Ruin (Rhodes #1) by Rina Kent



                             Nothing. As if the colour black chose this place as residence.

                             His arm slips from between my sweaty fingers. The void sends a jolt of trembles through my nerves. I move forward. “Aaron...?” My spooked voice freezes my spine.

                             Click.

                             No, no, no, no, no...

                             That wasn’t the door. He didn’t leave me here alone. He didn’t.

                             “Aaron?” My voice’s louder.

                             Silence. Imposing, terrifying silence.

                             “AARON!” I dash through thick layers of black to where I remember the door to be.

                             Once my hands connect with a metal surface, I pound it. “Where did you go? Come back!”

                             I pound, punch, and kick the door. Again. And again. I’m at it for so long that my palms sting, my knuckles explode with pain, and my frozen feet beg to be put out of their misery.

                             He’s not coming back.

                             He really left me. Alone. In a black world. The same blackness of the cave I got trapped in when I was a little girl.

                             I can’t survive darkness.

                             Phantoms group around me. Their ugly heads roam from side to side. Hollow eyes stare me down. Cheshire cat’s grins mock me, waiting to tear me apart.

                             “They’re not real, not real, not real...” I chant, attempting to close my lids.

                             An invisible hand wraps around my throat. I gasp, my lungs pleading for inexistent oxygen.

                             “D...ad...dy...” I choke out, but Dad isn’t here. There’s only another hand that stretches inside my chest. It squeezes my heart as if tying it with ropes.

                             My hand reaches to my cold, wet neck in a hopeless try to loosen the choking. My other hand clutches the side of my breast, desperately trying to stop my heart from bursting out.

                             Somehow, I end up curled on the ground. A whimper escapes my lips as salty tears seep into my dry mouth.

                             My limbs twitch in a continuous spasm. This isn’t a nightmare. This is real.

                             The punishing hurricane wrecks my insides. It shreds every cell. Destroys all thoughts. My body begs it to stop.

                             But it won’t.

                             The attacks will keep coming, over and over, until someone gets me out of this black hell.

                             My only option is the same psycho who coerced me to it.





                             Chapter Nine

                             Aaron



                             Twenty-one years ago,