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Chapter 1: Shattered Glass

Emma's Honda groaned up another hairpin curve, the engine straining against the grade of the mountain. The GPS had expired a half hour ago with a cheerful "recalculating" that never came. Rain pounded the windshield at a greater speed than dying wipers could clear it.

"Come on," she coaxed the car, white knuckles around the steering wheel. "Just a little bit more."

Her phone had rung on the passenger seat. Another missed call. She didn't need to look to know it was Dr. Torres. The seventeenth of the day.

The mist created a veil that made Pine Ridge Cabin look as if from a postcard—if postcards had peeling paint and slanted porches. It was perfect. Isolated. Abandoned. What she needed at the moment.

Emma shut off the engine and sat in the sudden quiet, listening to rain beat against the roof. No traffic. No sirens. No sounds of the city that had swallowed her up and spat her out. Quiet and the chance to be forgotten.

She pulled her two duffel bags out of the backseat—amazing how all fifteen years of building a life could be contained in so little space—and ran for the covered porch. The key was under a ceramic frog, just where the rental agency had instructed her it would be.

Inside, the cabin smelled of pine disinfectant and wood. A stone fireplace dominated most of the big room, overlaid with mismatched furniture that had seen finer decades. The kitchen was minuscule, barely big enough for one. That was perfect for Emma. She didn't have any plans on entertaining.

Her phone read one pathetic bar of signal. Seventeen missed calls from Dr. Torres. Emma sat there, paralyzed, thumb poised over the callback button on the screen.

You were here to heal by yourself, she reminded herself, placing the phone in her bag. Not to require anyone.

She started to unpack, trying to get her mind off things, but the memories intruded nonetheless—fragments of the ruin that had been her life.

Entering Marcus's office with a bag of Chinese takeout, planning to surprise him with lunch. The door was locked, which seemed unusual. She had used her key, opened the door, and said, "Honey, I brought your favorite—"

The scene came to a halt in her mind like a photograph: Marcus tucked under the sheets of their guest bed with Jennifer. Her business associate. The woman she'd shared all her secrets with.

"How long?" Emma had demanded, her voice coldly steady as Jennifer frantically grabbed for her clothes.

"Emma, listen to me," Marcus had stuttered.

"How long?"

"Six months." He hadn't even looked at her. "It wasn't on purpose, we just—"

"In our house?" she'd whispered. "You had her in our house?"

"Emma, please—"

She shook her head wildly, struggling to shake the image, but they assaulted her in a slideshow of destruction.

Three weeks after, the lawyer's office. Mr. Patterson pacing behind his mahogany desk.

"I'm afraid it's more complicated than we initially thought, Emma. Jennifer informs me you embezzled money from the joint business accounts. She has proof of irregular transfers, vanished client deposits."

"Those were valid expenses!" Emma had protested. "The Morrison project, the downtown renovation—I can provide the receipts, the contracts—"

"Your business partner has already brought proof to the contrary. Short of access to your firm's books, and with clients pulling their contracts." He'd shrugged his shoulders in dismay. "You're liable civilly and quite possibly criminally too."

Emma slumped on the sofa in the cabin, her hands massaging her forehead where a headache was beginning to develop. How had it all fallen apart so fast? Fifteen years of being cautious, working to build her reputation, creating something meaningful—destroyed in six weeks.

The architecture firm she had started from the ground up, dissolved. The house she herself had designed, sold to pay off debts she still couldn't understand. Her marriage, her partnership, her very sense of self—all of it reduced to ashes before her eyes, powerless to stop it.

"Thirty-four years old," she said under her breath, practicing the words aloud in the empty cabin. "Thirty-four and starting over with nothing."

Her voice was unnatural in the quiet. When had she ever talked to anyone but a lawyer or debt collector?

Coffee. She needed coffee in order to think. Emma found an old percolator in the kitchen cabinet and filled it with water, but her hands trembled more than she'd anticipated. The glass carafe slipped out of her hands and broke on the tile floor.

"Damn it!" The words burst from her, bitter and biting. "Damn it, damn it, damn it!"

She stared at the shards of broken glass and suddenly she was crying—ugly, racking sobs that seemed to come from a place beneath grief. She slid off the cabinet onto the floor, paying no attention to the shards, and let fifteen years of repression finally break.

The coffee maker was more than a coffee maker. It was her marriage, business, faith in humanity, faith that hard work and loyalty were valuable. All broken beyond repair, on cold tile like so many broken, sharp-tipped slivers.

When the sobbing finally stopped, her eyes were burning and her throat ached. She sat between the growing evening, the shattered glass, and was empty like she had not been since her parents had passed away.

When she picked up the pieces, she heard a sound that made her freeze—a car engine in the distance driving towards her before abruptly dying. Emma waited, her breathing suspended, but nothing came. Probably just another tenant running late, or some lost traveler like she had been on mountain roads.

But with evening at the cabin, a nervous feeling of being watched crept down her spine. Every time she passed a window, her skin crawled. She found herself glancing over her shoulder at shadows that hadn't been there just before.

Paranoia, she told herself, closing the curtains and checking the locks twice. You're alone and beaten. Of course you think someone's following you.

She saw a coffee mug in the sink—clean, but obviously used. The rental company had assured that the apartment would be spotless. Housekeeping could have missed it.

By ten, emotional exhaustion finally prevailed over worry. Emma dry-swallowed two sleeping pills and crawled into the one bed in the cabin. The mattress was softer than she had expected, and even though everything in her head hurt, her body finally relaxed for the first time in weeks.

She was just falling asleep when she heard them—footsteps on the wooden porch out front. Heavy, slow footsteps that made the old boards groan in rhythm.

Emma's eyes snapped open, her heart hammering against the inside of her ribcage.

The footsteps hesitated right outside the front door.

She lay there, frozen, barely daring to breathe, trying to hear above the thumping of her heart. Whatever was standing outside wasn't moving. Not even breathing, really. Just waiting.

Nothing, she tried to tell herself. An animal. A lost hiker. Your imagination.

But the steps had been too controlled, too measured. Too human.

Time passed—minutes or maybe hours—before eventually the steps faded away, moving backward until they were swallowed up in the mountain silence.

Emma slept on her back, staring up at the black ceiling, every nerve jumping as she wondered if she was finally going crazy with everything else. The night tablets should have floored her by now, but she had run on through possibilities, every one of them worse than the previous.

What if someone had followed her here? What if Jennifer or Marcus had hired someone to stop her from contesting the charges of embezzlement? What if—

She forced herself to cut it off. This was the same kind of paranoid behavior that had landed her in hot water before, making claims she couldn't back up, imagining conspiracies when there were only coincidences.

But with the hours dragging towards dawn, there was one thing that kept recurring: those footsteps had been real. And whoever they belonged to had hung out at her door for what seemed like an eternity, as if they knew exactly who was inside. As if they were waiting for her to arrive.

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