too lazy to do it properly, silly man
Cosimo Galluzzi
noise dept.
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
Misplaced Lens Cap
will byers stan first human second
DEAR READER

ellievsbear
$LAYYYTER

Love Begins
Cosmic Funnies
Three Goblin Art

Discoholic đȘ©

@theartofmadeline
I'd rather be in outer space đž

izzy's playlists!

â

Andulka
Not today Justin
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seen from United States
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@zurific
too lazy to do it properly, silly man
Gives eyeless jack some smoochies
heheh
the way u draw ejs mask is so satisfying đ„č
hehe thank u... ^_^
Heâs just keeping that smile nice & wide!
my doodles
My favourite guy! I honestly loved playing around with his designđȘČ
I missed drawing him so muchhhhhh
first one looks like trash ive been so lazy w my doodles lately
my ej headcanons. i never really saw him as a white man. i dont think heâd be slender either, i think heâd be pretty muscular from all his hunting. dont look too close or you might notice heâs loosely based off toji fushiguro
i think he was frail and weak in the beginning, and overtime got stronger. the organs he eats has a lot of fat and protein, so mixed with all the physical activity and walking he HAS to do, he is strong. it's mostly focused on his arms and back.
Lady in Pink
Summery: A pastel-dressed stranger arrives at a quiet town in the year 1960s, and without ever lifting a finger, she makes the truth impossible to keep buried.
àšà§ word count: 13k
àšà§ note: ê° my little attempt at writing a creepypasta story for my OC! i do hope you enjoy. â€ïžïž ê±
The first real warm spell of March came late that year, like it had to be coaxed out of the ground. Snow still clung in thin, dirty ridges along the shoulders of Route 6, but the air had softened enough that folks unbuttoned their coats on Main Street and pretended it meant something. In a town like Briar Glen, that kind of pretending was a hobby. You counted your days by church bulletins and school calendars, by the hours the mill whistle kept, by who waved first at the post office window. Nothing happened quickly. Nothing happened loudly. Not unless it was a fire.
On Monday morning, the bulletin board outside Halvorsonâs Pharmacy had a new notice pinned beneath the supper announcements: a neat sheet of paper, typed, with the words EVICTION NOTICE in hard black letters. It was already damp at the corners from the fog that rolled off the creek overnight. Someone had tried to pull it down, maybe, because one tack was bent and the paper hung a little crooked. Still, it stayed there, stubborn as a scab.
Mrs. Nettleton from across the street stood with her purse tucked into her elbow, staring like the notice had called her name.
âThatâs the Dobsons,â she said to nobody in particular, then turned her mouth toward Ruth Emery as Ruth came up the sidewalk with a paper bag of rolls. âHe canât do that to them. Not with the baby still coughing like sheâs got gravel in her lungs.â
Ruthâs hair was pinned up under a scarf, the chill clinging to her cheeks. âHe can,â she replied, simple as that, and glanced at the notice like she didnât want it to look back. âHe owns the building. Thatâs what he told the council, anyway.â
âItâs that landlord,â Mrs. Nettleton hissed, voice dropping the way it did whenever the subject felt dangerous. âMr. Hart. Heâd squeeze a penny till it squealed.â
Ruth adjusted the bag in her arms. âHeâs been saying the wiringâs bad for years. He never fixes it. Just threatens.â
âBecause heâs waiting for something,â Mrs. Nettleton said, as if sheâd just said something clever. âMark me. Heâs waiting.â
Ruthâs gaze drifted from the eviction notice down the street, toward the front windows of the little bakery that used to be a dress shop, toward the row of parked cars that always seemed to lean a little from the slope in the road. A pale pink car was pulled up near the curbânewer than most in town, glossy enough that it looked wrong against all the salt-stained Chevrolets. A young woman stood beside it, as if sheâd been there a while.
She wasnât dressed like the girls who worked the counter at Morrisonâs. She wasnât dressed like the wives who hurried between errands with their lipstick touched up and their gloves shoved into pockets. She wore a pastel pink dress with small white polka dotsâonly on the dress, Ruth noticed, because her eyes went there the way they went to anything that felt intentional. The skirt sat full around her knees, pressed smooth. The shoulders were frilled, soft ruffles that looked almost too delicate for a March wind. White gloves covered her hands, clean and fitted, and a ribbon pinned in her hair caught the light when she turned her head.
For a moment, Ruth couldnât place why the sight pricked at her. It wasnât jealousy. It wasnât admiration either, not exactly. It was the sense of seeing a fine china cup sitting in a barn.
The woman looked up from the bulletin board as if sheâd felt eyes on her, even though sheâd been facing the other way. Her expression was calm, almost mild. She didnât smile widely or look away. She met Ruthâs gaze and held it politely, the way people did when they understood the rules.
Ruth shifted on her feet. âMorning,â she said, because silence in a small town could turn sharp.
âGood morning,â the woman answered, her voice soft and careful.
Mrs. Nettleton looked her up and down with the same frankness she reserved for new curtains in church. âYou visiting family, dear?â
The womanâs eyes flicked to Mrs. Nettletonâs face, then back to the bulletin board, like she was choosing her words. âNo. Iâve taken a room here. For a while.â
Ruth noticed the way she said here. It was factual and unadorned.
Mrs. Nettleton clucked, already forming a story. âWell. Briar Glenâs quiet. If youâre looking for quiet, youâve found it.â
The woman nodded once. Her attention returned to the typed eviction notice, not with gossiping interest but with the same distant focus a person might give a weather report. âQuiet helps,â she said.
That could have been the end of it. New people came through town, sometimes. Salesmen. A cousin from somewhere else. A teacher assigned to the school for a year before getting married and leaving. Briar Glen didnât swallow strangers wholeâit just waited to see if theyâd stay long enough to become ordinary.
But Ruth watched the woman for another beat, because the dress was too pretty for the gray street and because the woman stood in the cold as if she didnât notice it. She didnât shiver. She didnât tug at her sleeves. She looked comfortable in a way that made Ruthâs shoulders tighten under her coat.
âWhatâs your name?â Mrs. Nettleton pressed, because she couldnât help herself.
âLayla,â the woman replied. âLayla Lovelace.â
The last name sounded like something printed on a perfume bottle. Ruth expected Mrs. Nettleton to laugh at it. She didnât. She blinked and nodded slowly, as if accepting it was safer than questioning it.
âWell, Miss Lovelace,â Mrs. Nettleton said, voice turning syrupy, âif you need anything, you can ask Ruth here. She keeps the books at the school and she knows everyone worth knowing.â
Ruth gave Mrs. Nettleton a look that was meant to be a warning. It didnât work.
Laylaâs gaze came back to Ruth. Up close, Ruth noticed her lashes first, dark and long, the kind that made people look half-asleep even when they werenât. Her eyes seemed lowered rather than hidden, not thrown open to the world. Laylaâs mouth held a small, steady curve, like someone who had learned to smile for portraits and never stopped.
âThank you,â Layla said to Ruth. âThatâs kind.â
Ruth cleared her throat. âIâm not hard to find,â she replied, which was true and also an excuse.
Layla didnât ask Ruth about the eviction. She didnât offer sympathy. She didnât act like she was collecting town tragedies for entertainment. She only looked at that notice one more time, then turned slightly, as if preparing to walk on.
Before she did, she said, almost to herself, âPeople always think itâs later than it is.â
Ruth paused. âExcuse me?â
Laylaâs head tilted. Not coy. Just thoughtful. âItâs easy to say youâll fix something. Tomorrow. Next month. After the holidays. But âlaterâ has teeth.â Her voice stayed gentle, like she was discussing bread dough or a loose hem. Then she looked at Ruth again, polite as ever. âI hope your day goes smoothly.â
And then she walked away, steps measured, the skirt of her dress barely moving in the wind. The ribbon in her hair sat neat and sure, like it had been placed with care and would stay there no matter what happened.
Ruth watched her go, feeling a strange irritation she couldnât justify. Not because Layla had been rude. The opposite. Layla had been too composed, too tidy, too finished.
Behind her, Mrs. Nettleton exhaled. âWell,â she said, as if the town had just been handed a new puzzle.
Ruth adjusted the paper bag in her arms and forced herself to move. âSheâs just a woman,â she said, though the words didnât land in her own chest the way she wanted.
âââ đà§ .
That afternoon, Mr. Hartâs building caught fire.
It didnât go up in flames like the movies. It started small, smoldering behind the back wall where the wiring ran crooked through old studs. Someone smelled it first, an acrid bite beneath the usual laundry soap and boiled cabbage. Then there was a shout, and smoke burst from a second-story window. By the time the volunteer fire truck rattled up, its siren whining like a hurt animal, the back staircase had already turned into a chimney.
Ruth stood on the sidewalk with half the town, coat pulled tight, watching smoke roll out like dark cloth. Mrs.Dobson sat on the curb with the baby bundled against her chest, coughing into a handkerchief. Mr.Dobson held their older boy by the shoulder so hard the childâs sweater collar stretched.
