I am 15 chapters ahead on my patreón, check it out if you are interested.
https://www.patréon.com/emperordragon
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Chapter Forty-Three: The Toy
Lucas's Perspective
The supermarket pulsed with its usual rhythms—the mechanical beeps of checkout scanners, the rhythmic clatter of shopping carts over worn tile, and the low murmur of countless conversations blending into a single, indistinct drone. Fluorescent lights buzzed overhead, casting a cold, artificial glow over rows of produce and brightly colored packaging. Normally, this would all fade into the background for me. Today, it vanished entirely.
I focused my senses and the scent hit me even harder.
Not something physical. Something visceral. Immediate. Overwhelming.
Terror.
Not the common, twitchy anxiety that people carry in their shoulders, or the vague unease that creeps up behind you in a dark hallway. No—this was something far more primal. It stung my senses like acid, sharp and suffocating. It was raw, undiluted terror, chemical in its intensity. It clung to the air like smoke after a fire, saturating everything nearby with its foul trace. I turned my head sharply.
And then I saw her again.
That woman, maybe in her mid-thirties, standing just inside the store's entrance. Her body was trembling, her chest hitching with sobs as tears carved tracks down her cheeks. In her hand, she clutched something small and garish—pink plastic, a child's toy. Her knuckles were white around it. Two uniformed officers stood nearby, trying to calm her, but their presence only seemed to heighten the storm of emotion swirling off her in waves.
Every part of me sharpened—focus slicing through the noise like a blade through silk. I closed my eyes and tilted my head, tuning out everything else.
The world quieted.
There was the soft crinkle of plastic grocery bags being stuffed.
The low, endless hum of refrigeration units in the back.
The high-pitched whine of a misfiring fluorescent light near aisle four—annoying, persistent.
And below all that, quieter but clearer now: voices.
"I came in with her—my daughter, she's six," the woman sobbed, her voice strangled and desperate. "She was right next to me, I swear. One second she was there, and then… she was just gone!"
She clutched the pink toy tighter like it was the only thing anchoring her to reality.
One of the officers spoke, his tone practiced and measured. "Ma'am, take a breath. What's your daughter's name?"
"C-Chloe," she choked out. "Her name is Chloe. She's wearing a blue dress, white shoes. She had her toy unicorn with her—the one with the pink horn. I—I didn't even notice she was gone until I turned around. I thought maybe she just wandered off into another aisle, I didn't…"
Her voice cracked completely. The rest dissolved into unintelligible sobs.
Beside me, Emily shifted, her eyes on me. "Lucas?" she murmured, sensing the change in my stance.
I lifted a hand, subtle but firm. "Not now."
That was all she needed. She recognized the tone—quiet, focused, with a lethal edge.
As we neared the front of the store, the situation was clearly evolving. The woman had been taken to the small security room off to the side. Now she stood there surrounded by officers and store personnel, hands shaking as she pointed to a monitor.
"There—there she is! That's her," the mother said, her voice a frantic mix of relief and terror.
The officers leaned in toward the screen.
"Who's the man with her?" one of them asked.
"I don't know," she whispered, nearly breathless. "I've never seen him before. Maybe he said something to her, tricked her… My daughter's friendly. She's a sweet girl. She talks to everyone."
Her grief was a physical thing. It filled the room, heavy and smothering.
I didn't need to see the footage. I didn't need grainy images or still frames to tell me what I already knew.
I could hear everything.
Once the woman was led outside to calm down, the officers kept talking, quieter now.
"He's wearing a cap," one muttered. "Keeps his head low—face never clear in any of the shots."
"His car was parked way at the far end of the lot," the other said. "No camera coverage back there. Plates weren't visible. Bastard thought of everything."
"He planned this," the first one growled. "He's probably been watching for weeks. Picked the moment she'd be distracted. Knew what to look for."
"And now we've got nothing. No name, no face, no vehicle. Just a missing kid and a desperate mother."
I opened my eyes.
They were wrong. I didn't need the footage. I didn't need a plate number or a pixelated face.
I just needed the scent.
And the trail was still fresh.
Emily noticed I was no longer beside her at the register. "Lucas?" she called again, more urgent this time.
But I was already moving. Focused. Tracking.
Just outside the security room, the woman stood, hugging the toy unicorn like it was her daughter herself. Her shoulders shook with sobs. Her fingers trembled. She was lost inside her own mind, gripped by guilt and panic and helplessness.
I approached slowly. No sudden movements. Just casual enough to pass unnoticed.
And then—just the lightest touch. A slight pivot of my shoulder as I walked past. Enough to bump into her gently.
The toy slipped from her hand and landed softly on the tile with a dull plastic clatter.
"Oh—I'm sorry," she gasped, startled.
"No, I've got it," I said quickly, crouching to retrieve it.
I picked up the toy—bright pink, with a little plastic horn, slightly scuffed and worn at the edges. It was still warm from her grip. I held it for a moment longer than necessary, letting the child's scent imprint into my senses.
Then I handed it back.
She looked up at me, eyes red, swollen, and utterly broken.
"Thank you," she whispered.
I gave her a single nod.
And then I turned and walked away, every part of me tuned to the trail.
Her daughter had been taken.
But I had what I needed.