Page 106 of The Night the Stars Fell

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“In your hands, you hold the key. Walk toward it.”

I looked down, and sure enough, a long iron key sat in my palm. Twisted with strange markings. Ancient. Familiar.

My fingers closed around it.

I moved forward.

Each step felt harder than the last, like the air thickened the closer I got.

Something in me screamed not to continue.

“I don’t think I’m supposed to open this,” I whispered.

“You’re safe,” Thorne murmured. I felt his presence like a tether at my back. “I’m with you.”

I lifted the key.

The door pulsed beneath my touch, like it was alive. I slid the key into the lock. It resisted. Fought me.

But I pushed.

Click.

The door groaned open an inch, and the hallway plunged into shadows.

“Elira?” Thorne’s voice cut in, a touch more urgent.

I looked through the gap.

And I saw… myself.

But not as I was.

A child. Pale, hollow-eyed. Standing in a cage with metal bars and chains at her wrists. Her shadow writhed behind her like a second creature—twisting, shifting.

A man stood outside the bars. Bloody red eyes glowed in his face.

I started to shake.

“No…”

“Elira, tell me what you are seeing.” I could hear Thorne. “I can’t see you!” He sounded frustrated.

My whole body was rebelling. I wanted to be sick. The man loomed over me, his face hungry.

“Don’t hurt me. Not anymore, please.” I whispered, but my voice was so young. It was reedy and thin.

You’ve been a bad girl, Elira…

“I’m sorry!” I cried out. “I didn’t mean to.”

I have to punish him now. You know that…

“Don’t!” I yelled. “Don’t hurt him! Please! I’ll do anything!”

“Elira! Wake up! Elira!” Thorne yelled. I felt hands on my skin, on my forehead.

My eyes burst open and I hurled myself off the bed, before getting brutally sick on the floor. My breakfast poured out of me in a foamy pile.