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Awaken the Dawn: The Awaken Saga, #1
Awaken the Dawn: The Awaken Saga, #1
Awaken the Dawn: The Awaken Saga, #1
Ebook478 pages6 hoursThe Awaken Saga

Awaken the Dawn: The Awaken Saga, #1

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An unsuspecting teen discovers a secret that lures her into the snare of a ruthless crime boss. Can she survive his twisted game?

 

When her dad dies during a business trip to Romania, Kat Barrett blames herself for their failed relationship. She's racked with guilt, haunted by strange dreams about the crash that killed him, and she'd do anything to have him back. 

 

Then a package arrives. It's from her dad and contains a list of clues — one of his classic scavenger hunts. Desperate for answers, she follows the clues to Bucharest and meets Maksim, a local with a dark past who offers to help. Kat doesn't trust him, but when she hits a dead end, she's left with no other choice. 

 

As they work together, decoding the clues and trying (unsuccessfully) not to fall for each other, the scavenger hunt reveals a deadly secret the dreams have been pointing to, something Maksim's old crime ring has been hiding all along, and Kat has walked into their trap.

 

Can she beat them to the final clue — and solve it — before she suffers the same fate as her dad?

 

"Ellis K. Popa (delivers) an amazing story full of mystery, intrigue and romance." - John Benedict, Bestselling Author of Adrenaline ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

"A gripping and unforgettable read that heralds Popa as a rising star in the genre..." - Elicia Meairs, Netgalley ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️


Get ready for an exhilarating ride that will keep you guessing until the final, breathtaking conclusion. Perfect for fans of puzzle mysteries like Inheritance Games and Da Vinci Code and clever crime fiction like 'Sherlock', The Reappearance of Rachel Price, and A Good Girl's Guide to Murder.

Worldwide praise for Awaken the Dawn: The Awaken Saga, Book 1...

"Go ahead, go add this to your TBR!" - Books with Cats (Europe) ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

"This is an absolutely delicious book. I both devoured it in one day, and savoured every word!" - Charlotte, Blue Fairy Bugs Books (UK) ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

"...there were many nights where I told myself 'just one more chapter' yet continued reading for many more..." - Kasey Morris, Author + Romania Enthusiast (US) ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

"It was both dangerous and thrilling. Kat was amazing and a kick-ass character." - Kriti, This Reader Girl (India) ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

"The book was absolutely amazing and I couldn't get enough of it. I can't wait to see what happens next." - Scarlet Le Clair, Horror & Romance Author + Netgalley Reviewer (UK) ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

 

Awards & Recognition for Awaken the Dawn...

Cascade Awards - 1st Place
Blue Seal Awards- 1st Place
The Selfie Awards UK (London Book Fair) - Shortlist: Top 8
The BookLife Prize - Semifinalist (Shortlist: Top 5)
The Wishing Shelf Awards UK - Finalist
Page Turner Awards UK - Shortlist: Top 6
KN Readers' Choice Awards - Finalist: Top 6
IAN Book of the Year - Finalist: Outstanding New Adult
Claymore Awards - Finalist: Top 6
Silver Falchion - Top Pick
Writers' League of Texas - Finalist
Badge of Honor - 1st Place (Fiction) / Runner Up (All Genres)
Write to Publish - 2nd Place
Serious Writer's Writer of the Year - Semifinalist

LanguageEnglish
Release dateMar 26, 2024
ISBN9781962180108
Awaken the Dawn: The Awaken Saga, #1
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    Awaken the Dawn - Ellis K. Popa

    Part One

    Atlanta

    Map of Georgia with Atlanta marked

    Prologue

    WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 19

    The wind scraped at my cheeks and whipped my ponytail around. I laced up my cleats, shivering, and zipped myself into a Lady Knights hoodie. The soccer field stretched around me. Silence rested on the empty stadium.

    I turned away from the goal and jogged up the sideline. My thighs protested. Cold air hit my lungs and caught fire in my chest. I pushed harder, commanding myself into focus.

    District. Regionals. State. State champs.

    A blip of movement drew my attention to the bleachers. I turned, expecting to see Brandy—but why would she be in the bleachers? We were supposed to be practicing.

    I paused my warm-up, scanning. The announcer’s box fortified the top, and I could see straight through the large windows. There was nobody in there.

    There was nobody anywhere. I was alone.

    My pocket vibrated. I pulled out my phone and checked the message.