Mr. Hart arrived late, pushing through people with his face pale and furious. âWhat happened?â he demanded, voice sharp enough to cut.
A man named Franklin Boone from the mill answered without looking at him. âWiring in the back. Same wiring youâve been âmeaning toâ fix.â
Mr. Hartâs mouth twitched. âYou donât know that.â
Franklinâs gaze lifted. âWe all know it.â
Mr. Hart turned, scanning the crowd like he expected support. Most people looked away. No one wanted to be on his side in public, even if they paid his rent in private.
Ruthâs eyes moved automatically, searching, and she found Layla at the edge of the crowd near Morrisonâs window. She stood slightly apart, hands folded at her waist, white gloves bright against her pink dress. The smoke didnât seem to bother her. She watched the building burn with the same quiet attention sheâd given the eviction notice, like she was observing a clock.
Ruthâs stomach tightened. She told herself it was coincidence. It had to be. Layla had arrived in town the same day a fire started? That meant nothing. Old buildings burned. Bad wiring burned. People ignored problems until they couldnât.
Still, when Laylaâs head turned and her gaze met Ruthâs again, Ruth felt the unpleasant sensation of being recognized.
Layla didnât wave. Didnât call out. She held Ruthâs eyes for a moment, and Ruth had the irrational thought that Layla had been waiting for her to look over.
Then Layla looked away first, as if sheâd gotten what she needed, and drifted off down the sidewalk, swallowed by the crowd and the smoke.
Two days later, Mr. Hart tried to spin the fire into sympathy. He stood in front of the remains, jaw clenched, telling the county man from the paper that heâd been meaning to renovate anyway, that the building had been a loss for years, that heâd do right by the tenants in the end. He said it loud enough for everyone to hear. He said it like he was performing.
âââ đà§ .
By Friday, the county inspector came through and found violations that went back half a decade. Mr. Hartâs policy didnât cover negligence. He lost not only the building but the right to rent out two more properties until they were brought up to code.
Mrs. Dobson didnât get a miracle. She got a local church offering the family a temporary place to stay. She got women bringing casseroles and blankets and quietly arguing with the council about emergency housing. It was messy. It was human. It didnât feel like salvation so much as a town finally admitting it had let things go too far.
Ruth sat at her desk in the school office that afternoon, tapping her pencil against the ledger, listening to the clack of the typewriter as the principalâs secretary typed notices for parents. The air smelled faintly of chalk and wet wool. A bulletin about polio vaccination dates lay on her blotter, corners curling.
She couldnât stop thinking about Laylaâs lineâlater has teethâand she resented it, because it sounded like something youâd find stitched onto a pillow, and yet it had been true.
A knock came at the office door. Before Ruth could answer, it opened.
Layla stepped in as if she belonged there.
She wasnât violating anything. Visitors came in to drop off lunch money or speak to the principal. Still, the sight of her pastel dress in the drab school hallway made the room feel briefly unreal, like someone had placed a magazine cutout against a chalkboard.
âHello again,â Layla said.
Ruth stood automatically. âCan I help you?â
Laylaâs gaze moved across the office, taking in the ledger books, the coat hooks, and a dented metal fan that hadnât been used since September. She didnât linger. She simply noticed.
âIâm looking for the principal,â Layla replied. âIâd like to ask about volunteer work. If itâs needed.â
Ruth blinked. âVolunteer work?â It came out sharper than she meant. âHere?â
Layla nodded. âIf thatâs all right.â
Ruth couldnât imagine Layla helping with cafeteria duty or wiping desks. Layla didnât seem proud or above the work. She simply felt untouched, like someone who didnât leave fingerprints.
âWe always need hands for the book fair,â Ruth said finally, because she didnât know what else to say. âAnd we have a reading program. Younger students. After school.â
âThat would be fine,â Layla answered. No hesitation.
Ruth studied her for a moment, then asked, carefully, âWhere are you staying?â
âA room above Morrisonâs,â Layla said. âMrs. Morrison was kind.â
Of course she was. Mrs.Morrison collected lonely things the way other women collected china. A pretty stranger in a pink dress was exactly the kind of thing sheâd offer tea to, and Ruth imagined Layla sitting at Mrs. Morrisonâs kitchen table with her gloves folded neatly beside her cup, listening to town stories like she was taking notes.
Ruth swallowed. âYou can wait here. Iâll get Mr. Weller.â
Laylaâs eyes softened slightly. âThank you.â
Ruth left the office and walked down the hallway, shoes squeaking faintly on the polished floor. Childrenâs drawings lined the wallsâconstruction paper houses, stick-figure families, bright suns in corners. The building tuned with ordinary life. That was the comfort of it: routine, the illusion that nothing truly changed.
She found the principal in the teachersâ lounge and told him there was a woman asking about volunteering. He followed her back, adjusting his tie, curiosity on his face.
When they returned, Layla was still standing in the office, posture straight but relaxed. She hadnât sat. She hadnât touched anything. She looked like sheâd been placed there and would remain until instructed otherwise.
Mr. Weller put on his friendly voice. âMissâŠ?â
âLovelace,â Layla supplied.
âWell, Miss Lovelace, thatâs very generous. We can always use help, especially with our younger readers.â He smiled. âAre you a teacher?â
Laylaâs gaze met his, calm as a Sunday morning. âNo. Iâm just someone with time.â
Mr. Weller chuckled. âWish I had some of that.â
Layla didnât laugh. She held her small smile, polite but not indulgent. âTime is strange,â she said. âIt feels plentiful until it doesnât.â
Ruth felt her skin prickle. It wasnât what Layla said that was wrong. It was how perfectly it landed, like it had been waiting in the air for someone to step into it.
Mr. Weller, unaware, gestured toward the chair. âPlease, have a seat. Ruth can get the paperwork.â
Layla glanced at the chair, then sat carefully, smoothing her skirt. Her gloved hands rested in her lap. She looked, Ruth realized with mild shock, like a photograph from a womenâs magazineâexcept she was breathing, and there was no glossy sheen to hide the fact that her calmness wasnât for show. It was simply how she existed.
Ruth pulled a volunteer form from the drawer. âYouâll need to fill this out,â she said, sliding it across the desk with a pen.
Layla took the pen with her gloved hand. She wrote neatly, the lines clean, no hesitation, no scribble-outs. Ruth watched the way her wrist moved, precise, like sheâd done it a thousand times.
Outside, the late afternoon sun shifted behind cloud cover, and the office lights seemed a fraction harsher. The typewriter in the next room paused. Somewhere down the hall, a child laughed, then stopped abruptly as if reminded of rules.
When Layla finished, she handed the paper back. Ruth glanced at it. The handwriting was beautiful. The address was Morrisonâs. The date of birth was written, but Ruthâs eyes snagged on it and slid away before she could properly read it, as if her mind refused to hold it.
Laylaâs gaze stayed on Ruthâs face, not accusing, not pleased. Attentive.
Ruth forced herself to speak. âWhat brought you to Briar Glen?â
Laylaâs expression didnât change. âI go where Iâm needed.â
Mr. Weller smiled again, taking it as a harmless turn of phrase. âWell, weâre glad to have you.â
Layla inclined her head, then looked back at Ruth. âYou keep many things running here.â
Ruthâs throat tightened. âItâs just work.â
Laylaâs voice dropped slightly, still gentle. âWork holds places together. People forget that until it slips.â
Ruth wanted to ask what she meant. She wanted to push. She also, suddenly, wanted to be careful, the way you were careful around a loose stair you couldnât afford to fall through.
In the silence that followed, the smell of smoke from Mondayâs fire seemed to rise again in Ruthâs memory, sharp and clinging.
Layla stood, smoothing her skirt once more. âThank you for your help,â she said to Ruth, then to Mr. Weller, âIâll come when you tell me.â
Mr. Weller nodded, already distracted by the next task. âWeâll call.â
Laylaâs small smile returned. âI expect you will.â
She left the office with the same measured steps, and when the door clicked softly behind her, Ruth realized her hands had curled into fists at her sides.
Mr. Weller exhaled, impressed. âWell,â he said, âthatâs a proper young lady.â
Ruth stared at the closed door. âYes,â she replied, because it was true in the way a knife could be proper: clean, sharp, and returned to its place.
âââ đà§ .
That night, Ruth walked home under a sky the color of old steel. The streetlamps buzzed faintly. Radios played behind curtains. The smell of someoneâs supper drifted through the coldâonion and fat and something sweet. The town looked exactly as it always had, and yet Ruth kept catching herself glancing over her shoulder, expecting to see pastel pink at the edge of her vision.
She told herself she was being foolish. A fire was a fire. A landlord had finally met the consequences of his own neglect. A stranger volunteering at the school was, if anything, a blessing.
Still, as Ruth climbed her porch steps, she remembered Laylaâs words again, quiet as a prayer and twice as unsettling.
