The Echo Between Us

The words hung in the air between us like a death sentence. *The last time we were together, the world burned.*

Callum's face went completely still, his green eyes searching mine with an intensity that made my chest tight. "What did you just say?"

Before I could answer, every piece of electronic equipment in the apartment began to spark and hiss. The monitoring devices disguised as everyday objects—the coffee maker, the television, the digital thermostat—all flickered and died in rapid succession. The overhead lights strobed once, twice, then plunged us into complete darkness.

"Sloane?" Callum's voice cut through the blackness, closer than I expected.

"I'm here." My words came out as barely a whisper. In the darkness, every other sense seemed amplified. I could hear his breathing, steady but quickened. Could smell the faint scent of his cologne mixed with something uniquely him—warm skin and the lingering trace of coffee.

Footsteps shuffled across the hardwood floor as he moved toward me. "The backup power should kick in any second."

But the seconds stretched into minutes, and we remained trapped in absolute darkness. I'd instinctively backed toward what I thought was the bedroom doorway, my hands groping for the wall.

"Careful," Callum's voice was much closer now, maybe three feet away. "There's a coffee table somewhere around here."

I took another step backward and felt my shoulders hit the bedroom door frame. The space suddenly felt impossibly small, intimate in a way that made my pulse race. We were standing in complete darkness, and I could feel his breath on my collarbone.

The memory hit me without warning—not the violent end this time, but something softer, more dangerous.

*Candlelight flickered across stone walls as Callum's fingers traced the curve of my jaw. "I've waited three lifetimes to find you again, Aria," he whispered against my ear. His thumb brushed across my lower lip, and I could taste the salt air from the Mediterranean coast on his skin.*

I gasped, jerking back to the present, but the phantom sensation of his touch lingered on my skin.

"Sloane." His voice had changed, dropped to something lower, more intimate. "I can see you."

"That's impossible. It's pitch black."

"Not with my eyes." His hand found mine in the darkness, fingers intertwining with a familiarity that should have been impossible. "There's something else. Something deeper. I can feel exactly where you are, like you're glowing."

His thumb traced across my knuckles, and the simple touch sent electricity shooting up my arm. The rational part of my mind screamed warnings—this was exactly what Dr. Ashworth had warned us about, the connection deepening, the resonance building to dangerous levels.

But in the darkness, with his warmth so close I could feel the heat radiating from his body, rational thought felt impossibly far away.

"Tell me about the world burning," he said softly, his forehead coming to rest against mine. "Tell me what you remember."

His breath was warm against my lips, and I could feel the steady rhythm of his heartbeat through the thin fabric of his shirt. Every instinct I had was screaming at me to step away, to maintain professional distance, to remember that proximity between us was literally dangerous.

Instead, I found myself leaning closer.

"I remember fire," I whispered, my voice barely audible in the darkness. "Blue flames that didn't burn. And I remember you trying to save everyone, even when you knew it was too late."

His free hand came up to cup my face, his thumb tracing the line of my cheekbone. "I remember your eyes. Even when everything else was falling apart, I could always find you by your eyes."

The space between us seemed to shrink with every breath. I could feel the warmth of his skin, could smell the faint scent of his shampoo mixed with something uniquely him. His lips were so close to mine that if I tilted my head up just slightly...

"Sloane," he breathed, and I could hear the question in my name, the same desperate hope I felt building in my chest.

I was about to close the distance between us, about to let three hundred years of separation collapse into this single moment, when the emergency lighting system suddenly blazed to life.

The harsh fluorescent glare hit us like a physical blow, and we sprang apart as if we'd been caught doing something illegal. Which, considering Dr. Ashworth's warnings about our connection, maybe we had been.

Callum ran a hand through his hair, his face flushed in the stark emergency lighting. "I should... we should check the other rooms. Make sure everything's okay."

"Right. Yes. Good idea." My voice sounded breathless, unsteady, completely unprofessional.

But as we moved through the apartment, checking the dead electronics and waiting for the main power to return, I couldn't shake the feeling that something fundamental had shifted in those fifteen minutes of darkness. The air between us felt charged now, electric in a way that had nothing to do with the building's power grid.

When the main lights finally flickered back on, the monitoring equipment began its startup sequence with a series of electronic beeps and whirs. Within minutes, every screen in the apartment was displaying readings that made my blood run cold.

Our resonance values had spiked during the blackout, but more terrifying than that was the geographic display showing a slowly expanding circle centered on our building. The power outage hadn't been limited to the apartment—we'd somehow affected the electrical grid for three city blocks.

My phone rang before I could fully process the implications. Dr. Ashworth's face appeared on the screen, but his expression wasn't the concerned frown I expected. Instead, he looked almost... excited.

"Excellent," he said without preamble. "The energy discharge was exactly what we hoped for. Much stronger than the historical records suggested."

"Dr. Ashworth, we caused a blackout. Three blocks of residential buildings lost power because of us."

"Minor collateral damage. The important thing is that your combined resonance is building toward the threshold we need." His eyes gleamed with something that looked disturbingly like satisfaction. "We can move to the next phase."

Ice flooded my veins. "Next phase of what?"

"I'll explain everything tomorrow. For now, just know that you're both exactly where you need to be." His smile was sharp, predatory. "The energy levels are perfect. We can proceed as planned."

The call ended, leaving Callum and me staring at each other in the harsh apartment lighting. But Dr. Ashworth's final words echoed in my mind, and a terrible realization began to take shape.

We weren't being monitored to prevent a disaster.

We were being cultivated to create one.

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