tance** of *Whispers
er 1: The I
nches. The further Kira Langley drove, the more her cell signal faded, until even the familiar hum of digital life disappeared into static silence. The car's
stone arch, eyeing her like a sentinel. She tightened her grip on the s
metallic. She grabbed her backpack, slung it over one shoulder, and approached the gate. It
n't explained much, only that Evelyn left everything to her "sole remaining bloodline." That was Kira.
till shaped like a roaring lion. Kira hesitated, then pressed the key int
rough stained glass windows. The grand foyer yawned before her, a sweeping staircase splitting the space with regal disdain. Portraits lined the walls-ster
oom had the kind of beauty found in forgotten places: a dusty grand piano, l
glass with her fingers, tracing the image as memories stirred. Her grandmother had once held
startl
d. No one
, her hand grazing the banister, which was smoother than expected. Halfway up, her foot caught on a c
rdrobes filled with moth-eaten dresses, bookshelves packed
nearby dresser matched the lock. Inside were letters-dozens of them-tied in twine and addressed to someone named Elias
s. She made her way to the attic, drawn by a strange pull in her chest. The door groaned ope
st. The seams were too clean. She pressed her fingers along the edges until something clicked
obsidian stone in the cen
ted-then t
icked open
tood a towering mirror, its frame wrought from dark wood twisted into almost serpenti
utline shimmered there, but not her face.
tepped
r breath visible. The silenc
hing moved
ection-or something that looked like her-t
ira h
slammed the door shut, and sho
lt colder no