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Maya Daniels climbed the stairs to her apartment, her heels tapping a weary rhythm against the cracked cement steps. The building, an aging structure on Ashmere Drive, groaned quietly under the weight of the evening breeze. Each step echoed in the narrow stairwell, bouncing off walls painted in a shade of gray that had seen better decades.
She paused on the second-floor landing, fishing through her oversized leather purse, the one expensive thing she'd kept from her old life. A tube of lipstick, receipts from the courthouse cafeteria, and finally her keys, tangled around a small stuffed elephant keychain that Anna, her daughter, had given her last Christmas. "Mom, this is my Christmas gift for you. Hope you'll take me to Santa?" Anna had said.
She glanced down at her wristwatch 8:15 PM. Earlier than usual.
"At least there's that," she murmured to herself, remembering the string of fourteen-hour days that had become her norm since opening her practice.
She paused outside her door, exhaling slowly. The air was thick with the scent of diesel fumes and something fried, probably Mrs. Foster's spring rolls again wafting from a neighbor's open window. A dull headache pulsed at her temples, the kind that came from squinting at legal documents under fluorescent lights all day, but she welcomed the silence of the corridor.
Finally. Home.
Since she'd left her high-paying but soul-numbing job at Herndon & Associates and launched her own modest law firm, "Daniels Legal Consult," life had shifted gears drastically. No more chauffeured commutes in the back of sleek cars, no more catered lunches with clients who treated her like decoration, no more red-lipped bosses like Patricia Herndon who stole her ideas in boardrooms and presented them as their own brilliant insights.
"We think it would be better coming from someone with more... gravitas," Patricia had said during Maya's last partnership review, her manicured fingers drumming against the mahogany table. "You understand."
Maya had understood perfectly. She'd understood that no matter how many cases she won, how many clients she brought in, how many late nights she sacrificed, she would always be seen as the young black woman who should be grateful for the opportunity.
Now, there were court documents spread across her tiny kitchen table, late-night dinners of whatever she could microwave in under three minutes, and the constant gnawing fear of failure. The kind of fear that woke her at 3 AM, calculating and recalculating her dwindling savings account. But freedom? Freedom was hers.
She smiled faintly as she fished for her keys in her purse, already imagining Anna's small feet padding across the floor to greet her, probably in those oversized bunny slippers she refused to take off, even in summer.
"Mom!" Anna would call out, launching herself into Maya's arms with the kind of uninhibited joy that made every sacrifice worthwhile. "Guess what happened at school today!"
Then her phone buzzed.
Another message.
She tapped the screen with her thumb, FLASH SALE: 50% OFF shoes and accessories. Today only! Your cart is waiting...
She rolled her eyes. That made it the tenth promotion today, maybe the fifteenth. She didn't even make the mistake of buying from online stores to avoid spamming her phone with notifications. But somehow she still managed to get them.
"Good grief," she muttered, swiping it away with more force than necessary.
Finally, she slipped the key into the lock and turned it. The bolt clicked, and she stepped inside.
Darkness.
Total, unsettling, unnatural darkness.
Her fingers froze on the doorknob, still clutching her keys. The elephant keychain dangled silently.
"Anna?" she called out, her voice carrying that sing-song quality she always used when she came home. "Honey pie? Mom's home!"
Silence.
Not the comfortable silence of a child absorbed in homework or television. This was different. Empty. Wrong.
She flipped the light switch beside the door.
Nothing happened.
No warm glow from the living room lamp with its faded yellow shade, no sound of the cartoons Anna usually played too loud on the living room TV, something with talking animals that Maya had learned to tune out, no scent of popcorn or microwaved leftovers lingering in the air.
Her heart skipped.
"Power outage," she whispered to herself, but even as she said it, she could see the digital clock on the microwave glowing green through the kitchen doorway. 8:18 PM.
She stepped further in, setting her purse on the small entry table with deliberate care, as if maintaining normalcy could somehow make this normal. The room was cold, too cold for July. She moved quickly to the window and yanked the curtains aside. Streetlight poured in, casting long shadows across the small apartment, illuminating the space in harsh, unfamiliar angles.
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