    Hello dear

    I blinked. The text was from Dad, but… he never called me dear. He also never wrote messages shorter than fifty words.

    I swiped a reply.

    Did you see my text? Need to know when your flight gets in.

    I pressed Send and dropped into a lunge.

    The phone vibrated in my hand. The screen brightened.

    U can find it dear

    I straightened. Dad never abbreviated anything. Ever. He also used perfect grammar and punctuation in all his text messages. These didn’t have any of that.

    A scuff broke the silence. My attention moved to the stands, then to the cyclone fence that wrapped around the stadium. Somebody was here. Whoever it was didn’t want to be seen.

    What are you doing? The muffled voice came from behind me.

    I wheeled around.

    Brandy stood there, padded goalie gloves held between her teeth while she yanked her auburn hair into a ponytail. She was layered up in bulky clothing, and the gray weather dulled her normally warm freckles.

    When she finished, she spat out the gloves. They landed in a heap on the grass. You’re looking paler than usual. You’re not sick, are you?

    N-no, it’s just— Never mind. I stilled my heart, which pounded at a full sprint. Trying to figure out my dad’s itinerary. Almost done. I held up my phone.

    She shrugged, plunking herself on the grass.

    Her neon-pink cleats were tied together and slung over one shoulder. She pulled the shoes onto her lap and picked at the knot.

    I headed for my bag, swiping a reply to Dad.

    Have to go. Shooting drills with Bee.

    I hesitated, thumb hovering. Dad had been acting weird since Thanksgiving, and he was acting extra weird now.

    Unless I was imagining things. Was I? How could I know for sure?

    An idea breathed across my thoughts. It wasn’t the greatest idea, or the nicest, and it might get me in trouble. But…

    I gnawed my bottom lip and added to the message.

    Ty’s coming over to help me study. Hope that’s ok.

    Ty wasn’t allowed over at night. Not ever, but especially not while Dad was out of town. If I didn’t get a reply with all caps and threats of being grounded for life, I’d know something was up.

    I held my breath and pressed Send.

    My mom needs the car tonight.

    I pivoted, insides heavy. Huh?

    My mom’s covering the overnight at the nursing home. Brandy flexed her fingers in the padded gloves. Can you follow me home and then drop me off at Dave’s?

    I… can’t. Have to study. Chemistry midterm. That part was true. I really did need to study.

    My gaze landed on the phone. No reply from Dad.

    Come on, Kat. We have to study, too.

    Right. ‘Study.’

    Brandy cocked her hip and used it as a handrest. Dave and I have pre-cal.

    Then take the MARTA.

    "You know that station by my house is sketch, and I’ll have to connect by bus. That’ll suck in this weather. Please, Kat? She blinked out puppy-dog eyes. Pretty please?"

    I rubbed my forehead. Dave and his dad lived forty-five minutes away. Double that with rush hour traffic. I couldn’t afford to lose that much time.

    But I also couldn’t let my best friend end up cold, stranded, and stuck at a sketchy train station.

    Yeah, okay. We won’t have time for sprints or crunches⁠—

    I’ll do crunches before bed and sprints up and down the staircase. Her mouth tipped up. What’s the deal with chemistry, anyway? You’re not at risk of getting a B, are you? Or dare I say… a B-minus? She waggled her eyebrows.

    I rolled my eyes and started for my athletic bag.

    She angled to cut me off. Hold up. For real, what’s going on?

    I wasn’t going to say anything yet, but… Coach Jules got a call. I fought a smile. From Georgia State.

    Brandy’s mouth dropped open wide enough for a small plane to land. They called about you?

    Sort of. They’re sending scouts when the season starts, and they had a lot of questions about me. They even asked about my academic performance. Coach Jules thinks they might offer me a full ride.

    "A full-ride scholarship? What?" Brandy squealed and spun me around.

    Georgia State checked off all the boxes. I could live with Dad rent-free, and I’d be close to Brandy and Dave, who were planning to stay in Atlanta for community college.

    But without that scholarship, my college horizons were bleak. I hadn’t wanted to jinx myself.

    Okay, okay. I anchored my feet, bringing us to a stop. But I have to practice. Shooting drills every day, even on crap days like this one.

    Don’t worry, babe. I got you. Brandy glanced around. Where’s the ball?

    I tipped my chin toward the goal. My soccer ball rested against the post. Brandy took off in that direction. I closed the distance to my bag.

