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Chapter 1 - Chapter 1

Aria's POV 

I never thought rock bottom would smell like stale coffee and burnt croissants, but here I was,sitting in a near-empty cafe at 9:47 p.m., sipping on something that claimed to be cappuccino but tasted like regret. The barista was already throwing side-eyes my way, probably wondering if I planned to sleep in the booth. Spoiler alert: I had considered it.

My backpack sat next to me, holding everything I owned,two shirts, a sketchpad, a toothbrush that had seen better days, and exactly twelve dollars and thirty-five cents in coins. I counted them twice. Still twelve thirty-five. Not enough for rent, or even a decent meal, but hey,if there was an award for surviving off vending machine crackers and optimism, I'd be a freaking legend.

I scrolled through apartment listings on my cracked phone screen for the fifth time today. Every listing either wanted a $500 deposit upfront, no pets, no trauma, or no personality. Some even wanted all three. Cute.

I blew out a sigh and leaned back in the chair. My neck ached from sleeping sitting up the past three nights. I'd been couch-hopping for a while, until the last friend finally told me, in the nicest way possible, that I came with too much baggage. Like I was a human suitcase or something.

Whatever. I didn't need them.

I needed a place.

A roof.

Walls.

A door I could lock.

A quiet space where no one could find me.

I kept scrolling, thumb lazy and tired, ready to give up for the night—when something weird caught my eye.

> Room Available. Must sign NDA before viewing. 1 bed. 1 bath. No questions. No exceptions. Email only.

No phone number. No pictures. No vibe. Just… cold, clinical words that felt more like a contract than a rental ad.

Which made it perfect.

I blinked at it. The rent? Stupid cheap. Like, is-this-a-drug-den cheap. I snorted. Probably a scam. Or a serial killer's lair. Or both.

Still, my thumb hovered over the email link. I mean, what were my options? Rot in this booth all night with passive-aggressive barista energy attacking me from behind the counter? Yeah, no thanks.

I clicked.

Typed up a message.

> Hi. I'm Aria. Saw your ad. Is the room still available? I don't ask questions. I just need a place.

Sent.

That was it. I didn't even overthink it. Look at me, all brave and reckless. My therapist—if I had one—would be proud.

I stretched my legs under the table and let out a long yawn. It was raining outside, again. Because of course it was. The city loved drama. I checked the time—10:01 p.m. Great. One hour left before the bus station kicked everyone out for the night. My favorite part of the day.

I shoved the rest of my croissant into my mouth and stood up, brushing crumbs off my hoodie. The barista sighed in relief. You're welcome, man.

---

I glanced around the empty street, the neon signs flickering like they were holding on just as tight as I was. The city never really sleeps — it just shifts gears, swapping one kind of chaos for another. Somewhere, a siren wailed in the distance, a reminder that no matter how much I wanted to disappear, the world had a way of catching up. I tucked my chin into my coat, the cold biting through the thin fabric like it knew all my secrets. Funny how I could run from places, people, even my own past, but I could never outrun the feeling that I was still waiting for something. Not a prince, not a miracle, just a break—a little space to breathe without the constant pressure of looking over my shoulder. I was tired of pretending everything was fine when it clearly wasn't. But maybe, just maybe, this sketchy little room with the weird contract was my shot at rewriting the script. Or at least starting a new scene. And hey, if nothing else, it gave me something to laugh about. Because if you can't laugh at life when it's kicking you down, what else is left?

I pulled my jacket tighter around me and let out a shaky breath. I wasn't about to get my hopes up — not after everything. But still, the idea of a real place to crash, even one with weird rules and some mystery guy calling the shots? It felt like a tiny spark in a room full of darkness. Maybe this was the break I needed, or maybe it was just another mess waiting to happen. Either way, I wasn't going to overthink it. I had no choice but to try.

I stepped out into the cold and pulled my jacket tighter. The rain wasn't heavy, just annoying enough to soak your socks. I found a semi-dry spot under the awning of a closed flower shop and sat on the stoop. My phone buzzed.

I pulled it out of my pocket, expecting spam or another rejection from a job I didn't remember applying for.

Nope.

One new message.

> Apartment 7B. 437 Blackstone. Tomorrow. 8PM. Bring ID. Come alone.

…Well, that didn't sound suspicious at all.

I stared at the screen, heart thumping, not from excitement but from that little tickle of unease. The kind you feel when something's either about to go very right or very, very wrong.

Still.

It was a response.

I grinned.

"Guess I've got a date with 7B."

The rain picked up. I tucked the phone into my coat pocket and leaned back against the cold wall, eyes fluttering closed, lips quirking up in a tired smile.

Finally. A place.

Even if the guy sounded like a total asshole.

Maybe especially because of that.

I didn't need kindness. I didn't trust it.

I just needed a locked door, four walls, and a roof that didn't ask questions.

Tomorrow couldn't come soon enough.

And if I was walking into something insane?

Well, at least it'd make a good story.

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