People always think itâs later than it is.
And for the first time in years, Ruth wondered, not idly but with a sudden tightness in her chest, what in her own life sheâd been pushing off until âlater,â and whether âlaterâ was already on its way.
Inside her house, the phone sat silent on the hallway table, black and heavy. Ruth hung up her coat, washed her hands, and moved through the familiar rooms with a new sense of being observedânot by a person, exactly, but by the weight of her own choices.
Outside, somewhere downtown, a car door shut. Soft footsteps crossed a sidewalk. A ribbon caught a sliver of streetlight and vanished.
Briar Glen, still pretending it was a quiet town, went to sleep with smoke still in its walls and a new name quietly taking root in its memory.
By the next week, the town had done what it always did with a disruption: it folded it into routine until it could pretend it had been expected all along. The Hart building still sat blackened behind a sagging line of caution tape, windows blown out like missing teeth. Men from the county came through in stiff coats and serious hats, poking at beams and taking notes.
The Dobsons were âstaying with Mrs.Kline for now,â which meant two children sleeping on a pullout couch and a baby tucked into a dresser drawer lined with sheets, because people did what they had to do and didnât make a fuss about it afterward.
But beneath the practical bustle, something else began to spread. In Briar Glen, rumors moved quietly, tightening the town by degrees.
It began with small observations that sounded harmless until you stacked them side by side.
Layla Lovelace had shown up on Monday morning, and by Monday afternoon, Hartâs building was burning.
Layla Lovelace had been seen at Morrisonâs counter Tuesday morning, ordering nothing but tea and paying with exact change, and that same afternoon, the county inspectorâs car appeared on the street when it hadnât been due until April.
Layla Lovelace had walked into the school office as if sheâd always had permission. The very next day, a mother arrived furious after the nurse noticed her sonâs bruises and filed a report by the book. A situation that had gone on for months, with everyone meaning to address it eventually, finally snapped into motion.
People didnât say she caused these things. Most of them werenât foolish enough. They simply began to say she wasâŠaround. And they started to say it with the careful tone reserved for weather that could turn.
Ruth Emery heard it first in the teachersâ lounge, where gossip traveled faster than cigarette smoke.
Mrs. Lasky, the third-grade teacher, leaned over her coffee cup and said, âYouâve met her, right? That volunteer. Miss Lovelace.â
Ruth didnât look up from the attendance sheets. âBriefly.â
Mrs. Laskyâs eyes were bright with that particular kind of interest that only came from boredom and nerves mixed together. âSheâs so put-together. Like she stepped out of one of those Sears catalogs.â
âLots of women are put-together,â Ruth replied, keeping her voice mild. She didnât want to feed it. Feeding things in this town made them grow.
âI know.â Mrs. Lasky lowered her voice anyway. âItâs justâŠI donât know. I feel funny when sheâs in the room. Like Iâm supposed to mind my manners.â
Ruthâs pencil paused. She wanted to scoff. She also knew exactly what the woman meant.
âShe signed up for the reading program,â Ruth said, practical. âThatâs all.â
Mrs. Lasky hesitated, then said, âDo you know where she came from?â
âNot really.â
âWell.â Mrs. Lasky took a sip, then set her cup down carefully. âMy sister-in-law swears she saw her in Green Hollow two summers ago.â
Ruthâs eyes lifted despite herself. âGreen Hollowâs two counties over.â
âThatâs what I said.â Mrs. Laskyâs voice tightened with satisfaction at having something interesting to hold. âBut she swears it. Said there was a girl thereâpretty as a doll, always dressed sweetâand there was trouble at the paper mill. A foreman got caught taking money. Whole thing went public. Ruined him. My sister-in-law says that girl was there the week before it happened.â
Ruthâs mouth went dry. âThatâsâŠthin.â
Mrs. Lasky shrugged. âMaybe. Iâm just telling you what she told me.â
Ruth forced her gaze back down to the paper. âPeople see what they want to see.â
âThatâs true,â Mrs. Lasky admitted, but she didnât sound convinced. She sounded pleased to have something to be half-afraid of.
Ruth pushed her chair back and stood before the conversation could grow teeth. âI have to get the mail.â
As she walked down the hall, she could feel the schoolâs usual order trying to settle around herâchildrenâs voices behind doors, the smell of floor polish and chalk dust, the steady rhythm of bells and footsteps. She told herself the town was stirring itself up. Fires happened. Inspectors arrived. Bad men got caught. A pretty volunteer didnât mean anything.
Still, when she turned the corner toward the front office, she saw Layla at the end of the hallway, and her stomach gave that small, involuntary lurch of recognition.
Layla stood beside a row of childrenâs coats, speaking softly to a boy Ruth recognizedâEddie Pell, a second-grader with constant sniffles and a talent for disappearing at recess. Eddieâs shoulders were hunched as if he expected to be scolded.
Layla wasnât scolding him.
She held his mitten in her gloved hands, turning it over as if inspecting a tear in the seam. Her posture was relaxed. Her voice, when it reached Ruth, was gentle and measured, like she was telling him something ordinary.
ââŠitâs easier to lose things when youâre rushing,â Layla said. âDo you rush often?â
Eddie stared at the floor. âI donât mean to.â
âI know.â Laylaâs head tilted slightly. Observant. âBut you do it anyway.â
Eddie swallowed. âMy dad gets mad when Iâm slow.â
Layla didnât react in a way that showed shock or pity. She simply looked at him for a long moment, as if weighing something invisible.
âSome people call it impatience,â she said, quiet. âSometimes itâs something else.â
Eddie blinked up at her, confused.
Layla folded the mitten neatly and handed it back to him. âIf you cannot be slow at home, you can be slow here. Itâs safe to take your time in this building.â
The boyâs face softened with something like relief, but he didnât know what to do with it. He nodded once, then ranâstill rushingâdown the hall.
Layla watched him go, then turned her gaze toward Ruth as if sheâd known Ruth was there the entire time.
âGood morning,â Layla said.
Ruth felt oddly caught, like sheâd walked in on something private. âMorning.â
Laylaâs eyes drifted to the stack of mail in Ruthâs arms. âYou carry many small things for other people.â
âItâs part of the job.â Ruth kept her voice even. She refused to let it become a confession.
Layla nodded as if she accepted that. âYes. It is.â
Ruth could have walked past her. She could have kept it simple. But the conversation in the teachersâ lounge lingered in her head like smoke trapped in fabric.
âMrs. Lasky thinks she saw you in Green Hollow,â Ruth said, blunt enough to surprise herself. âTwo summers ago.â
If Layla was startled, she didnât show it. She only blinked once, slowly, and her small smile stayed in place.
âPeople mistake faces,â Layla replied. âAnd they mistake timing.â
âThatâs not an answer.â
âIt is,â Layla said, softly.
Ruth held her gaze. âWhy are you here, Layla?â
The use of her name shifted Laylaâs expression by the smallest degree, leaving it less pleasant and more direct.
âI told you,â Layla said. âI go where Iâm needed.â
Ruthâs jaw tightened. âThat sounds like something you say when you donât want to tell the truth.â
Laylaâs eyes lowered for a second, then lifted again. âIt is the truth. It just isnât the one you want.â
Ruth felt heat rise in her face, partly from irritation and partly from the strange realization that Layla wasnât being evasive at all. She was being precise.
Before Ruth could respond, the bell rang. The hallway filled with motion, children spilling out of classrooms, coats tugged on, voices rising. Layla stepped back slightly, giving space without being asked, like she understood the flow of a building.
Ruth took advantage of the interruption and moved toward the office, but she couldnât shake the feeling of Laylaâs attention following her with quiet patience.
âââ đà§ .
That evening, Briar Glen got another âcoincidence.â
Not a fire. Nothing dramatic enough to pull people into the street. It was smaller, and because it was smaller, it crawled deeper under the skin.
Dr. Sutter, the town dentist, was arrested.
It happened around eight oâclock, when most families were finishing supper. Sheriff Halpernâs car parked outside the neat little office off Main Street, and two deputies went in with their hats in their hands. People didnât see the arrest itself. They saw the sheriff walking Dr. Sutter out the back door, his face gray and rigid, his wife trailing behind him like she might faint.
By nine, the phone lines whirred. By ten, the story had grown a spine.
Something about missing money. Something about insurance claims. Something about a girl from the high school, though no one knew her name and everyone had a guess. By midnight, half the town had decided what they believed, and the other half had decided what they would say aloud.
Ruth heard it from her neighbor, Mrs. Pike, who knocked on Ruthâs door with a dish towel still in her hands, breathless with the thrill of bad news.
âHave you heard?â Mrs. Pike whispered, as if the walls might report her.
Ruth opened the door wider. âAbout Dr. Sutter?â
Mrs. Pikeâs eyes widened. âSo you have! Itâs awful. Absolutely awful. I always said there was something about him. The way he smilesâtoo friendly.â
Ruth didnât like that. She didnât like how quickly people rewrote their memories to feel smarter.