    I stooped and tugged on the zipper. No more distractions, not from Dad or anyone else. My phone would go in the bag. I would focus. Everything else would fall into place. It had to.

    District. Regionals. State. State champs. My smile tugged harder. Georgia State. Scholarship.

    The smile faltered. I checked the phone one more time, and my chest tightened. The message light was off. The screen was still black.

    1. Delivery

    TWO WEEKS LATER

    More people die from selfie accidents than shark attacks.

    Vending machines kill an average of thirteen people per year.

    A Brazilian man died after a cow fell through his roof, crushing him while he was asleep.

    Of all the statistics I’d seen, that death-by-cow incident had to be the weirdest, but I couldn’t say it was the absolute worst. That honor surely belonged to selfie accidents, especially those involving heights.

    Imagine the regret someone would have as they fell, knowing what’s about to happen, knowing they can’t stop it. What would they be thinking about? Would they have enough time to ponder their life’s decisions (or at least their last decision)?

    There’s a saying in Romania: „Viața celui care se teme de moarte este tot un fel de moarte."

    Translation: The life of one who fears death is a kind of death.

    In other words, the person who’s afraid of dying is the one who really loses his life. But how can that be true? Because if the selfie-accident people had been afraid to climb up to that height, they’d still be alive.

    And if Dad had been afraid to return to his homeland, he’d still be alive, too…

    I pushed a stack of dirty dishes aside and dumped an armful of mail on the counter. The words Past Due in blood-red ink glared up at me. I picked up the envelope, and the one beneath it had an identical, inky-red twin.

    My eye twitched. I rubbed it and reached for a padded mailer. Probably something from Mom, a late Christmas gift no doubt. I was surprised she remembered at all.

    I tugged on the junk drawer and reached for the scissors. My attention skimmed a postmark on the back of the mailer.

    Braşov – Poşta Română

    My brow dipped. Braşov?

    The front door to the apartment creaked, and cold air settled around me.

    Kat? Brandy’s husky voice drifted into the kitchen. A quick double knock followed. Hello?

    In here.

    The ceiling fan blinked on, drawing my attention across the breakfast bar.

    Brandy breezed into the living room, striding past the Christmas tree, then the couch, before stopping next to the one-and-only box I’d managed to pack—Dad’s programming books.

    She yanked off her beanie, leaving a trail of static in the wake, and surveyed the living room. Her smile crashed and burned. What the hell? Kat, you’re supposed to be packed. She marched into the kitchen. Dave’s coming with the truck. He could only get it for tonight.

    I was about to, um…

    Brandy leaned sideways, trying to see past me. I sidestepped, putting myself between her and the mound of dirty dishes.

    I’m sorry. I wrung my hands. I-I meant to do more.

    Her eyes found mine, and her expression softened. You don’t need to apologize, okay? You just lost your dad. She took my hands. Don’t worry, babe. We’ll figure this out. She marched out of the kitchen.

    I wiped a stray tear and followed her.

    The Christmas tree sprayed the living room in blue, gold, and red. The lights splashed across the wall and spilled onto the carpet. Homemade flag ornaments dotted the branches.

    My feet stalled. I hadn’t thought Dad would let me do a Romania-themed tree. He never had before. Why this year? Why the change of heart?

    I looked down at the padded mailer I was holding. My fingers detected something hard and clunky inside. Had the cleanup crew found something in the wreckage?

    Today’s Wednesday. Brandy stood beside the couch, massaging her temples. School starts Monday. I’m working tomorrow, Friday, and Saturday. Shoot, and I think Sunday, too. We’ve gotta get this done tonight.

    We could take the big stuff to your house first, couldn’t we? I-I’ll move the smaller stuff by myself this weekend.

    Brandy slanted an eyebrow.

    What? When we moved into this place, I packed everything we owned into our car. It’s a compact, but it holds a lot. The real reason was because we hadn’t owned much back then. Even less than we owned now.

    Correction: Than I owned. There was no more we.

    Brandy whipped out her phone and punched out a text. Probably to Dave. I let my stare drift over the living room… over Dad’s TV… over our ratty couch.

    I paused on Dad’s poster of Rosie the Riveter. Her red bandanna wrapped around her head and tied at the top. She pursed her lips, expression serious and kind of intense. She was confident in her mission, in herself, with her sleeve rolled up and her biceps flexed.

    We Can Do It! The World War II slogan filled a dialogue bubble.

