Chapter 1: ๐๐ข๐ต๐ค๐ฉ๐ข ๐๐ข๐ต๐ต๐ฆ
Pink petals blew down the winding, cobblestone street. Spring was more than welcome after a cold winter, and with it, rain, new growth, and brisk, sharp airโthe kind that, when breathed in, woke up the senses.
Worn lettering on a wooden signpostโdirecting her left, right, and up a steep hillโdidnโt help her become less lost. It made her more confused. Sheโd never heard these names: Bakerโs Row, Market Street, Townsend Lane.
She had a map of the village.
None of the street names matched.
Coming to the countryside from a bustling city, sheโd had a notion that it would be easier to navigate. Fewer people and fewer buildings equated to effortless navigation. Or so she thought.
Whenever she believed sheโd found her way, sheโd become wholly flabbergasted on where to go next. The sidewalks seemed to shift when she wasnโt looking. Her lack of breakfast this morning must have been messing with her head. But she swore, staring across the quiet road, that sheโd already passed that small candle shop across the street.
Yellow brick with dark orange accents. A weathervane in the shape of a hopping rabbit attached to its dark green eaves spun wildly.
She didnโt feel any wind.
The smell of floral perfume teased her nose pleasantly as a woman walked past her. Grey, curly hair and a pale cotton blouse paired with an ankle-length skirt rustling in the slight breeze. The only person sheโd seen in a long while.
โAre you lost, my dear?โ
Nina let out a breath of relief. Finally, her salvation. And it came in the form of a tiny, wrinkled woman with a beautiful smile and expressive brown eyes.
โI am.โ Nina bowed slightly, so relieved that the propriety her mother had instilled in her escaped. โCould you give me directions to the library in town?โ
She neednโt be specific. The quaint village of Wisteria didnโt have many amenities. Brick weathered with age, and a love for vibrant, abundant gardens. Wisteriaโs rich history seeped into every sidewalk and cracked road.
Since moving into her small apartment in the villageโs heart last week, sheโd happily embraced the silence and remoteness the village offered. She was so used to the bustle of city life, she desperately needed a reprieve. That was why sheโd taken this job, which cut her pay significantly.
โYouโre close,โ the woman told her.
โOh! Am I? Please, if youโd be so kind as to point me in the right direction.โ
She focused intently as the nice woman gave her detailed guidance on how to reach the library.
โThank you,โ Nina said earnestly. โIt was so close. I didnโt know.โ
โIโve never met someone who managed to become lost here.โ The woman laughed heartily.
โYou must be on your way elsewhere. Iโm sorry for stopping you.โ
โItโs no matter. Youโve given me a good story to tell around Meadow Table tonight.โ
Ah, the only restaurant in town. She hadnโt visited, but she knew it was where most locals flocked after working hours.
Sheโd be the spectacle there tonight, then, in spirit.
Stunning.
Nina smiled. Her lips twitched at the corners. She reined in her temper. It had been a long morning, and the ache in her legs from walking didnโt help her patience. This woman seemed genuinely kind and did help her tremendously. The last thing she wanted to do was lash out at such a nice person.
โThank you again,โ Nina said. โIโd love to stay and chat, but I must get going. Iโm already late.โ
โAre you the woman who moved here last Friday?โ
Word travels fast in a small village.
โI am.โ
Nina found her hand in a tight hold, soft palm against hers. The womanโs brown eyes lit up as she said, โIโm so pleased to meet you. Weโve been waiting ages for someone to take over the library.โ
โThe job posting had been up for over a year.โ
โNobody wants to move to such a small village. All the educated folks would rather stay in the city.โ
Nina smiled warmly and shook the wrinkly hand holding hers. โI cannot say I share their feelings on the matter. I find it charming here.โ
โThat it is.โ The woman retook her hand. โMy name is Isolde.โ
โNina.โ
โYou should come to Meadow Table this evening, Nina. Iโll introduce you to the rest of the village. A lovely girl like yourself will be the talk.โ
โThank you. If I can get settled into the library at a reasonable hour, Iโll see you then.โ
โWould you like me to walk you the rest of the way, my dear? My television shows can wait for me.โ Isolde lifted her purse. The woman must be referring to the movie store Nina had glimpsed while leaving the small train station last Friday morning.
โThatโs okay. I can find my way now.โ
โIf youโre sure.โ
She was lost again.
As she meandered down a narrow street with residences hugging the thin sliver of sidewalk, she began to feel hopeless. How long had it been? Hours had gone by; she swore it. But every time she blinked, it was as if sheโd only taken a few steps.
Wisteria had been Ninaโs ticket to a real life, away from her unfulfilling work as an indexer in the city. Well, so much for seizing her bright future. She couldnโt even find her way through a village with a population of less than two hundred people.
Stopping with a huff, she glanced around.
Nobody.
The only person sheโd seen had been Isolde. That just wasnโt possible. Wisteria might be quaint, but its inhabitants were sure to be bustling around the downtown section of the village. But as she spun and took in her surroundings with growing panic, there was not a soul in sight.
