Jesus Christ.
I took a few startled steps backwards as I heard everyone around me gasp in horror. The man in the casket began to sit up, causing everyone to scatter.
He was in his mid-thirties, significantly younger than my grandfather.
He had black, shoulder-length hair and skin so pale he could have passed for dead if he had kept his eyes closed.The moment his dark eyes locked on mine, I felt a hard body run into the back of me and I fell into someone who was running past me.
I looked over my shoulder to see the men I had previously noticed fighting against the crowd to get closer to the casket.
Their haste meant they knew something about it, and it was because of that that I watched them intently as the room around us panicked.
One of them, an Eastern Asian guy with dark, coiffed hair and black stud earrings, pushed his way to the front.
I saw a momentary flash of fear in the beady eyes of the man in the casket before he swung his legs over the side and tried to run.
The Asian man, who looked to be in his mid-twenties, reached his arm out and grabbed him by the collar of his jacket. They fought against one another for a moment as everyonebaround them struggled to get away. The younger guy finally got his hands around the other's neck and he snapped it.
I gasped and fell backwards against someone running awaybbehind me.
The others in the group of men in suits finally pushed their way forward and they all hovered together as they too began to exit the house, taking the corpse with them. I watched in annoyance as I stood on the other side of the room from the front door, a panicking crowd of people were now in between me and the unknown man.
I needed to know what was going on and where my grandfather was.
Looking around the room quickly, I noticed the window behind the dining room table was big enough for my body to slip through.
Using the commotion as cover, I moved quickly through the crowd and ducked around the furniture.
I made it to the window and slid it up. With the noise in the room, no one noticed the squeaking of the old window and I jumped out inconspicuously.
It was about three feet from the window to the snow-covered ground and I landed hard, but on my feet.
I turned to close the window behind me, knowing someone would notice the cold breeze coming in, when I saw Zak standing there looking down on me.
I could tell he didn't approve, but he made no effort to stop me.
''Don't tell Mom,'' I signed.
"I'll be back."
"Be careful,'' was all he signed before he threw me his jacket and closed the window.
I stomped through several inches of snow before I rounded the corner of the cottage and saw the men stuffing the now-actually dead man into the back of a black SUV.
Seeing the SUV, I immediately began to assume they were government workers.
Although, even with this assumptionbnothing else made sense.I opened the car door of my grandfather's truck and pulledbdown the visor as I hopped into the seat. The keys fell into my lap and I prayed the truck would start as I slid them into the ignition. I turned the key and nothing happened. That's when I saw the stick shift.
Welcome to Europe, I thought.
I couldn't remember the last time I had driven a car with a manual transmission, so this was bound to be a disaster. I panicked seeing the SUV pull out of the driveway and onto the road and I hit the clutch as I turned the key.
The car stalled out and I groaned.
Trying one more time, I restarted the truck and it roared to life I sighed in relief as I saw the indicator that the tank had plenty of gas.
I pulled out onto the driveway and down the road, following the SUV from a distance.
You're an idiot, I thought to myself. You don't know where they're going and you don't know how to get back here once you get there.
I shoved reasoning to the back of my brain as I changed gears. The sun began to set, worrying me slightly. I followed the car from a distance for a while until it was dark. I almost turned around, giving up, until the SUV turned down a long path.
About half a mile from the road was the tree line into a forest, which was the direction the SUV was heading. This night could not get any creepier.There was no one else on the road, so I drove past the pathway and did a u-turn, turning off my headlights.
I inched forward on the road, watching as the SUV's taillights disappeared into the thick trees. I turned onto the path, my anxiety shooting through the roof.
What are you thinking?
I shook the thoughts away. I knew I needed answers and this was the only way I saw myself getting them.
About halfway down the path, I found a small clearing big enough to park the truck where no one would see it. I didn't know what was on the other side of that path and I didn't want to literally drive straight into it.
I parked the truck and got out, wrapping Zak's jacket around me tighter. I walked along the path, hidden by the trees. The sun had set and I was trying to walk quickly, hoping there wasn't too much farther to go.
I wasn't afraid of the dark, but I hated nature.
I took a deep breath and huffed as I nearly tripped over a fallen limb.There were lights that I saw ahead of me and I slowed my pace as I noticed the large cabin with several SUVs like the one I'd followed that were parked outside.
