BITE BACK
drained the warmth from the world. The wind didn't move. The trees stood stil
iancé. My almost-husband. Now, just a name
dn't come in tears. It came like smoke. Thick in my lungs, sour i
ncounter him in the woods where he liked to run. The sheriff s
he died. They didn't say anything about the way his body was found-not just torn, bu
tailored onto their bones. His mother wore black lace and pearls, but her face was sharp. She looked a
e the
ke a question no one would answer. The silver wa
smelled like citrus and old smoke. Her buzzed hair was dyed electric blue again. It clashed hard with
red, voice low enough
ie number o
stening. My eyes stayed locked on the coffin as it was lowered into the ground. The finality of it
red below the earth, something cold ran down m
, just past the crooked gate and half-dead trees, there was someone standing in the woo
onged to the forest. Like
lin
o
. Jez looked where I pointe
e w
allowing the unease.
aid a hand on the casket before she left and whispered something I couldn
under our feet like bones breaking. My hands wer
er?" she asked. "I could m
to be alone. J
push and when not to. She hugged m
you don't, I'm calling the co
ot
engine off, hands in my lap, staring at nothing. T
ought I was asleep. The way he would hum under his breath when he cooked. The way he
s when he handed me the death certificate. About the scorch
wasn'
feel like
he start of so
y gut, someth
n't an a
er di
not fi