The brisk wind nipped at her bare ankles as Eve skipped down the stone steps of the school building. It was chilly, but the sun was still shining down on the yard spread out like a canvas before her, illuminating everything in a soft, ever-so-slightly golden glow. The grass was a brilliant shade of green, and little crocuses and daffodils were just beginning to poke out of the soil. The trees, too, were finally waking up again after their long winter’s sleep, their leaves unfolding as though to say that even the most frigid of winters couldn’t break their spirit. Eve couldn’t help but smile at the almost idyllic scene. Spring had always been her favorite time of year, when everything was fresh and new and so, so beautiful. She took a deep breath in and exhaled, relishing the smell of the season.
“Ready to go?” a voice spoke from just behind Eve’s right shoulder. She turned around and was greeted by the sight of Hannah, her best and oldest friend. The girl was of a slight, petite build, with bright blue eyes and an explosion of blonde curls atop her head, and sported a cranberry-colored cabled sweater despite the changing weather and a grin that seemed to foretell merry mischief.
“Of course,” Eve replied, grinning right back. They made their way to Hannah’s car amid jokes and fits of giggles, carefree and untroubled by the world. Eve hopped into the passenger seat of the old sedan with the faded paint and the seemingly permanent smell of the coffee Hannah had spilled the previous fall and could never quite get out of the carpeted floor of the vehicle. Hannah took her place in the driver’s seat, and not a minute later, two other girls leaped into the back seat.
“Sorry we’re late! Stupid English teacher kept me after class again,” said one of them. This was Abby, the third friend in their group of four. Abby was always running late. That was just who she was, a hectic hurricane that charged through life without stopping to think. None of them minded, though; she always came through when it really mattered. The other girl, who was too busy scrolling through her phone to say a word, was Rebecca. She was Abby’s twin sister, obsessed with everything social media and fashion. It would be easy to assume that she was a shallow person with little to no academic interests, but she was equally enthusiastic about math and science.
Hannah rolled her eyes and started the car. They were going to Eve’s house like they always did after school. It was a few miles away down a winding back road that hardly anybody ever used, but that had its fair share of accidents. Eve’s mother was always concerned about them taking such a hazardous route, but Eve had always brushed the protestations off. They were careful, so what did it matter? Besides, the road was pretty much deserted at that time of day anyway.
They were zipping by down that road, the trees blurring together outside the car window, when, in the corner of her eye, Eve saw another car heading towards them, driven by some guy whose face she didn’t recognize. At first, she thought nothing of it. But then the other car suddenly swerved straight into their car’s path. She could feel the panic rising up in her chest like a tidal wave, and she barely had time to scream before the two cars collided head-on.
Suddenly she was immersed in pain. She was on fire. Her veins were flowing with acid. She was being simultaneously crushed by an unimaginable weight and exploded from the inside. Every fiber in her body had been shattered, ripped apart, shredded until there was nothing left of her. All of this pain was compacted into and instant, and then… Nothing.
What felt like millennia later, she opened her eyes. At first, she recognized nothing, her surroundings hazy and her vision still blurry. Then her vision cleared, and she saw a face that she instantly recognized as the driver of the other car. Her head still pulsing a bit with the lingering pain of the crash, she locked eyes with the driver, unable to comprehend what was happening in between the headache and the nausea she felt like a rising tide in her stomach.
“You,” she mumbled, barely able to breathe out the words. “Who… Who are you?”
@Daemonic
“Ready to go?” a voice spoke from just behind Eve’s right shoulder. She turned around and was greeted by the sight of Hannah, her best and oldest friend. The girl was of a slight, petite build, with bright blue eyes and an explosion of blonde curls atop her head, and sported a cranberry-colored cabled sweater despite the changing weather and a grin that seemed to foretell merry mischief.
“Of course,” Eve replied, grinning right back. They made their way to Hannah’s car amid jokes and fits of giggles, carefree and untroubled by the world. Eve hopped into the passenger seat of the old sedan with the faded paint and the seemingly permanent smell of the coffee Hannah had spilled the previous fall and could never quite get out of the carpeted floor of the vehicle. Hannah took her place in the driver’s seat, and not a minute later, two other girls leaped into the back seat.
“Sorry we’re late! Stupid English teacher kept me after class again,” said one of them. This was Abby, the third friend in their group of four. Abby was always running late. That was just who she was, a hectic hurricane that charged through life without stopping to think. None of them minded, though; she always came through when it really mattered. The other girl, who was too busy scrolling through her phone to say a word, was Rebecca. She was Abby’s twin sister, obsessed with everything social media and fashion. It would be easy to assume that she was a shallow person with little to no academic interests, but she was equally enthusiastic about math and science.
Hannah rolled her eyes and started the car. They were going to Eve’s house like they always did after school. It was a few miles away down a winding back road that hardly anybody ever used, but that had its fair share of accidents. Eve’s mother was always concerned about them taking such a hazardous route, but Eve had always brushed the protestations off. They were careful, so what did it matter? Besides, the road was pretty much deserted at that time of day anyway.
They were zipping by down that road, the trees blurring together outside the car window, when, in the corner of her eye, Eve saw another car heading towards them, driven by some guy whose face she didn’t recognize. At first, she thought nothing of it. But then the other car suddenly swerved straight into their car’s path. She could feel the panic rising up in her chest like a tidal wave, and she barely had time to scream before the two cars collided head-on.
Suddenly she was immersed in pain. She was on fire. Her veins were flowing with acid. She was being simultaneously crushed by an unimaginable weight and exploded from the inside. Every fiber in her body had been shattered, ripped apart, shredded until there was nothing left of her. All of this pain was compacted into and instant, and then… Nothing.
What felt like millennia later, she opened her eyes. At first, she recognized nothing, her surroundings hazy and her vision still blurry. Then her vision cleared, and she saw a face that she instantly recognized as the driver of the other car. Her head still pulsing a bit with the lingering pain of the crash, she locked eyes with the driver, unable to comprehend what was happening in between the headache and the nausea she felt like a rising tide in her stomach.
“You,” she mumbled, barely able to breathe out the words. “Who… Who are you?”
@Daemonic