Entwined by chance
hia'
to empty, but that wasn't even the worst of my problems. The check engine light had been taunting me for the past
y frustration alone could bring the engine back to life. Tu
ed for my phone. No signal. Of course. Be
ess stretch of isolation. My fingers tightened around my useless phone. Maybe if I waited a little, another ca
h me as the dark SUV slowed, pulling up beside my stranded car. The window rolled
voice was deep, laced w
the top of my "good life choices" list. But standing out
have no signal," I admitted, wipi
then jerked his chin toward
h my already damp hoodie. With a deep breath, I grabbed my bag and s
pulled back onto the road, h
offered after a mom
nod. No
talker
again, hoping to chip a
e before he finall
ng. Fitting for someone with
e from becoming a ghost story," I joked
wanted to smile but had forgotten
ine. There was something about him-something restrained, as if he
e and the rhythmic thud of the windshield wipers. The town's ligh
lights spilling onto the wet pavement. "Lily'
thing, he was already looking straight ahead, fin
Arnaut," I
. No linger
away, leaving me standing in the ra
ut's
hia
mind long after I pu
dangerous sense, but in the way that
ed, carried an edge of something fractured. I knew the
house that stood in stark contrast to the small-town charm surrounding it. I had designed
rain clinging to me. The silence was immediate, the kind
han a stranded traveler, a fleeting presence in a town she didn't belong to. She would leave soon,