“Colin, are you hurt? Who’s been picking on you?”
“They ruined the cupcake I made for you…”
Memories, strange and unfamiliar, began to surface in my mind–snapshots of a little girl crouching
beside a boy, inquiring about his injuries.
The little boy was holding a smashed cupcake, his eyes brimming with tears.
The girl was dressed in a red dress; she took a piece of the ruined cupcake and tasted it. “It’s so
sweet.”
My head pounded as if it were about to split open. I rubbed my temples, but the alien memories clung
to me, persistent and unsettling.
What were they?
“Madam, would you like something to eat?” The nanny’s voice came softly through the door.
Her words pulled me back to the present, and I stepped outside. “Where’s Caleb?”
The nanny nced around before speaking in a hushed tone, “Mr. Caleb… we don’t know where he
has gone.”
A frown creased my brow. Where could he be?
“Madam, I haven’t been here long, but you might ask Wendy; she’s been with the Langley family for
ages.”
I nodded, not wanting to trouble the young nanny further, and made my way downstairs.
Ever since Samuel’s ident and Brendan’s stroke, the Langley family had undergone aplete
overhaul. The old staff was gone, except for Wendy, who still managed the kitchen; the rest had been
let go.
“Wendy, where’s Caleb?” I was irritable earlier and somewhat short with Colin, and I hoped I hadn’t hurt
his feelings.
“Madam, Mr. Caleb takes some time away each year at this date. He asked me to tell you to rest well
and eat properly,” said Wendy.
Colin wasn’t at the Langley estate. Still, I couldn’t shake off a nagging worry for him; his moods were so
unpredictable.
“Did he say where he was going?” I pressed.
Wendy shook her head. “We dare not pry into Mr. Caleb’s affairs.”
After eating only a few bites, I left the house, distracted.
10:02
On the way to my destination, the memory of the girl in the red dress and the boy with the cupcake
consumed my thoughts.
“Phoebe…”
“Phoebe.”
The boy’s face was a blur, but I remembered a cut at the corner of his mouth. Desperately, I tried to
recall his features.
Lips, nose, eyes…
I suddenly sat upright, my breath catching.
Colin.
Why was I thinking of Colin’s face? The young boy with mixed heritage, his eyes so clear and piercing.
“Madam, we’ve arrived.” The driver announced our destination and parked the car.
Snapping back to reality, I stepped out to face the dpidated alleyway, littered with trash and reeking
of decay.
This was Sea City’sst slum, an undeveloped demolition area.
Many homeless gathered here, a melting pot of the desperate and lost.
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I was there to see Zoe, Carter’s sister–the woman with mental challenges, yet somehow used of
orchestrating the murder.
Navigating the dirty staircase to the third floor, I was surrounded by refuse.
“Fucking hell, paying 200 bucks for a woman like you is already being generous,” echoed the coarse
language through the hallway, a clear indication of the sordid activities taking ce.
At room 306, the metal door swung open, and a man, fastening his pants, emerged cursing and
embodying vulgarity.
He gave me a once–over. “Huh, didn’t know this ce had quality chicks.”
I red a warning. “Leave now unless you want the cops here.”
He muttered an insult but moved on without further fuss.
Inside the dim room, a woman with pale skin but an off–look about her sat on the bed, bruises marring
her face.
My eyes scanned the room, freezing on a photograph prominently disyed on the wall. My blood ran
cold.
The photo featured three young people.
The girl in the middle, donning a red dress, was me, around seventeen or eighteen.
10.02
To my right stood Colin, his height pronounced, his demeanor aloof as he seemed to shy away from the
camera. On my left, a boy wearing an expression of discontent was Carter.
1
This photo was one I had nevere across while searching for orphanage records.