The scream did not sound human. It was a jagged, visceral sound—the cry of a wounded animal caught in a trap of ice. It tore through the sterile silence of the Oakwood Estates, shattering the fragile peace of a Tuesday afternoon.
I froze, my fingers trembling as they gripped the handle of my car door. I had pulled into the driveway of my sprawling manor three days ahead of schedule, a surprise homecoming meant to reclaim the time I’d lost to a relentless business trip. I wanted to see the light in my children’s eyes.
Instead, I saw a nightmare rendered in high-definition frost. Standing in the center of the backyard, buried shin-deep in the fresh, relentless snow, was my eight-year-old daughter, Mia. She was not wearing a parka.
She was not wearing boots. She was standing there in a gossamer, cotton summer dress—the pale blue one she usually saved for July picnics. Her tiny feet were swallowed by the white powder, a ghastly shade of crimson and violet.
Her skin was translucent, a sickly, marbled gray. I didn’t think. I didn’t breathe.
I dropped my leather briefcase—the culmination of a billion-dollar merger—into the slush and sprinted. “Mia!” I roared, the air burning my lungs. She didn’t turn.
She was vibrating so violently her joints seemed to rattle. When I reached her and scooped her up, the cold radiating off her small frame was a physical assault. She was a block of carved ice.
“D-d-daddy?” she stammered. Her lips weren’t pink; they were a bruised, terrifying cobalt. “I’m… I’m so c-c-cold.”
I ripped off my suit jacket and swaddled her, crushing her to my chest as I ran toward the house.
A cold dread coiled in my gut, quickly overtaken by a white-hot flare of adrenaline. My sister, Clarissa, was standing by the back door. She was the picture of suburban elegance in a thick cashmere sweater, cradling a steaming mug of artisanal coffee.
She looked… inconvenienced. Not panicked. Not distraught.
Annoyed. “Richard?” She blinked, her expression shifting with practiced ease from irritation to a mask of feigned worry. “Thank goodness you’re here.
Mia was being utterly impossible. She bolted outside without her coat. I was just about to go fetch her.”
I didn’t break my stride.
I barreled past her, my shoulder slamming into hers. “She’s hypothermic, Clarissa! She’s barely conscious!”
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