I hid behind a large tree trunk as I watched the men in suits walking around, joined by a few men that had come out of the cabin.
There was no sign of the body of the man who had been in my grandfather's casket.I watched with frozen toes and fingers as everyone went inside the cabin. Once I was sure that evervone was inside. I came out of my hiding place. I walked up to the cabin slowly, weaving in between vehicles.
Every time I walked, I heard the crunch of snow under my boots. I was scared someone else would hear it.I got up to the cabin and I went to the closest window I could find.
I peeked inside to see a lit fireplace, which was the only source of light in the empty room. Suddenly, a shadow passed by the window and I dropped to my knees.
"Shit," I muttered.A few long moments went by and I felt my heart pounding inbmy chest. This was a stupid idea, go back home, I told myself. This time I didn't push the thought away. I used it to motivate me to move.
I stood up and moved away from the window slowly.
"What are you doing?"
The deep voice cut through the silence, nearly stopping my heart. I turned around so quickly that my foot slid out from under me and I fell back into a bush that was behind me. I felt a spider web fall into my face and I began to spit and sputter as I swatted it out of my face.
Arachnophobic didn't even begin to explain how I felt about spiders.
I stood up quickly, all thought of a spider disappearing when I remembered the man standing in front of me. I looked at him, my eyebrows immediately furrowing I couldn't see him, only a large, shadowy outline standing a few feet away from the light the window provided. I knew he was waiting for an answer, but I was too shocked to give one. I was half astonished at his German and half astonished that I'd been snuck up on so easily.
I fumbled over my words for a moment before he sighed.
"What are you doing here?"
I took a deep breath, feeling my hands shaking.
"That man was in my grandfather's casket," I said, speaking in English.
He was silent for a few moments before replying in English as well."You're the granddaughter of Otto Müller."
It sounded more like a statement than it did a question, but I nodded nonetheless.
We were quiet for a few moments before I finally got up thebcourage to ask a question."Where is he?"
He didn't answer me and I began to feel like it wasn't such abbad idea to run away."Come inside, I'm sure you're cold."I was freezing, but I wasn't sure I wanted to go inside the cabin. I didn't know whether I would come back out. There was a piece of me that wanted to trust him, oddly enough, and I couldn't shake it.I followed him around the house, staring at his back as he led me up the stairs to the side door. He was almost a foot taller than me and I guessed almost a hundred pounds heavier unless he had several layers under his coat.I turned to look at him as he did so. I gulped.He was a lot better looking in the light than I had expected him to be. As he took off his coat I came to the conclusion he hadn'tblayered and he was indeed built like a brick house. I could seebthe outline of his chest and arm muscles under the gray, form-fitting Henley he wore.He brushed the snow flurries from his short, chestnut-colored hair and I let out a long breath.We looked at each other and the world stopped for a moment. He had the oddest eyes I'd ever looked into. They w
Ella's P.O.V.I'm an idiot.I couldn't believe that I had made arrangements to go across Germany with men I didn't know to hunt ghosts. Zak made it abundantly clear how he felt about this by staring at me blankly after I had finished explaining myself."You're supposed to be the smart one between the two of us, he signed. ''Where is your common sense?''I just shrugged. I didn't have a defense for myself. What I had done was stupid but I didn't want to back out of it.As much as the situation made no sense to me, there was a nagging tug in the pit of my stomach that urged me to commit to going with the strangers and find my grandfather."What are you going to do about school?'' Zak asked me.''Then my grandfather's dead." Excuse will only work for so long until you start to get behind on your work.I sighed. He had a point.''Thanksgiving break is about to start,'' I signed. ''That will at least buy me a week."Zak just shook his head''You don't know these men.'' he reminded me fo
"That's impossible."I reached forward and took the sheet of paper from Cain's hands and examined it. There was very little light in the train due to the drawn shades, but I squinted enough that I could read the contents of thepaper.I looked through the dates of his hospital visits and I shook my head in disbelief.Cain was right. My grandfather hadn't been seen at any hospital for the past seven years. He didn't have so much as a prescription filled. This didn't add up seeing as I'd been led to believe he'd had a serious, life-threatening heart condition for a number of years."I don't understand," I said, my eyebrows furrowing. I laid the paper down on my lap and looked up at Cain as he stared at me intently."Are there any other medical records there?" I asked him,nreferring to the folder in his hands. Maybe he had them out of order and read the wrong thing.Cain shook his head. "There isn't a medical examiner's report here or a certificate ofdeath," he said."He wouldn't have