    Dad had other posters, but Rosie had been his favorite. She was the screen saver for his laptop, too.

    Grief dragged my heart into my rib cage.

    Hey, Bee? I swallowed my emotions and held up the mailer. This might be from the government liaison I’ve been working with. I think the cleanup crew might have— I looked down and nearly choked.

    My name and address had been scribbled in a familiar, left-handed slant. Hope sprang up. Dad?

    The cleanup crew, what? Brandy peered back at me. Babe. You’ve got to start finishing your sentences. I don’t know what you’re talking about half the time.

    I bolted into the kitchen. The package had been taped solid on both sides. I grabbed the scissors and ripped through the semisoft material. Something gold and shiny clattered to the linoleum. A folded-up sheet of paper followed, landing on my shoe.

    I picked up the paper and unfolded it.

    Scavenger hunt list of clues

    This looked like the scavenger hunts Dad used to make, and it was all in his handwriting.

    I scooped up the other item that had fallen out—a gold locket with a wagon wheel stamped on the back and flowery vines engraved on the front.

    Antique gold locket

    I pressed a latch, and the locket opened to an inscription.

    That wasn’t a bad idea. Brandy’s lean frame appeared in the kitchen. We’ll take the big stuff tonight. Dave’s bringing the truck for that, and then he’s gonna swing by this weekend for everything else.

    I stared, lips parted. My vocal cords wouldn’t work.

    I’ll start on your room, okay? Take your time, do what you need to do, then come help me. She stripped off her fleece jacket, tossed it on the dining room table, and hauled a stack of flattened cardboard boxes into my bedroom.

    The screech of packing tape hit my ears and sank to my stomach. My room, my entire life, was being dismantled, and no amount of procrastinating had been able to stop it.

    I clutched the locket. The thing was sturdy, an antique from the looks of it—but Dad hadn’t been into antiques. And when could he have sent me this? He’d been dead for two weeks.

    Two weeks. Was that enough time for mail to arrive from Romania? I didn’t know the answer, but I thought of someone who might.

    2. Django

    Ipeeked behind the potted plants stacked around the entrance. The diner’s pale lights reflected off crinkly plastic.

    Sour candies! I squealed and clapped. Daddy, I found them, I found them.

    That’s my girl. Up we go now. He scooped me up. The list of clues slipped from my hands and floated to the floor.

    He spun me around. I giggled, clutching the candies.

    Has the explorer found her big prize? Mr. Kotfas came through the kitchen doors and wandered into the dining area. He’d been in America as long as Daddy, but he still rolled his R’s and sang his words together. Sometimes I couldn’t understand him.

    She certainly did. Ohh, but our game required a bit more work this time. Daddy set me down. Didn’t it, my darling?

    Highway lights rushed past my window. I gripped the steering wheel, pressing the grooved vinyl into my palms. The sensation helped sharpen my focus.

    Eighty percent of car accidents were caused by distracted driving. Nearly three thousand of those resulted in deaths. I needed to concentrate.

    Downtown Atlanta glittered against the black horizon. Skyscrapers towered over the freeways, glass giants standing guard over their neon-lit kingdom.

    I veered onto Peachtree Street and skidded to a stop behind a line of traffic. Seriously? Ughh. I hadn’t told Brandy where I was going, just that I needed to step outside. She was going to be pissed if I didn’t get back soon.

    A parking space opened up near restaurant row. I swung into the spot and hopped out. The meter had twenty-two minutes left. Hopefully that was enough time.

    The wind blasted me, whipping my hair into curly black chaos. I zipped myself into Brandy’s fleece jacket, which I’d borrowed without permission, and jogged up the sidewalk. A heady mix of hot oil and fried chicken swirled.

    Memories rushed back to me. Dad and I used to come down here when I was a kid. Sometimes we would race each other on this sidewalk.

    I stifled my emotions and stopped at the corner. Gold letters twirled across a backlit sign. Gypsy Django. It wasn’t the sign I remembered, but there wasn’t another Gypsy Django in Atlanta.

    I tugged on the sturdy black door—also new—and then hesitated. I hadn’t been here in… how long? Five years? Six? What would I say to Mr. Kotfas? Sorry I stopped coming to your restaurant. Dad’s dead, but can you help me figure out if he mailed this stuff?

    Yeah. I hadn’t thought this through. Not even a little bit.

