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Chapter 1: Lost In The Pines

The first thing Lana registered was the cold—not the gentle chill of morning dew, but a bone-deep frost that seemed to seep through her skin and settle in her marrow. Her eyes snapped open to a canopy of towering pines, their dark branches interwoven like skeletal fingers against a gray sky that offered no hint of the time of day. The metallic taste of blood filled her mouth.

She tried to sit up and immediately regretted it. Pain exploded behind her left temple, sharp and insistent, and when she pressed her fingers to the spot, they came away sticky with something warm. Blood. Fresh blood.

What the hell?

Lana pushed herself up on her elbows, fighting through the nausea that rolled over her in waves. The world tilted dangerously, but she forced herself to focus. She was lying on a bed of pine needles and dead leaves, her back pressed against the rough bark of an enormous tree. The forest stretched endlessly in every direction, silent except for the occasional whisper of wind through the branches overhead.

Her jacket was torn at the shoulder, exposing pale skin scratched raw by something sharp. Pine needles clung to the dark fabric like tiny green accusations. Her jeans were dirty and damp, and one of her hiking boots was missing its lace entirely.

How did I get here?

The last clear memory she had was stepping onto the yellow school bus that morning, her backpack heavy with notebooks and the sandwich her mom had made—turkey and swiss with too much mustard, just the way she liked it. The environmental science trip to Pine Ridge Forest. Mr. Halbrook had been so excited about it, going on and on about hands-on learning and connecting with nature. She could still hear his voice: "This trip will change your perspective on the natural world, students. You'll see things you've never noticed before."

But between that moment and this one—nothing. A void as dark and empty as the spaces between the trees surrounding her.

Lana fumbled for her phone, her movements clumsy and uncoordinated. The screen was black, unresponsive to her frantic tapping. Dead. Completely dead. She tried to remember when she'd last charged it, but even that simple fact seemed to slip away from her like smoke.

"Hello?" she called out, her voice cracking. The sound was swallowed almost immediately by the oppressive silence of the forest. "Can anyone hear me?"

Nothing.

She struggled to her feet, using the tree trunk for support. Her legs felt weak, unsteady, as if she'd been lying there for hours. Or days. The thought sent a spike of panic through her chest.

Where is everyone else?

There had been twenty-three students on the bus, plus Mr. Halbrook and Mrs. Chen, the biology teacher who'd volunteered to chaperone. They should be here somewhere. They had to be.

"Maya!" she shouted, thinking of her best friend who'd been sitting beside her on the bus, complaining about having to wake up early for a weekend field trip. "Sarah! Anyone!"

The forest absorbed her voice like a sponge, giving nothing back.

Lana took a tentative step forward, then another. Her balance was better now, though her head still throbbed with each heartbeat. She needed to find the others. She needed to find her way back to—where? The bus? The campsite? She couldn't even remember if they'd reached their destination before... before whatever had happened to her.

She began walking, choosing a direction at random since one way looked as forbidding as any other. The undergrowth was thick, forcing her to push through brambles and low-hanging branches that caught at her clothes and hair. Thorns scraped across her arms, adding fresh scratches to the collection she'd apparently already acquired.

After what felt like an eternity but was probably only twenty minutes, she stumbled into a small clearing where shafts of pale sunlight managed to penetrate the canopy. And there, scattered across the forest floor like breadcrumbs in a fairy tale, were things that didn't belong.

A torn piece of bright red fabric hung from a low branch—the same color as Maya's favorite jacket. Lana's heart leaped with hope and terror in equal measure. She rushed forward and grabbed the fabric, examining it closely. It was definitely from Maya's jacket, the one with the distinctive silver zipper pulls shaped like tiny lightning bolts.

"Maya!" she called again, louder this time. "Maya, where are you?"

But as she looked around the clearing more carefully, hope began to curdle into something much worse. There were other things scattered in the dirt: a pair of prescription glasses with thick black frames, one lens cracked in a spider web pattern. She recognized them immediately—they belonged to David Kim, the quiet senior who sat in the back row of their environmental science class.

A few feet away, partially hidden under a pile of leaves, she found a cell phone with a cracked screen. The case was bright pink with a unicorn sticker on the back. Sarah's phone. The screen flickered when she picked it up, showing seventeen missed calls from a contact labeled "Mom" and dozens of unread text messages, the most recent from just three hours ago: "Where are you? Call me NOW."

Three hours. That meant whatever had happened to them had happened recently. Very recently.

Lana's hands shook as she tried to unlock the phone, but the screen went dark before she could enter the passcode. Another dead end.