âWhat happened?â Ruth asked.
Mrs. Pike leaned in. âThey say heâs been billing for work he never did. AndâŠand there was a girl. A young girl, Ruth.â She touched her chest dramatically. âItâs sickening.â
Ruthâs stomach sank. âWho told you that?â
Mrs. Pike waved her hand. âMy cousinâs husbandâs brother works down at the station. He said itâs a mess.â
Ruth nodded slowly, mind already moving elsewhere. Dr. Sutter had been in town for fifteen years. Heâd gone to church. Heâd sponsored the little league. Heâd sent his wife flowers on Motherâs Day like clockwork. Heâd also been the kind of man who made girls at school go quiet when his name came up.
Ruth had ignored that quiet for too long.
Later that night, after Mrs.Pike left, Ruth sat at her kitchen table with a cup of tea gone cold. The radio murmured softly from the living roomâmusic, then a newsmanâs voice, then more music. Outside, the street was still. Briar Glen slept like it always did, pretending it was safe.
Ruth couldnât stop thinking about Eddie Pellâs words in the hallway. My dad gets mad when Iâm slow. Layla had listened like it mattered. Ruth had heard versions of that sentence for years and filed them away as ânot my business.â
She didnât know what to do with the thought that Layla might have come here because the town was full of people who kept telling themselves âlater.â
âââ đà§ .
On Saturday morning, Ruth went to Morrisonâs for coffee, partly because she needed groceries from the little market next door and partly because she couldnât stop herself from wanting to see if Layla was there. She hated that about herself, but curiosity had always been a quiet vice in towns like this. It made people feel less powerless.
Morrisonâs was warm and smelled like cinnamon and frying bacon. Mrs. Morrison stood behind the counter with her hair rolled and sprayed into place, a cigarette tucked into an ashtray beside the register. The jukebox near the back played something light and swinging.
Layla sat in a booth by the window, as neat as a picture. A teacup sat in front of her, untouched. She wasnât reading the paper. She wasnât doing anything that would justify why she looked so settled.
Ruth slid into the booth across from her before she could talk herself out of it.
Laylaâs gaze lifted. âGood morning.â
âYouâre always here,â Ruth said, more accusation than greeting.
Laylaâs expression didnât shift. âMrs. Morrison makes good tea.â
Ruth glanced at the cup. âYou never drink it.â
Laylaâs gloved hand rested lightly on the saucer, fingers relaxed. âSometimes itâs enough to be offered something.â
Ruthâs throat tightened. She didnât like how that sounded like a lesson.
Mrs. Morrison approached with a pot of coffee, cheerful. âRuthie, you want your usual?â
âYes, thank you,â Ruth replied, then added, âand a slice of lemon cake, if youâve got it.â
Mrs. Morrison beamed. âI do. Fresh this morning.â Her eyes flicked to Layla, fond. âMiss Lovelace, you sure you donât want something more filling?â
âIâm fine,â Layla said, gentle. âThank you for asking.â
Mrs. Morrison bustled off, satisfied.
Ruth watched Layla for a moment, then said quietly, âPeople are talking.â
Laylaâs gaze stayed steady. âPeople talk when theyâre frightened.â
Ruthâs fingers curled around the edge of the table. âAre you frightening them?â
Laylaâs small smile faded just enough to feel honest. âNo.â
âThen why does it feel like youâre⊠near things?â Ruth struggled for the right words. âNear trouble.â
Layla looked out the window for a second. The street beyond was washed pale by morning light. A man crossed in front of the pharmacy, hat pulled low. A woman carried a basket of laundry like she was heading to the laundromat by the creek.
âI donât bring trouble,â Layla said, still quiet. âI notice where it already lives.â
Ruth felt a chill despite the warmth of the cafĂ©. âAnd then what? You watch it?â
Laylaâs gaze returned to Ruth. âSometimes watching is what changes a person.â
Ruth frowned. âThatâs not how it works.â
Laylaâs voice stayed soft, but there was something firm beneath it now. âIt is how it works. People behave differently when they think someone sees them clearly.â
Ruth stared at her, unsettled by how plain that sounded. No magic, or threats. Just truth laid out like a clean cloth.
Mrs. Morrison returned with Ruthâs coffee and cake. Ruth thanked her automatically, then stared down at the plate as if the lemon slice could steady her.
Laylaâs gaze dropped briefly to the cake. âYou chose lemon.â
Ruthâs brows knit. âSo?â
Laylaâs mouth curved faintly again. âItâs a clean sweetness.â
Ruth didnât know whether to be annoyed or touched by the observation. âMy mother liked it,â she said before she could stop herself, then regretted the sudden intimacy.
Layla didnât pounce on it. She only nodded once, as if filing it away.
From the counter, the radio crackled with newsânothing major, just a mention of Dr. Sutterâs arrest and the county investigation. The cafĂ© quieted for a beat as people listened. A few heads turned. A few mouths tightened.
Ruth saw Mrs.Morrison glance toward Layla, then away, like she didnât want to connect dots in public.
Ruth leaned forward slightly. âDid you know?â
Laylaâs gaze lifted. âKnow what?â
âAbout Dr. Sutter,â Ruth said, voice low. âDid you know he was doing those things?â
Laylaâs eyes didnât flicker. âMany people knew,â she replied. âThey just didnât say it.â
Ruth felt shame flash hot and immediate. âYouâre talking like youâre above it.â
Laylaâs expression softened with understanding. âNo,â she said. âIâm talking like Iâm tired of waiting for people to decide to be honest.â
Ruth swallowed. âAnd what do you do when they arenât?â
Laylaâs gloved fingers traced the edge of her saucer once, slow and careful. âI donât make them honest. I make it harder to pretend.â
Ruth stared, heart beating harder than it should have over a conversation in a diner booth.
âYouâre speaking likeââ Ruth started, then stopped. She didnât want to say like God. It sounded ridiculous out loud.
Layla tilted her head slightly, eyes steady. âLike what?â
Ruth exhaled through her nose, frustrated. âLike youâreâŠresponsible.â
Layla held the silence for a moment, letting it settle between them. Then she said, quietly, âResponsibility is heavier than people think. They hand it off and call it survival. They delay it and call it hope.â
Ruthâs fingers tightened around her coffee cup. âYou talk like youâve been watching people do this for a long time.â
Laylaâs small smile returned, faint and unreadable. âPeople do it in every decade.â
The jukebox clicked, the song ending with a bright little flourish. A softer, slower tune followed. Outside, the street remained ordinary. Inside, Ruth felt the booth close in around her.
Before Ruth could push further, Layla stood. âI have to go to the school,â she said. âItâs reading day.â
Ruthâs voice came out sharper than she meant. âYou volunteer like itâs a hobby, but you speak like youâre here for something else.â
Layla paused, hand on the edge of the booth seat. Her gaze held Ruthâs, direct now.
âI am here for what people do,â Layla said. âNot what they say theyâll do.â
Then she slid out of the booth, her skirt settling around her knees, gloves immaculate, the ribbon pinned in place like a quiet signature. She nodded politely to Mrs. Morrison on her way out, and Mrs. Morrison smiled back, fond and oblivious, or perhaps simply choosing not to look too closely.
Ruth sat there with her cake untouched, watching Layla cross the street toward the school in measured steps.
âââ đà§ .
On Monday, the patterns got sharper.
A boy named Tommy Klineâeleven years old, all elbows and bravadoâwas caught stealing from Halvorsonâs Pharmacy. Not candy like kids sometimes did, but money from the donation jar on the counter. The jar had been set there for the Dobsons after the fire. It was meant for their babyâs medicine.
Tommy didnât just get caught. He got caught in front of people.
Mrs. Halvorson marched him out by the ear, furious, and he stood on the sidewalk crying and swearing he hadnât meant it. His mother arrived breathless, face white with humiliation. The crowd that gathered didnât offer comfort. They offered judgmentâthe kind that felt good because it wasnât aimed at them.
Ruth stood across the street with a group of women, hands tucked into her coat pockets, watching. She didnât feel righteous. She felt sick.
Then she saw Layla.
Layla stood a little ways down the sidewalk near the bakery window, hands folded, expression calm. She wasnât watching Tommy like a spectacle. She was watching the adultsâtheir faces, their mouths, their enjoyment.
Ruth moved without thinking, crossing the street as the crowdâs murmurs rose.
Tommyâs mother was pleading now, voice trembling. âHeâs a child. He didnât understand.â
Mrs. Halvorson snapped, âHe understood well enough to take it.â
Tommy wiped his face with his sleeve, eyes darting, catching Layla standing there. For a second, something changed in him. His bravado drained like water from a cracked cup.
He looked at Layla as if he recognized her, even if heâd never spoken to her.
Layla didnât speak. She didnât step forward. She only held his gaze.
Tommyâs lower lip trembled. âI did it,â he blurted suddenly, loud enough to hush the crowd. âI did it. I took it. I was gonna put it back.â His voice cracked. âI was gonna.â
Mrs. Klineâs face crumpled. She made a sound like sheâd been struck.
