn’t be the one to release him back into the Mortal Realm.

I wouldn’t be.

“Wake up!” I screamed desperately at myself.

Something wasn’t right.

The air was too cold. A sharp chill bit at my skin. Winter drafts had begun creeping over the mountains lately, but I always closed my windows before bed. After this past year – after everything I’d been through – I had developed a careful ritual before bed. One that included no unlocked doors and no open windows.

I reached for the blanket, still half-caught in the haze of sleep, but instead of finding the familiar weight of my quilt, my arm bumped into something hard. Solid. I opened my eyes, and absolute darkness filled my vision. I froze, breath stuttering in my throat, every nerve in my body on edge.

Something was wrong.

Verywrong.

I pushed at the space around me, frantic, and my fingers scraped against the smooth wood. Walls. A ceiling? No, it was too close for that. My chest tightened, my breaths shallow and sharp. This wasn’t my bed.