The wind curled around the corners of Hollowpine High, rattling windows and breathing whispers into forgotten cracks. Autumn had painted the town in rusted gold and deep crimson, but Elara Wren didn't care about the changing seasons. She preferred the kind that lived in pages—the kind bound in leather and secrets.
Friday evenings were her favorite. While her classmates chased bonfires and boys, Elara chose dust and quiet. The library was her refuge: a cathedral of calm with shelves taller than sense and a silence only the truly lonely could appreciate.
She wandered through the farthest aisle, a section most students avoided—too many spiders, too much shadow. Tonight, however, the shadows felt thicker. The air was oddly cold, like the room had inhaled and forgotten how to exhale.
She paused at the sound of movement. A rustle.
A footstep.
Elara turned.
There he was.
A boy stood at the end of the row, half in darkness. He wore black from collar to boot—his coat slightly too elegant for school, too timeless for a teenager. His hair was midnight dark, brushing against high cheekbones, and his skin looked sculpted from porcelain. But it was his eyes that rooted her in place—obsidian, unwavering, unreadable.
She found her voice, though it wavered like candlelight. "Are you lost?"
He tilted his head slightly, as though studying her. "I could ask you the same."
"I volunteer here," she said, hugging the book against her chest. "You're not a student."
"Not anymore," he said. "But I like old things. Books. History. Silence."
Something about the way he said silence made it sound sacred.
The lights flickered above them. A single bulb popped, plunging that side of the aisle into a deeper gloom. Elara didn't flinch, but she took a small step back.
"Do the lights always do that?" he asked, a faint smile ghosting his lips.
"Sometimes," she replied, heartbeat quickening. "Especially when storms are near."
"There's no storm tonight."
She didn't reply.
He moved closer, quiet as breath.
"What's your name?" he asked.
"Elara."
"Pretty," he murmured. "You look like you read poetry."
"I do."
"Do you believe in monsters, Elara?"
She narrowed her eyes, sensing the mockery beneath his softness. "Not really."
"Then you're lucky."
"Why?"
"Because they believe in you."
A silence bloomed between them, rich and heavy.
Then she blinked, and he was gone.
No footsteps. No sound. Just the echo of his last words, circling her like moths around a flame.
She stood frozen for a long time, the book in her hands forgotten, her spine tingling.
That night, she couldn't sleep. Because in the space between dream and waking, she could still see him—
Eyes like midnight.
Smile like danger.
And a voice that promised something she couldn't name.