The crowd shifted, unsure what to do with a confession that clean.
Ruth felt her pulse hammer. It was the kind of moment people remembered, one rooted in honesty, which was rare in public.
Laylaâs gaze flicked briefly to Ruth, just once, then back to the scene as if to say: this is what I mean.
Later, when Ruth returned to the school, she found a stack of parent letters on her desk and a message from Sheriff Halpern asking if she could come by the station after hours. Something about records. Something about Dr. Sutter. Something that made Ruthâs skin go cold.
And in the middle of the afternoon, when the children filed into the library for reading day, Layla sat among them as if she belonged there, pink dress bright against worn carpet, and opened a book with gloved hands as though it was the most ordinary thing in the world.
The children leaned closer. They always did with Layla. She made them feel, for a few minutes, like their small lives mattered enough to be seen.
Ruth stood in the doorway watching, unease curling tighter in her chest.
If Layla wasnât causing these things, then what was she doing?
And if she wasnât doing anything at allâŠwhy did it feel like the town was being steered, slowly, toward something it had avoided naming for years?
Ruthâs gaze drifted to the library clock above the shelves. The second hand ticked steadily, indifferent. Outside, the world kept moving. Inside, Briar Glen felt like it was holding its breathâwaiting to see what would happen next, and whether âlaterâ would finally bite down.
Deputy Calvin Rusk liked order the way some men liked whiskey. He relied on it daily and believed it kept the world from slipping off its hinges. He was thirty-five, broad-shouldered from years of hauling crates at the mill before Sheriff Halpern took him on. He wore his uniform with the same seriousness he carried everywhere else, pressed and steady, meant to be taken seriously.
People in Briar Glen nodded when he passed. Women lowered their voices. Teen boys straightened their backs. That was the kind of respect Calvin understood. It was permission.
On Monday night, he sat at the station desk with a cigarette burning low in the ashtray and a stack of paper files spread in front of him like a deck of cards. Sheriff Halpern had gone home an hour earlier, leaving Calvin to âmind the placeâ while the phone sat heavy and silent beside him. The Dr.Sutter business had everyone restless. It wasnât just the fraud. It was the other partâthe whispered part that didnât make it into the county paper, the part people insisted they didnât know while still managing to describe in full detail.
Calvin had opinions about it. Most of them involved keeping certain things quiet so the town didnât embarrass itself.
A knock came at the glass door. Calvin didnât look up right away, because making someone wait was a small pleasure. When he did glance up, he saw Ruth Emery standing under the porch light, coat buttoned to the throat, hair pinned neat, her expression tight with the kind of self-control teachers developed early or not at all.
Calvin stood and unlocked the door. âEvening, Miss Emery.â
âEvening,â Ruth replied, stepping inside. The station smelled of ink, damp wool, and the stale sweetness of cigarettes. Her gaze swept the desk and stopped on the files. âSheriff said you wanted school records.â
Calvin gestured toward the chair. âSit a moment. Iâll fetch the form.â He watched her sit. Ruth never fidgeted. She looked composed even when she was uneasy, like sheâd been trained to hold her posture through storms.
Calvin went to the back cabinet, pretending to look for paperwork while he listened to the quiet. Ruthâs breathing was steady. No gossip. No questions. Heâd always respected that about herâshe knew how to mind her business. It made her useful.
When he returned, he slid a form across the desk and tapped it with his pen. âWe need attendance dates. Sutterâs girlâif there was oneâmight be tied to the school schedule. Weâre trying to establish patterns.â
Ruthâs eyes sharpened. âYou have a name?â
Calvinâs mouth tightened. âNot yet.â
Ruthâs fingers paused on the paper. âThen youâre asking me to help you find one.â
Calvin gave a small shrug that was meant to look reasonable. âIâm asking you to help the investigation.â
Ruth didnât argue further, but the air between them shifted. Calvin felt it and disliked it. People were growing bold lately, as if something in the town had loosened. Confessions on sidewalks. Mothers speaking up. Kids saying things they normally swallowed.
He blamed the countyâs attention. He blamed rumor. He didnât know what else to call it.
Ruth filled in dates carefully. When she finished, she handed the form back without looking at him. âIs that all?â
Calvin slid it into a folder. âFor now.â
Ruth stood. âThen Iâll go.â
Calvin moved to open the door for her, and through the glass he saw her pause on the steps, head turning slightly, as if sheâd sensed someone approaching from the street.
Calvin followed her gaze and felt a flicker of annoyance he couldnât justify.
Layla Lovelace was walking past the station.
She wasnât hurrying. She wasnât lingering. She was purely moving along the sidewalk as if it belonged to her, pink dress and white gloves pale under the streetlamp. Her ribbon sat in her hair like a quiet stamp. She looked up once, just once, and her eyes met Calvinâs through the glass.
Not flirtatious. Not frightened. Not curious.
Simply direct.
Calvinâs hand tightened on the doorknob.
Ruth stepped out into the cold, her gaze brushing Laylaâs face as she passed. Layla didnât stop. She offered Ruth a small, familiar nod and continued on, as if the station, the uniform, and the man behind the glass were all equally ordinary.
Calvin watched her until she disappeared into the dim stretch of Main Street, and he realized his cigarette had burned down to ash.
Ruthâs voice came through the open door, quieter than before. âSheâs been around a lot.â
Calvin looked at her. âWho?â
Ruth didnât answer immediately, which told him enough. She glanced toward the street, then back at Calvin. âGood night,â she said, and walked away.
Calvin shut the door harder than he meant to.
He told himself it was ridiculous to feel watched by a woman who volunteered at the school. He told himself she was just another pretty face passing through, and that the townâs nerves had turned her into a story. That was what towns did. They took ordinary events and stitched them into warnings.
Still, as he turned back to the desk, the silence felt less empty than it had before, as if something had stepped into the room without entering.
âââ đà§ .
Two days later, Calvin met Layla properly.
It was at Morrisonâs, midday, when the cafĂ© was crowded with men on lunch break and women running errands between stops. Calvin sat at the counter with a plate of meatloaf and mashed potatoes and a coffee that tasted like burnt tin. He liked Morrisonâs because it kept him visible. Visibility was power in a small town.
Layla entered quietly. Heads turned the way they always did now, just enough to register her presence. She moved to an empty booth near the window and sat without fuss.
Calvin tried to ignore her. He told himself he didnât care. But his attention kept sliding that way, drawn by the sereness she carried. It made the room feel louder by contrast.
Mrs. Morrison poured coffee at the counter and leaned in toward Calvin, voice low. âSheâs a sweet thing,â she murmured, nodding toward Layla. âPolite as can be.â
Calvin smirked faintly. âYouâve taken a liking to her.â
Mrs. Morrisonâs eyes narrowed in mild warning. âDonât start, Deputy.â
Calvin held up one hand innocently. âIâm not starting anything.â
Across the room, Layla lifted her teacup and set it down again untouched, as if the action had been for someone elseâs benefit. Then she looked up.
Directly at Calvin.
She didnât look challenging or timid, only as if sheâd decided he was the one worth noticing that day.
Calvin felt irritation rise in him like heat. He stared back, letting his expression harden into official neutrality, the look that made people glance away.
Layla didnât.
After a moment, Calvin stood and walked over to her booth, plate still warm in his hands. He slid into the seat across from her without asking. It was a small dominance, a familiar one. People usually accepted it.
Laylaâs gaze didnât flicker. âGood afternoon,â she said.
Calvin set his plate down. âAfternoon. Youâve got folks talking.â
Laylaâs mouth held that small, steady curve. âPeople talk when theyâre bored.â
âYou know what I mean.â Calvin leaned back slightly, letting his uniform show. âYou were outside the station the other night.â
âI walked past,â Layla replied. âThat is allowed.â
Calvinâs eyes narrowed. âWhy are you here, Miss Lovelace?â
Laylaâs head tilted, thoughtful. âYouâve asked that already, havenât you?â
Calvin didnât like that she knew. âAnswer it.â
Laylaâs gaze dropped to the edge of his plateâmeatloaf, potatoes, gravyâthen returned to his face. âYou prefer directness,â she said, as if noting a habit. âVery well. Iâm here because people in this town have learned to wait until harm becomes undeniable. They call it politeness. They call it minding oneâs place. But it is still waiting.â
Calvin felt his jaw tighten. âThatâs a fine speech.â
âIt isnât a speech,â Layla said softly. âItâs an observation.â
Calvinâs voice dropped. âAre you saying the sheriffâs office waits?â
Layla held his gaze, calm. âIâm saying you do.â
Calvinâs pulse jumped, sharp and immediate. âYou donât know what youâre talking about.â
Laylaâs gloved hands rested on the table, fingers still. âI think you do know,â she said. âAnd youâve grown used to calling it order.â
Calvinâs nostrils flared. He leaned forward slightly, keeping his voice low so no one else could hear. âListen. People get hurt when rumors start. Real hurt. Families get ruined. Girls get dragged through the dirt. Men get driven out of town. If you donât understand that, then youâre naive.â
Layla listened without reacting, like she wasnât impressed by the warning. When Calvin finished, she let a small pause settle between themâlong enough to make him feel the space heâd filled.
