Luna lines
bright lights, and the second thing I notice is the
shock as I recognized the person sitt
irk on his lips, and if I didn't know better
you real? I asked in a frustrated and completely baffled to
his impossible reality. "The Inkwell." He says simply, nodding to
some bizarre dream. "The inkwell?" I echo,
in that quaint little shop. It's no ordinary object, Emma. It carries power, ancient and
pkeeper had warned me about, is responsible for this? "But that doesn't make any sense," I whi
the chair, his dark ey
to the desires, the intentions of its owne
as sitting at my desk, pouring my soul into a story t
ed, as if the story had been waiting for m
y eyes shut and shaking my head. This is just
there, a small, amused smile playing on his
walls to start melting or something equally drea
rewolf sitting beside my bed. What....am I suppos
you want, Emma. You brought me here, and now our fates are intertwined. You cou
r down my spine. Write
er now? The thought is both
t," I admitted, pulling the b
s. I just wanted to write..
hy in his eyes. I understand. You were searching for something, and t
ips a beat.
table. It's tied to your emotions, your deepest desires. You may think
an respond, the lights in the room flicker-once, twic
for the lamp on my bedside table. My fingers final
darkness, but there's an edge to it now, some
ough the room-like the rustling of paper mixed with a low, ominous hum.
ll. The room fills with an unnatural energy, thick and heavy, making it hard to breathe. Then, out of nowhere, a gust of wind whips through the room, strong enough to knock over the
f a truck, knocking the breath from my lungs. I'm thrown to the ground, the world spinning around me, as darkness sw