Across the street, the candle shop stole her blearing focus. Ferns grew above an awning over the oak door and hung down, kissing the shiny wood. The weathervane on its painted eaves spun and spun, mocking her.
She turned and ran.
If she did this long enough, sheโd make it somewhere else. Right? Maybe sheโd break whatever reality-shifting bubble that sheโd gotten herself stuck in.
She pushed herself until sweat stuck the soft fabric of her pink blouse to her back, and her breath came in burning pants.
Stopping, she placed her hands on her knees. After huffing for a while, she slowly raised her gaze, hoping to see new buildings. Then, sheโd laugh at herself for being a superstitious fool, make it to the library, albeit late, and apologize to Mrs. Galvan for making her wait for hours to hand over the key to the building.
But of course, across the narrow cobblestone road, her eyes fixed on a familiar building.
โNo!โ she screeched. โThis canโt be happening!โ
The candle shop. A sign hung over its door, nearly lost in the fernery. Sheโd thought it had been a candle, but focusing on it, she realized it was a decal of a teacup on a porcelain plate, with smoke rising from its rim. Hand drawn in thick white paint, the words Endless Brew took up the rest of the sign, eye-catching.
How had she missed it?
โYou!โ She pointed at the tea shop. โYes, you! Youโve messed with the wrong woman!โ
Sheโd never had a nemesis before, but this, Endless Brew, had just become it. Awareness that she had most definitely lost her mind settled, but knowing that didnโt quell her temper. She might be fighting with a building, but that didnโt mean sheโd lose. She would bash every brick into dust if she needed to.
โYouโre doing this to me,โ she shouted as she began to stomp across the road. โArenโt you!?โ
Her shrill, arenโt you, coincided with the door of the shop opening. A man holding a hefty-looking box stepped down the two short steps. His boots smacked the white pavers with a small, happy-go-lucky hop. The boyishness didnโt match his aesthetic.
Black everything. From his jacket to his boots. Except for his hair. Dyed white. Sheโd never believe somebody had been born with snow-coloured hair like that. His piercings seized her bodyโs functions: two in his ears.
Her motherโs voice rang in her head, lecturing her on tattoos and body jewellery and what such things did for social standing. She disagreed with her motherโs claims, but that didnโt mean panicked thoughts werenโt worming their way into her head.
A punk! A rogue! A criminal!
She froze, forgetting her mission to bash the Endless Brew to dust. She should have been running but couldnโt get her legs to move. Standing in the middle of the street, her chest rising raggedly, with sweat beading from her brow and down her flushed cheeks, she must have made for a crazed sight.
His eyes found her, stopping in his tracks with the box held against his chest. Pupils the colour of a lake in spring. Light grey-blue and warm.
โHey!โ He shouted.
She ducked instinctually and cursed under her breath.
With nowhere to go, she resigned herself to standing hunched over, ready to flee and hide at a momentโs notice.
โOh no...โ He sighed, setting the box on a small glass table near the shopโs front door. He smiled at her. โYouโre one of those, huh?โ
His voice held a softness that soothed her ears. Her previous judgments were being erased as she felt herself calming slightly while under his warm attention. But that didnโt mean she wasnโt wary.
This tea shop had just accosted her, and then spat out a man in a leather jacket. She wouldnโt let herself be fooled. This could be another trick.
He smiled at her. โIf you comeโโ
The door to the shop opened. โQuinn!โ A woman stuck her head out, gaze narrowing on the man in leather. โYouโre supposed to be mopping the floors. Donโt think you can get out of it by pretending to do work.โ
โPretending?โ Quinn scoffed at her. โIf you must know, naggy, Iโm helping a customer.โ He gestured to Nina.
The womanโs sour mood shifted instantly. Stepping outside, she took Nina in. The womanโs pin-straight, sleek black hair reached her upper back. A frilly pink apron tied around her waist clashed with the plaid skirt and matching vest she wore.
A school uniform?
But this wasnโt a teenager staring at her. In her early twenties, at a guess.
Cosplay then.
โWhatโs wrong with her?โ the woman asked Quinn.
Quinn frowned. โSheโs a mushy.โ
A what? No. Sheโs a, about to go mad and take a hammer to this tea shop. All she wanted to do was make it to her first day as the villageโs new librarian. Something told her that ship had sailed.
โWhat should we do?โ the woman asked Quinn.
They were treating Nina as if she werenโt there. Fine with her, sheโd stay rooted to this spot, and hopefully, after starvation hit, sheโd forget the insanity that was occurring around her. Yes, such a lovely plan.
Her stomach rumbled.
She shouldโve eaten breakfast.
โKai isnโt here?โ Quinn asked with a deepening frown as the woman came to stand beside him. She shook her head. โCrap.โ He smacked his forehead. โWeโll need to deal with this.โ
โNo!โ The woman whimpered and stomped her foot on the paver. Her mary jane-style chunky heels were pristine, not a speck to mar their glossiness. โI hate dealing with mushies. Thereโs got to be somebody else who...โ
They smiled at each other. Concluding something at the same time. They looked at the shop and shouted simultaneously, โLyle!โ