âI understand,â Layla said. âThat is why Iâm careful.â
Calvinâs eyes sharpened. âCareful about what?â
Laylaâs voice remained gentle. âCareful about giving people time to choose.â
Calvin scoffed. âChoose what?â
Layla looked at him as if the answer should be obvious. âWhether to keep protecting the wrong things.â
Calvin felt a cold flush of anger. He stood abruptly, plate scraping slightly, and Layla didnât flinch. Her eyes stayed on him, steady, as if sheâd expected his reaction and found it unremarkable.
Calvin forced his voice into control. âYou donât come into my town and talk like that.â
Laylaâs expression softened in the smallest wayâalmost kind. âIt isnât your town,â she replied. âYouâre just loud in it.â
Calvinâs face heated. He wanted to slam his hand on the table. He wanted to demand answers, names, proof. Instead, he grabbed his plate and walked back to the counter, shoulders stiff, pretending it hadnât disturbed him at all.
He didnât look back.
âââ đà§ .
By Friday, Calvin had convinced himself she was a nuisance at best and a meddler at worst, and that the best way to deal with nuisances was to remind them of their place.
The opportunity came sooner than he expected.
A call came in after dusk from the Pell house on Maple Street. Mrs. Pellâs voice on the phone sounded thin, clipped, trying to stay calm. âItâs nothing,â she said quickly, too quickly. âJustâŠEddie ran off again. Heâs upset. Calvin, could youââ
Calvin could hear a manâs voice in the background, harsh and impatient, cutting through her words.
Calvinâs grip tightened on the receiver. âIâll be there,â he said, already reaching for his coat.
He drove out with the cruiserâs headlights cutting through the damp dark. Maple Street was quieter than Main, lined with bare trees and houses that looked tired in the porch light. The Pell house sat with one upstairs window glowing. The rest was dark.
Calvin knocked. The door opened a crack, and Mr. PellâDale Pell, mill worker, thick hands and a permanent scowlâlooked out.
âEvening, Deputy,â Dale said, voice too controlled.
Calvin stepped inside without waiting to be invited. The living room smelled like beer and old carpet. Mrs. Pell stood near the doorway to the kitchen, hands wringing a dish towel. Her eyes were fixed on the floor.
âWhereâs the boy?â Calvin asked.
Dale jerked his head toward the hallway. âIn his room. Sulking.â
Calvin took a step, then paused when he noticed a small smear of blood on the edge of the hallway wallâfresh enough to still look wet.
Mrs. Pell made a small sound. âHe fell,â she said quickly. âHeâs clumsy.â
Calvin looked at her face. It was tight and afraid, the kind of expression heâd seen before. He told himself it wasnât his job to fix every home in town. He told himself some families were just rough.
Tonight, he felt Laylaâs words like a fingertip pressing against his spine. Youâve grown used to calling it order.
Calvinâs mouth tightened. He walked down the hall and knocked on Eddieâs bedroom door.
âEddie,â he called. âOpen up.â
Silence. Then a shaky inhale. The door cracked open, and Eddieâs face appeared, eyes red, nose running. There was a dark swelling at his cheekbone.
Calvinâs stomach clenched. âWhat happened?â
Eddieâs gaze flicked down the hall toward his father, then back. His lips trembled. âNothing.â
Calvin stared at him for a long moment. He heard himself say, âYou can tell me.â
Eddieâs eyes widened slightly. He looked on the verge of speaking, of finally stepping past the line of silence.
And then Calvin heard Daleâs boots in the hall behind him, heavy and deliberate.
âBoyâs fine,â Dale said, voice hard. âHeâs dramatic.â
Calvin felt the moment collapse. He felt it like a door shutting. Eddieâs face went blank in self-defense, and he looked away.
Calvin turned toward Dale. âHeâs bruised.â
Daleâs jaw flexed. âHe fell.â
Calvin could have pushed. He could have told Dale to step back. He could have taken Eddie to the station, called the nurse, filed a report that would rip this house open.
Instead, Calvin heard his own thoughts, familiar and practiced: Itâll get worse if you make it public. The boy will suffer more. The town will tear them apart. You donât have proof. You donât have time tonight.
He glanced at Mrs. Pell. Her eyes begged him, silently, to do nothing.
So he did what he always did.
He smoothed the moment back into order.
Calvin cleared his throat, voice flattening. âEddie. Stay put. No more running off. Your motherâs worried.â
Eddie nodded quickly, relief and shame mixing on his face.
Calvin looked at Dale. âKeep him in line.â
Daleâs mouth curled, satisfied. âOf course.â
As Calvin turned to leave, he caught sight of something on the small table near the front door: a childrenâs library book, its cover bent. The title was stamped in gold: THE LITTLE ENGINE THAT COULD. A pale pink ribbon lay across it, as if it had been used as a bookmark.
Calvinâs chest tightened.
He didnât ask why it was there. He didnât ask who had brought it.
He walked out into the cold and shut the door behind him, harder than necessary, as if the sound could seal the decision.
He drove back toward town with the heater rattling weakly. The cruiserâs headlights swept across the road, catching puddles and bare branches. He told himself heâd handled it properly. He told himself heâd kept the peace. He told himself heâd prevented something worse.
Halfway down Main Street, he saw Layla.
She stood on the sidewalk outside Halvorsonâs Pharmacy, hands folded, looking at the bulletin board. A church fundraiser notice had replaced the eviction paper, cheerful and neat.
Calvin slowed without meaning to. His tires hissed softly on damp pavement. Layla turned her head, as if sheâd heard the car before it arrived, and her gaze met his through the windshield.
Calvin felt heat rush to his face. He pulled the cruiser to the curb and got out, shutting the door with a sharp click.
Layla didnât move. She waited, calm as ever.
Calvin strode up to her, jaw tight. âWere you at the Pell house?â
Laylaâs expression didnât change. âI visited the school today.â
âThatâs not what I asked.â
Laylaâs eyes stayed on his face, steady. âYes,â she said quietly. âI was there earlier.â
Calvinâs stomach turned. âWhy?â
Laylaâs voice remained soft. âEddie asked me if he could keep a book longer. He said he had trouble finishing things at home.â
Calvin felt something ugly twist inside him, a mix he didnât want to examine. âYouâre stirring up trouble in peopleâs homes.â
Laylaâs gaze held his, unblinking. âI donât stir,â she replied. âI notice. And children notice first.â
Calvinâs hands curled into fists. âYou think youâre some kind ofâwhat? Judge? Savior? You donât even know these people.â
Laylaâs mouth softened slightly, not amused, or cruel. Just certain. âYou know them,â she said. âAnd you still chose silence.â
Calvinâs breath caught. âYou werenât there. You didnât see what I saw.â
Layla took a small step closer, not threatening, just closing distance the way a truth did. Her voice dropped, gentle enough that it felt worse. âI know what you did,â she said. âYou had a moment. You felt it. And you set it down because it was heavy.â
Calvinâs chest rose and fell fast. The street around them remained ordinaryâcars passing, a couple walking toward the diner, laughter from somewhere down the block. No one looked their way. It was just a deputy and a pretty woman talking quietly by the pharmacy, nothing worth noticing.
That made it feel even more private. Even more dangerous.
Calvin forced a laugh that sounded wrong in his own ears. âYou have no proof of anything.â
Layla nodded once. âNo,â she agreed. âNot yet.â
The calmness in her voice made Calvinâs skin prickle. âIs that a threat?â
Laylaâs gaze didnât waver. âItâs a choice,â she said. âYou can still fix what youâve protected.â
Calvin swallowed hard, anger and fear mixing until he couldnât separate them. âYou donât tell me what to do.â
Laylaâs expression softened again, almost regretful. âThen youâll do what you always do,â she said. âAnd it will finish.â
Calvin stared at her, pulse pounding. âFinish what?â
Laylaâs eyes flicked briefly toward the bulletin board, then back to him. âThe thing you keep calling order,â she replied. âIt will end the way itâs meant to.â
Calvin felt a cold wave pass through him. He didnât answer. He couldnât, not without admitting something.
Layla stepped back, giving him his space as if sheâd never taken it. âGood night, Deputy Rusk,â she said politely, and turned away.
Calvin stood on the sidewalk with his fists clenched and his throat tight, watching her walk down the street in that pastel dress, as calm as a prayer and twice as unsettling.
He got back into the cruiser and sat there for a long moment without turning the key.
Then he made the wrong choice.
He drove straight back to the station and pulled the Pell call slip from the log. He altered it with small changes, nothing dramatic. He wrote, âchild ran away, returned home safe, no injury observed.â He filed it under routine. He told himself it was protection. He told himself it was mercy. He told himself it was control.