    I released the door as the hostess appeared. Her jewelry glistened beneath diamond-white lights. Glossy tiles stretched around her stiletto heels, her curves wrapped in a chic dress.

    The door swung shut. I yanked it open. Since when did Gypsy Django have a hostess? Mr. Kotfas had always done everything. He even helped the line cooks.

    The hostess gathered a stack of leather-bound menus and led a party of four into the dining room. Classical music drifted from that direction.

    I hurried inside, grabbed a menu, and skimmed the glossy pages. A tiny black 47 marked a veal dish. Was that the price?

    May I help you, miss? A man stationed himself behind the host stand. The lights burned above him, casting a shimmery glaze over his red silk tie.

    I’m here to speak to Mr. Kotfas. I studied the menu. Real quick, do y’all still serve burgers? I’m trying to figure out⁠—

    "We do not serve burgers. He said the word like he’d been chewing on a lemon. And I am unsure who you wish to speak with. We have no staff by the name of Kotfas."

    He’s not staff. He’s the owner.

    Understanding crisscrossed the man’s face. This establishment underwent a change of ownership last fall. I do not know the previous owner, but none of the present owners—there are three—are named Kotfas.

    I fumbled with the menu. The man scowled.

    I-I guess I’m more interested in one of your customers. His name was Nicholas Barrett. He was a regular on Mondays. I should have a picture. I patted my pockets. Where was my phone?

    That name likewise does not sound familiar, nor are we open on Mondays.

    I froze. You’re not?

    We are open to the public Tuesday through Sunday. Mondays are reserved for staff meetings.

    Since when?

    Our grand reopening. That was in November. He pried the menu away from me. Is there anything else I may assist you with?

    Um, no. I-I don’t think so. My shoulders sagged as I ambled outside.

    A blast of cold air tunneled through downtown. I stuffed my hands into the fuzzy pockets of Brandy’s jacket. The locket and scavenger hunt took up one side. Dad’s keys scraped my knuckles in the other.

    Gypsy Django had been Dad’s favorite restaurant. Mr. Kotfas was his friend. Why hadn’t he mentioned any of this?

    Then again, maybe I hadn’t been paying attention. That was possible, but it didn’t explain everything—like where Dad had gone the Monday before his trip.

    And where he’d gone every Monday since November.

    The ceiling fan shed light on my deconstructed living room. Dad’s TV, with its dusty stand, had been staged by the door. The wall was blank, no more Rosie, and the Christmas tree was off for the first time in two weeks.

    My teary gaze lingered on the bundle of plastic branches. Dad and I had this habit of leaving the Christmas lights on for whoever was coming home last. I’d left them on this entire time.

    An ache penetrated my chest.

    Brandy’s five-ten frame filled the doorway to my room. There you are. She crossed to the den in three strides. Where were you? We were getting worried.

    I wasn’t worried, a male voice called.

    Dave traipsed out of my bedroom. A guy with dark skin a tinge lighter than ebony followed—Dave’s latest recruit for his parkour and free-running team.

    Hey. I couldn’t remember the guy’s name. Thanks for helping out tonight.

    Welcome. It’s not a problem. He pushed up his sleeves. We’re goin’ pretty fast. You don’t have much stuff.

    My stomach soured. He’d made the comment offhandedly, not as an insult, but it reminded me of how broke Dad and I were. How broke I was.

    We tried to call. Dave held up my phone and gave it a jiggle. It was plugged in by your bed.

    I took the device. Thanks.

    Ty texted you. One of Dave’s pale eyebrows slid up. Figured you’d wanna know.

    The twitch in my eye returned with a vengeance. Ty had gone skiing with his parents and their family friends, some kind of stupid tradition they had. He knew about Dad. They all did. Ty was fully aware I had a deadline to move out, but he’d gone anyway.

    Jerk.

    Well? I woke up my phone. Has he apologized yet?

    Brandy snorted. Doubt it.

    Listen, I wouldn’t know, Dave said. I only saw the notification.

    I did a double take. My app had marked the message as read. You didn’t open this?

    Not me. Dave sent a questioning look to Brandy. She raised her hands in a show of innocence.

    This happened the other night, too. With an email. The message had been marked as read, even though I hadn’t seen it.

    You never answered my question. Brandy pushed through the messy den, ponytail swinging. Where’d you go?

    I grimaced. Gypsy Django.

    That place your dad used to go? Her eyes narrowed. Isn’t that downtown?

    More like midtown, I’d say.