She continued searching the clearing and found more evidence of her classmates: a torn piece of notebook paper with chemistry equations scrawled in Marcus Webb's distinctive handwriting, a blue hair tie that belonged to Jenny Rodriguez, and most disturbing of all, a single hiking boot that definitely wasn't hers.

But no people. No voices calling back to her. No signs of life at all.

The silence was becoming oppressive, almost physical in its weight. Even in the deepest woods, there should be sounds—birds, insects, small animals rustling through the underbrush. But this forest was as quiet as a tomb, as if every living thing had fled or been frightened into absolute stillness.

As she stood in the center of the clearing, surrounded by the scattered remnants of her classmates' presence, Lana became aware of another sensation creeping up her spine: the unmistakable feeling of being watched.

She turned slowly, scanning the tree line that surrounded the clearing. The shadows between the trunks seemed deeper now, more impenetrable. Was that movement she glimpsed from the corner of her eye, or just the play of light through the branches? Was that dark shape behind the massive oak actually a person, or just her imagination running wild with fear?

"I know someone's there," she said, trying to keep her voice steady. "If this is some kind of joke, it's not funny anymore. People are going to be worried. My parents—"

Her voice trailed off as the reality of her situation began to sink in fully. Her parents had probably expected her back hours ago. When she didn't come home, they would have called the school. The school would have called Mr. Halbrook. And when no one could reach any of them...

How long before someone came looking? How long before anyone even knew where to look?

The feeling of being observed intensified, raising goosebumps along her arms despite the relative warmth of the afternoon. She spun around, trying to catch whoever was watching her, but saw only trees and shadows and the fragments of her classmates' belongings scattered like evidence of some terrible crime.

But there was something else in the clearing now, something she was certain hadn't been there before. Carved into the bark of the largest pine tree, at exactly eye level, were symbols she didn't recognize. Not random scratches, but deliberate marks cut deep into the wood with something sharp. They formed a pattern, almost like a primitive map or diagram.

Lana approached the tree cautiously, her heart hammering against her ribs. The symbols were fresh—she could tell by the pale color of the exposed wood and the sap that still oozed from some of the cuts. Someone had made these marks recently. Very recently.

As she traced one of the symbols with her finger, something crackled under her foot. She looked down to see another piece of paper, this one folded into a tight square and wedged between two exposed roots. With trembling hands, she unfolded it.

The message was written in block letters with what appeared to be charcoal: YOU'RE NOT ALONE.

The paper slipped from her nerveless fingers and fluttered to the ground. Someone was definitely here in the forest with her. Someone who knew she was here. Someone who was leaving messages.

But were they trying to help her, or were they the reason she was here in the first place?

A branch snapped somewhere behind her, sharp as a gunshot in the unnatural silence. Lana spun around, her heart in her throat, but saw nothing except the endless maze of tree trunks and undergrowth. Yet she was certain now that she wasn't alone. There was something—someone—moving through the forest nearby, keeping pace with her, staying just out of sight.

"Who are you?" she called out, hating the way her voice shook. "What do you want?"

The only answer was another sound—footsteps, definitely footsteps, moving away from her through the underbrush. Not running, but walking with deliberate slowness, as if whoever it was wanted her to follow.

Every instinct screamed at her to go in the opposite direction, to put as much distance as possible between herself and whatever was stalking her through these woods. But the alternative was wandering aimlessly through the forest until dark, and the thought of being alone in this place when night fell was somehow even more terrifying than following her mysterious observer.

Besides, whoever was out there might know what had happened to her classmates. They might be the only chance she had of finding them.

Or they might be the reason her classmates were missing in the first place.

Lana gathered up the torn pieces of fabric and David's broken glasses, stuffing them into her jacket pockets. Evidence, she told herself. Proof that the others had been here. Then she picked up Sarah's phone, hoping against hope that it might come back to life long enough to make a call.

The footsteps had stopped, but she could still feel eyes on her from somewhere in the surrounding darkness. Watching. Waiting.

Taking a deep breath that did nothing to calm her racing heart, Lana chose the direction the footsteps had gone and began to follow. Each step took her deeper into the forest, farther from any hope of finding her way back to civilization on her own.

But as the shadows grew longer and the air grew colder, one thought echoed in her mind with increasing urgency: whatever had happened to her classmates, whatever had brought her to this place with no memory of how she'd gotten here, it wasn't over.

It was just beginning.

And somewhere in the darkness between the trees, something was watching her every move, waiting to see what she would do next.

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