He didnât notice his hand shaking until the pen scratched the paper.
âââ đà§ .
The next morning, the nurse at the school called Ruth Emery with a quiet, trembling voice. Eddie Pell had fainted during morning assembly. When they lifted his chin, they saw the bruises properly, in the bright light, where no one could pretend.
By noon, Ruth was at the station with the school nurse and the principal, their faces set. By one, Sheriff Halpern was on the phone with county child services. By two, Dale Pell was in an interrogation room, red-faced and raging, shouting that everyone was ruining his family.
Calvin stood behind the sheriffâs shoulder, watching, heart thudding.
Sheriff Halpern flipped through the call log. âWeâve had reports before,â he said, voice quiet and cold. âWhy werenât they flagged?â
Calvinâs mouth went dry.
He watched the sheriffâs finger stop on Calvinâs entry from last night.
Sheriff Halpern looked up slowly. His gaze landed on Calvin like a weight.
Calvin felt his own decision come back to him, slow and inevitable, like a door heâd closed now swinging open from the other side.
Across the room, through the station window, Calvin saw a flash of pastel pink at the edge of Main Street. Layla was walking past again, as if sheâd always planned to be there at the moment the town finally stopped waiting.
Calvinâs breath caught.
Sheriff Halpernâs voice was low, dangerous. âDeputy Rusk,â he said, âyouâre going to explain this entry.â
Calvin opened his mouth, already scrambling for excusesâorder, mercy, keeping peaceâwords heâd used for years.
But for the first time, none of them sounded convincing.
Outside, Briar Glen moved through its day pretending it wasnât changing, while inside the station, Calvin felt the teeth of âlaterâ finally sink in, and he understood with a sick clarity that Layla hadnât forced anything at all.
Sheâd simply stood close enough that the truth could no longer stay hidden.
The town didnât explode the way people imagined scandals were supposed to. There were no crowds outside the station, no shouting in the streets, no headlines screaming truth in bold ink. Briar Glen absorbed the shock the way it absorbed everything else. Slowly, without ceremony, until the unease settled into the town and stayed there.
By Sunday, everyone knew about Deputy Rusk.
They didnât say his name loudly. They said it in kitchens with the radio turned up, in pews with heads bent close, in the aisles of Halvorsonâs Pharmacy where people pretended to read labels while listening hard. They said things like mistake and pressure and good man who lost his way. They said no oneâs perfect as if that settled it.
Calvin Rusk sat at his small dining table with the curtains drawn and the light off, nursing a cup of coffee heâd reheated twice without drinking. His uniform hung over the back of the chair, pressed and faintly scented with soap and metal. Sheriff Halpern had taken his badge that morning in the same practical way he handled everything else.
âYouâll hear from the county,â Halpern had said. âBest not to leave town.â
Calvin didnât argue or apologize. He nodded once, jaw tight, and watched the sheriff walk out. The man was already looking past him.
Now the house felt wrong without the radio murmuring or the familiar weight of authority settling his shoulders. Every sound outside seemed sharper. A car passing. A door closing. Voices down the block.
And beneath it all, a single, infuriating thought kept circling:
She knew.
Not guessed. Not suspected.
Knew.
Calvin shoved his chair back and stood abruptly, pacing the narrow living room. He replayed every moment with Layla Lovelaceâthe calm way sheâd spoken, the certainty that hadnât wavered even when heâd raised his voice. He hated that more than anything else. She hadnât needed to threaten him. She had simply waited.
He stopped pacing and stared at the front door.
The confrontation had been circling for days now, tightening like a knot. The town might be content to whisper and adjust, but Calvin wasnât built for quiet collapse. He needed answers. He needed to hear her admit itâwhatever it was.
By late afternoon, the sky had turned flat and gray, the kind of day that pressed down on a personâs chest. Calvin pulled on his coat, left the uniform where it was, and stepped outside.
Briar Glen watched him without appearing to.
At Morrisonâs, Mrs. Morrison looked up from the counter when he entered, her smile faltering just a fraction. âAfternoon, Calvin.â
âAfternoon,â he replied, voice even. âIs Miss Lovelace here?â
Mrs. Morrison hesitated. That alone told him enough. âShe went out a bit ago. Toward the creek.â
Calvin nodded once and turned without ordering anything. He felt eyes on his back as he left, the familiar comfort of being known replaced by something thinner and colder.
The path to the creek cut behind the old dress shop ruins, narrow and muddy from thawing ground. Bare branches reached overhead like ribs. The water itself moved slow and dark, swollen from melting snow upstream. It wasnât a place people lingered this time of year.
Layla stood near the bank, facing the water.
She wore the same pastel dress, pale against the dull world, the same gloves, the same ribbon pinned in her hair. The wind stirred her skirt lightly, but she didnât seem cold. She didnât turn when Calvinâs boots crunched behind her.
âYou shouldnât be here,â Calvin said, stopping a few feet away.
Laylaâs voice came back calm, as if heâd spoken from across a room. âNeither should you.â
Calvinâs jaw tightened. âI lost my badge today.â
âI know,â Layla replied.
That did it. Anger flared hot and sudden. âYou always do,â he snapped. âYou always know. Thatâs what I want to hear about.â
Layla turned then, slowly, meeting his gaze without surprise. Her expression wasnât pleased. It wasnât smug. It was steady in a way that felt worse than mockery.
âYou came to accuse me,â she said.
âI came to confront you,â Calvin shot back. âDonât twist it.â
Layla inclined her head slightly, accepting the correction. âVery well.â
Calvin took a step closer. âYou followed me. You watched me. You set things up so theyâd fall apart at the worst moment.â
Laylaâs eyes didnât flicker. âI didnât follow you.â
âDonât lie to me.â
âI donât,â she said gently.
Calvin let out a sharp laugh. âThen explain how you knew. Explain how you always showed up right before things broke. Explain how you knew about Eddie before anyone else did.â
Laylaâs gaze drifted past him, toward the slow-moving creek. âChildren speak more freely when they believe theyâll be heard,â she said. âI listen.â
âThatâs not an answer.â
âIt is,â Layla replied. âYou just want it to be louder.â
Calvinâs fists clenched. âYou think youâre better than us. That you get to stand there and decide who falls.â
Layla turned fully toward him now, her face composed, her voice still soft. âI donât decide,â she said. âYou did.â
Calvin shook his head, breath coming faster. âYou pushed.â
âI waited,â Layla corrected. âThere is a difference.â
Calvin stared at her, frustration edging into something closer to fear. âWhat are you?â
The question hung between them, heavy and clinical.
Layla didnât answer right away. She studied his face as if reading something written there, a ledger of choices she seemed to recognize. When she spoke again, her voice was quiet enough that Calvin had to lean in despite himself.
âI am what happens when no one intervenes,â she said. âI am what remains when excuses wear thin.â
Calvin scoffed, though it sounded brittle. âThatâs poetic nonsense.â
Layla shook her head once. âItâs very practical.â
Calvin ran a hand through his hair, pacing a short line along the bank. âYou think this townâs better now? That you helped?â
âI think the truth surfaced,â Layla replied. âWhat people do with it is their responsibility.â
Calvin stopped and faced her again. âEddieâs family is torn apart. His motherâs terrified. His fatherâs in a cell. You call that balance?â
Laylaâs expression softened, steady and serious. âBalance isnât comfort,â she said. âItâs accuracy.â
Calvin swallowed. âYou could have stopped it earlier.â
Layla nodded. âSo could you.â
The words landed cleanly, without cruelty. That was what made them hurt.
Calvinâs voice dropped. âYou donât understand what itâs like to keep order. To hold things together when they want to come apart.â
Layla met his gaze evenly. âYou mistake silence for stability.â
Calvinâs throat tightened. âIf Iâd acted sooner, the town would have torn itself apart. People would have blamed me.â
âYes,â Layla agreed. âAnd instead, they blame the truth.â
Something in Calvin finally cracked, and he had to look away. The creek moved steadily beside them, indifferent to confession or denial.
âYou didnât have the right,â he muttered.
Laylaâs voice was almost tender. âI didnât take it.â
Calvin turned back sharply. âThen what are you doing here?â
Layla looked around at the bare trees and the cold water, at the quiet edge of town where decisions seemed to weigh more. âI stay long enough for people to finish what they start,â she said. âThen I leave.â
Calvinâs chest tightened. âAnd if they donât?â
Laylaâs gaze returned to him. âThen they carry it.â
A bitter laugh escaped him. âYou make it sound inevitable.â
âIt is,â Layla replied. âChoice doesnât stop being a choice because itâs hard.â
Calvin stared at her, the truth of it pressing down until his shoulders sagged. âYou knew Iâd make the wrong one.â
Layla considered him for a moment. âI knew youâd make the familiar one.â
That hurt more than accusation.