    You drove to—? Brandy squeezed a fist. "How could you do that when you knew Dave was on his way with the truck? After I explained, in great detail, that we’re out of time. If we don’t get this stuff out⁠—"

    Okay! Dave clapped his hands and rubbed them together. Time for us to keep packing. He nudged the new guy, and they retreated to my bedroom.

    I’m sorry, I said when they were out of earshot. I know I shouldn’t have left, but I had to do something. It was important.

    I get it. I do, but— She gathered a breath, like whatever she was about to say required new strength.

    What?

    Something’s going on with my folks. Really with my mom. She doesn’t think we’re equipped to handle this situation.

    What situation? Me moving in with y’all? My guts twisted. Did you tell them I’m willing to pay rent? The movie theater by your house is hiring. I’ll apply this week. Whatever I need to do.

    My dad’s fine with that, but my mom… I haven’t known how to talk to you about this.

    About what? Bee, tell me.

    After I left for work the other day, my mom heard you talking to someone. Brandy averted her gaze. She thought you were on the phone, but then she found you digging through my closet. You were looking for something, and you were frantic over it. Then she realized— Her eyes met mine. You weren’t on the phone.

    My jaw slid out of place.

    You were saying stuff about your dad, about how he couldn’t be dead. She said it sounded like crazy talk, like you weren’t mentally there or… She punctuated her explanation with a sharp sigh.

    I-I don’t remember doing that.

    It’s gotta be trauma. You’ve always had hang-ups because of your mom’s— You know. Stuff. My parents think your dad’s death sent you over some proverbial cliff. She gripped my shoulders. Do you get what I’m saying?

    No. I don’t. Does your mom think I’m crazy? Do you?

    What was in the package? The edges of her mouth turned down. It wasn’t from the liaison, was it?

    I shook my head.

    Kat, what’s going on? And don’t say it’s nothing. I know you.

    I pulled out the list of clues and handed it over. It’s one of my dad’s scavenger hunts. It was in the package, and this was with it. I set the gold locket in her other hand. I went to Gypsy Django to talk to my dad’s friend about this stuff.

    You think your dad sent you a scavenger hunt? She held up the paper. In the mail?

    It’s all in his handwriting.

    She didn’t say anything for a long moment, but she didn’t need to. The lines sinking into her tan face—across her forehead, around her pear-green eyes—spoke louder than words ever could have.

    Everyone thought I was crazy. Maybe I was.

    The ceiling fan added a swish swish swish to the tense silence. Dave’s voice floated out of my room, followed by the rustling of clothes and the scraping of metal against metal. Sounded like the guys were in my closet.

    I’m not saying my dad mailed this stuff from the grave. My voice turned raspy, threatening to crack. He must have sent the package before his flight.

    I want you to see something. Brandy scooted past me and retrieved the mailer. This is a customs form. See? She placed her finger on a thin square piece of paper. Look at the sender’s name.

    I examined the gray letters scrawled into the carbon-copy paper. The return address was illegible, but the sender’s name was crystal clear.

    Levi Pavel.

    My pulse quickened. Impossible.

    I know how badly you must miss your dad. Brandy wrapped an arm around me. But babe? There’s been no mistake. He didn’t survive that plane crash⁠—

    Bee.

    —and he didn’t send you this package.

    Bee, listen to me. Dad lived in Braşov. He told me a bunch of stories right before his trip. I flipped the mailer and showed her the postmark. That’s where this package was sent from.

    That doesn’t mean he sent it.

    I know, but there has to be a connection. Somehow. I shook my head, trying to organize my thoughts. Levi Pavel was a friend of my dad’s, but this package can’t be from him.

    Of course it can. It is. He heard about the plane crash, saw it on the news or whatever, and sent you this stuff. The locket is a condolence gift.

    "I went to Gypsy Django tonight to see Dad’s Romanian friend. His only Romanian friend. Everyone else he knew, all his other friends and family, are dead."

    All? Her brow pinched. What do you mean by that? How’s that even possible?

    Because they died in the revolution that happened over there. That’s what I’m trying to tell you. Levi Pavel couldn’t have sent me anything. He died in 1989.

    Bucharest

    Map of Romania with Bucharest marked

    3. Voyage

    WEDNESDAY, MAY 29 (FIVE MONTHS LATER)

    L adies and gentlemen, it’s my pleasure to welcome you to Henri Coandă International Airport. The flight attendant’s delicate voice pealed through the PA system.