Ella's P.O.V.I jumped as I came face to face with Cain."What are you doing?" He asked, pulling me out of the hallway and into the car. I felt my heart stop when his hand touched my upper arm. He closed the door behind me and I looked around him to seenthat Jai and Daniel were nowhere to be found."I was looking for a bathroom," I lied.The stoic look on his face made me believe he wasn't convinced. He knew I had been looking for a way off the train. The glances that I had seen between the three strange men were unsettling, like I was missing a huge piece of the puzzle.The enigma behind who they were, why they cared about my grandfather, and why I was allowed to tag along was dizzying.I had a crazy theory that they worked for the German government. How else could someone order an autopsy?But I was still conflicted.If they worked for the German government, why did they need me to get his medical records and financial statements? Why was I invited? And why the hell was it worth no
Ella's P.O.V."Here's where you'll be staying."Jai opened the bedroom door and pulled my suitcase inside the room for me. I followed him inside and cringed The room was huge, just like the rest of the place. The ceiling was at least fifty feet tall. The dark paneling on the walls made the olive-colored curtains stand out, which hung beside a ginormous bay window that was in the center of the far wall.One of the biggest beds I'd ever laid eyes on sat against the wall to my left. It had a four post bed frame that was a dark oak just like the paneling on the walls and the flooring.The black duvet matched the pillows on the bed and the two black couches that were on the other side of the room.The Victorian-style couches sat across from each other in front of a fireplace that was big enough for three grown men to stand beside each other inside it."Over there is your bathroom," Jai said, pointing to a door that was on the same wall as the fireplace.We heard someone walk into the room
"Didn't you say you found the last man that this happened to?" I asked. "Did you talk to him about what happened?""We did talk to him," Cain said. "He didn't remember a thing. He said he fell asleep in his bed and woke up in the woods four days later.""Have you kept track of him? Maybe he remembers something now. "I said."He died yesterday," Cain informed me.My eyes widened. "How?""He had an aggressive form of leukemia. He was diagnosed two days before he was kidnapped and died shortly after he was found."I thought for a moment. "Leukemia is a blood-based cancer," I pointed out. "They were all given blood transfusions and all suffered from either a heartcondition or anemia. Do you think this could all be connected? Maybe the clinic they were seen at for the transfusions is where they are being targeted."Cain nodded thoughtfully. "It's a good start," Cain said. "I think we should keep looking and see if we find anything else." So keep looking we did.Hours went by and both Jai
Narrative P.O.V.Cain sat at his desk, looking at nothing. The tower was dark. Moonlight invaded his senses almost as much as the sunlight did but the thick stone walls kept the majority of the noise out inaddition to the light so he could actually think.The only thing he didn't like about where he sat was the fact that he would've rather been somewhere else. He was restless that night knowing that Ella slept only a few floors beneath his feet.Cain still couldn't believe she existed.She certainly wasn't supposed to... that's what everyone had told him his entire life.Looking at her, he thought he was dreaming. But standing next to her, he was reminded she was real. Whenever he touched her, she was a reminder of the fact that he wasn't so different from everyone else and that he wasn't so unlovable.Selfishly, he liked being around Ella for that reason.Cain knew monsters didn't deserve mates. Maybe, just maybe, if he had one it meant that he wasn't themonster he'd been raised t
Ella's P.O.V."Thank you." I took the steaming mug from Daniel before he sat down at the table in front of me."What are you doing up so early?" He asked."I'm a morning person."He scowled."No thanks."I faked a smile as I took a sip of my coffee. I couldn't tell him I hadn't slept. My bed would have fit four ofme comfortably. It was so large that it swallowed me up. It was cold and empty.Because I couldn't sleep, I had been up most of the night catching up on the schoolwork I had missed. I was also contemplating over the hundreds of sheets of paper I had combed through in Cain's office. I was beginning to lose confidence in the fact that we would find my grandfather."Why are you up so early?" I asked him, trying to distract myself from the pit my thoughts were dragging me into."I have to be for work," he explained, yawning."It's only seven o'clock." I said. "It's not so bad.""I hate it," he groaned."You don't like your job?"Daniel scoffed."I like this job only marginally