The door was still there. Unlocked. Unguarded.
And for the first time, she walked not in panic, but in peace. She opened the door. The hallway was cold. The air tasted like escape.
Time, which had congealed into amber, began to flow again. She drew a shuddering breath. Her fingers, which had been reaching for the doorframe, now dropped to her side. She had been trying to leave. That was the sin. That was why he had spoken the word.
Amirah looked at the door, then at him. She remembered the date: 20.09.2024 . A Thursday. Nothing special. Except that in her pocket, folded like a smuggled prayer, was a one-way ticket and a new identity. The freeze hadn’t been his power. It had been her own fear. Freeze - Amirah Adara - Free To leave -20.09.2024-
She smiled back. A small, devastating curve of her lips.
But something had changed in the space between her heartbeats. She looked past him, past the cold dinner on the marble island, past the memory of slammed cabinets and the shattered wine glass he’d made her clean up with her bare hands.
She was already gone.
He smiled, mistaking her stillness for submission. “See? You don’t need to leave.”
The command hung in the sterile air of the loft, a single word that acted less like a request and more like a law of physics. Amirah Adara became a statue of flesh and breath, her lungs paused mid-cycle, her eyes fixed on the rain-streaked window overlooking a city that had forgotten her.
Behind her, he didn’t say the word. He knew it wouldn’t work anymore. The door was still there
He circled her. Not with malice, but with the quiet curiosity of a collector examining a rare acquisition. The loft was theirs, a glass-and-steel mausoleum twenty stories above the chaos. Outside, taxis bled light into wet streets. Inside, only the metronome of his footsteps and the soft hum of the refrigerator broke the silence.
“Good,” he murmured, and the word was a key turning in a lock.
“You’re right,” she said. “I don’t need to.” And for the first time, she walked not