    The plane rocked, touching down. I death-gripped the armrests.

    Do exercise caution whilst opening the overhead lockers, the flight attendant purred. We ask that you wait until the captain has turned off the Fasten Seat Belt sign before moving ’round the cabin. Thank you for flying with us.

    I released the armrests and watched the color return to my knuckles. Turbulence. All the way from London. The chances of an accident were low, statistically speaking, but turbulence was the reason Dad’s flight had crashed.

    Well, one of the reasons.

    The plane ground to a halt, and the seat belt light dimmed. Ding! An orchestra of snaps filled the cabin. Two blondes in my row moved to the aisle. The younger one made eye contact with me and pointed at the overhead bin.

    I thumbed behind me. My stuff’s back there.

    The girl nodded and helped her mom with their carry-ons. I powered up my phone.

    A tiny blue envelope appeared on my screen. I figured it was a message from Brandy and opened it.

    You make it to Romania? Miss you. Thinking of you. Xx

    Bitter, inky blackness filtered into my stomach. My phone indicated the sender was a former classmate of mine, but the Xx was Ty’s trademark. Shorthand for kiss kiss.

    A second message chimed.

    Had a chance to hit the bike track. Couldn’t stand the thought of going without you… Can’t we talk?

    Yep. Definitely Ty.

    I stared at the empty seats. Passengers had smashed into the aisle and were pressing forward little by little.

    Do not text him back, I warned myself, tears rising. Don’t do it.

    My thoughts shifted from Ty to the girl he’d slept with. Someone had sent me a pic of them together, and I had decided to keep it—an ever-present reminder that my ex, with his pathetic excuses, could not be trusted.

    I navigated to the folder and tapped the icon, launching the god-awful pic onto my screen. My eyes heated, but I refused to look away.

    The girl sat on Ty’s lap, head tipped back while he kissed her slender neck. Honey-brown hair, streaked in lowlights and highlights, cascaded down her back. Her lips were over-Botoxed. Her sweater looked like it had been painted on, the neckline scooping low and showing off her cleavage.

    I firmed up my chin. Tried to. Why couldn’t European snow bunnies be gross and ugly or—at the very least—repulsed by my cheating boyfriend?

    Ex-boyfriend, I reminded myself. For nearly five months now.

    Warm streams spilled. I navigated to my contacts. That former classmate was likely an innocent bystander, but I deleted his number anyway. It was either that or manually block him. Either way, Ty wouldn’t be able to reach me from that number again.

    Somebody cleared his throat. Might have been the second time he’d done it, actually. I wiped my face and twisted around.

    A guy who looked about my age stood in the aisle, adjusting his huge, thick-rimmed glasses—what Brandy called grandpa glasses, even though people our age wore them. He gestured for me to go ahead.

    "Uh, vorbiţi engleză?" I was trying to ask if he spoke English.

    The guy fought a smile, and I knew I’d butchered the pronunciation. Dad had never taught me Romanian, and I couldn’t afford language programs. Had to settle for YouTube videos in the months leading up to this trip.

    The guy erased his amusement and nodded. Da. Yes.

    I pointed at an overhead bin at the back of the plane. It was the only bin still closed. My backpack’s in there.

    He glanced at the bin.

    I was going to let everyone else go first… My explanation trailed off as the guy pushed through the line of passengers and angled for the bin.

    A woman huffed, squeezing past him. I had one foot in the aisle when she brushed past me, her frumpy heels thump-thump-thumping. Other passengers followed her lead.

    Lava rose in my cheeks.

    Grandpa Glasses retrieved my backpack and returned it to me. I mumbled thanks, did a one-eighty, and fast-walked off the plane with my head down and my face hot.

    Thankfully, nobody seemed annoyed by the time I processed through Customs. The terminal funneled into a baggage claim filled with duty-free shops, souvenir kiosks, and luggage carousels.

    The passengers from my flight gathered around a carousel labeled with a yellow number four. Not a digital four. An actual printed sign. The conveyor belt cranked to life, and a horrible noise, like metal being forced into a meat grinder, dampened all other sounds.

    Five minutes ticked by, then ten, and not a single bag had appeared. Was this normal? No one else seemed alarmed.

    I took a calming breath and decided to work on the scavenger hunt. The paper had thinned along the creases from where I’d folded and unfolded it so many times.

    I unfolded it yet again and reviewed the

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