The floor creaked as we moved toward the back of the house. River stayed near the side wall, while I took position just inside the door. I kept low, listening. My ears tuned to the subtle shifts in the air outside.
Branches swayed.
A bird scattered.
Then silence.
“Anything?” I whispered.
River shook his head. “He’s quiet.”
Too quiet.
I moved toward the window again, this time slower, more deliberate.
And that’s when I saw it.
A scrap of white.
Tucked under a rock just outside the tree line.
My pulse kicked.
“There’s something out there,” I murmured.
River stepped beside me. Squinted. “Shit. That wasn’t there ten minutes ago.”
A note.
Left like a calling card.
“Don’t touch it,” he said quickly. “Cyclone’s almost here. He can—”
But I was already reaching for the door.
“Jude.”
“I’m not going far,” I said. “And I won’t touch it.”
He swore but followed me anyway, covering every angle as I crept barefoot across the deck, down the stairs, and across the damp grass.
The wind picked up as I knelt by the rock.
It was a torn scrap of paper. Clean edges. Typewritten.
The kind of message no one could trace.
I didn’t pick it up—I just leaned close enough to read.
Three words.
“You remember me.”
My breath caught.
Behind me, River swore again. “Get inside.”
I stood slowly, heart pounding, eyes scanning the trees.