Calvinâs voice cracked despite himself. âSo thatâs it? You justâŠwatch people fail?â
Layla stepped closer, closing the distance until her presence was impossible to ignore. Her voice lowered, calm and precise.
âI watch people decide who they are,â she said. âFailure is just the name they give it afterward.â
Calvinâs breath shuddered. âWhat happens to me?â
Laylaâs eyes searched his face, not unkindly. âThat depends on what you do next.â
He laughed weakly. âI donât have much left to do.â
Laylaâs expression didnât change. âYou have honesty.â
Calvin flinched. âThat wonât save me.â
âNo,â Layla agreed. âBut it will stop the damage from spreading.â
They stood there in silence, the creek whispering beside them. Somewhere in town, a church bell rang the hour, steady and unconcerned.
Calvin looked at Layla one last time. âYouâre not staying, are you?â
Layla shook her head. âNot much longer.â
He nodded slowly. âFigures.â
Layla turned away, as if the conversation had reached its natural end. After a few steps, she paused and glanced back over her shoulder.
âYou were close,â she said. âCloser than most.â
Calvin swallowed. âTo what?â
Laylaâs voice was gentle, almost regretful. âTo choosing differently.â Then she walked away along the creek path, pastel pink fading into gray until she was gone.
Calvin stood alone with the water and the weight of what heâd lostâand what heâd protected too long.
âââ đà§ .
By the following week, Briar Glen had begun its quiet reorganization. The Pellsâ house sat dark. New procedures were discussed at council meetings. The school nurse was given more authority. People spoke more carefully, eyes sharper, patience thinner.
Ruth Emery noticed it most in the pausesâthose brief hesitations before a lie, the moments when someone reconsidered a sharp word. She also noticed the absence.
Layla didnât come to the school anymore. Her room above Morrisonâs stood empty, the window dark. Mrs. Morrison said sheâd left payment on the table and thanked her for the tea.
No forwarding address.
On Sunday morning, Ruth walked past the creek and saw a pale ribbon caught on a low branch, fluttering softly in the cold breeze. She didnât touch it. She didnât take it down.
She went home and locked her door and sat at her kitchen table for a long time, thinking about all the moments sheâd waited through and all the ones she wouldnât anymore.
Briar Glen didnât call what happened justice. It didnât call it fate.
Long after Layla Lovelace was gone, people remembered what it felt like to be seen clearly and without interruption, and how much harder it became to pretend afterward.
And that was enough to change the way the town breathed.
Spring arrived without asking permission.
It crept into Briar Glen the way it always did with false starts that fooled people into trusting it too soon. Snow vanished from the shoulders of the road, then returned in thin, apologetic patches. The creek swelled and receded. Buds appeared on the trees and waited, stubborn and patient, for warmth that would stay.
Life resumed its habits. That was the first thing Ruth Emery noticed.
Children still lined up at the school doors each morning, coats slung over their arms once the afternoons grew kinder. The bell still rang at the same hours. Morrisonâs cafĂ© still smelled of coffee and sugar and grease by midmorning. People still said good morning and how are you with practiced ease.
And yet something had shifted. It showed in the smallest pauses.
A man at the hardware store stopped himself before snapping at the boy behind the counter and cleared his throat instead. A woman in the church vestibule hesitated before repeating a rumor and chose silence, lips pressing together as if sheâd bitten into something sharp. A mother lingered an extra moment at the school doorway, watching her child disappear down the hall before turning away.
No one announced these changes. No one claimed responsibility for them. Briar Glen simply began to move differently, as if it had learned too late that weight mattered.
Ruth felt it every day.
She felt it in the way parents spoke to her now, more direct and less defensive. She heard it in the school nurseâs firmer voice when concerns were raised, and saw it in the principalâs uncharacteristic willingness to listen rather than deflect. She felt it in herself most of all, in the way she no longer brushed aside discomfort as inconvenience.
Layla Lovelace had been gone nearly three weeks.
Mrs. Morrison said it plainly when Ruth asked, wiping the counter with slow, thoughtful motions. âShe paid through the end of the month, thanked me kindly, and left before dawn. Didnât say where she was going.â
Ruth nodded, unsurprised. âDid she leave anything?â
Mrs. Morrison paused. âJust a ribbon. Pink. I put it in the drawer with the spare napkins.â She hesitated. âIt felt wrong to throw away.â
Ruth understood that too well.
The room above the cafĂ© remained empty. The window stayed dark at night. People passed it without comment, though some glanced up without realizing they were doing it, like a muscle memory that hadnât faded yet.
The town did not miss Layla the way it missed people it loved.
It missed her the way it missed a sound that had stopped, like a clock that no longer ticked or a train that no longer passed through. The absence itself became noticeable.
Sheriff Halpern replaced Deputy Rusk with a younger man from the next county over, fresh-faced and careful, his uniform still stiff with newness. He asked questions more often than he gave answers. Some folks resented him for it. Others found relief in his uncertainty.
Calvin Rusk did not leave town.
He stayed in his small house with the drawn curtains and the quiet rooms, reporting weekly to the county office as required. People saw him sometimesâat the grocerâs, at the post officeâbut fewer met his eyes now. Respect had drained away, leaving behind something awkward and unresolved.
Ruth saw him one afternoon outside Halvorsonâs Pharmacy. He looked thinner, his coat hanging loose at the shoulders. When their gazes met, he nodded once, acknowledging a shared knowledge neither of them could undo.
Ruth nodded back. Neither spoke.
Eddie Pell did not return to school right away.
The county placed him and his mother with relatives out of town, somewhere quieter, somewhere that felt like a second chance if you squinted hard enough. A card arrived at the school addressed in Eddieâs careful handwriting, thanking Ruth for the books and saying he liked reading now because it helped him slow down.
Ruth kept the card in her desk drawer.
The house on Maple Street remained empty. The grass grew long and uneven. People passed it quickly, as if speed might erase memory.
Briar Glen did not cleanse itself. It did not heal cleanly. What it did instead was adjust its posture, the way a person did after realizing theyâd been standing wrong for years.
And always, in quiet moments, Layla lingered as a sensation rather than a figure.
People remembered her differently now.
Mrs. Lasky insisted Laylaâs dress had been more lavender than pink. Franklin Boone swore her gloves had been cream-colored, not white. Mrs. Morrison remembered her smile as warmer than it had been, while Ruth recalled it as measured, almost reserved.
No one argued hard about these details. They let the inconsistencies stand.
What remained consistent was the timing.
âShe was there before,â someone would say, vaguely, when an uncomfortable truth surfaced.
Before the fire, before the arrest, before the confession on the sidewalk.
Always before.
Ruth walked the creek path one evening near the end of April, the air finally soft enough to smell of damp earth and new leaves. The water moved quietly, reflecting the pale sky. She stopped where the bank widened and leaned on the low railing, breathing in the quiet.
She thought of Layla with a strange, reluctant gratitude.
Layla had never told her what to do.
That, Ruth realized, was the most unsettling part.
She hadnât demanded action. She hadnât delivered warnings wrapped in mystery. She had solely been present, attentive, and unyielding in her patience.
Ruth understood now that Laylaâs powerâif that was the right wordâhad never been about interference. It had been about removal.
Excuses stripped away.
Delays rendered useless.
Silence made visible.
The town had done the rest.
âââ đà§ .
On Sunday morning, the church was fuller than it had been in months. Not with devotion, exactly, but with awareness. People sat straighter. They listened harder. When the minister spoke about responsibility and care, there was no rustling, no polite disengagement.
After the service, Ruth stood near the doors, exchanging small talk, when she overheard a woman whisper, âDo you think sheâll come back?â
The question wasnât answered. It didnât need to be.
Because in a way, Layla never had to.
She had already done what she came to do.
Weeks later, the county paper ran a small piece about reforms. It mentioned new oversight,
updated procedures, and a commitment to transparency. The article was written in dry language, stripped of drama, and Briar Glen appeared only in passing.
Ruth clipped the article and folded it into her ledger.
That same afternoon, she stayed late at the school, organizing shelves in the library. The room smelled of paper and polish, sunlight slanting through tall windows. As she worked, she found a book out of placeâThe Little Engine That Could, worn at the spine.
A pale pink ribbon marked a page near the end.
Ruthâs breath caught.
She stood very still, listening to the hum of the building, the distant voices of children outside. Slowly, she removed the ribbon and smoothed it between her fingers. It felt ordinary. Soft. Harmless.
She did not put it back.
Instead, she tucked it into her pocket and returned the book to its proper place.
That night, Briar Glen slept beneath a sky scattered with stars. Radios murmured behind curtains. Dishes dried on racks. Windows glowed and dimmed.
âââ đà§ .
In another town, with different streets and different habits, a woman in a pastel dress stepped into view for the first time. She paused at the edge of a sidewalk and took in the surroundings with quiet attention.
A notice board caught her eye.
A choice waited to be made.
Layla Lovelace adjusted the ribbon in her hair and began to walk.
READ THIS ITS AMAZING I CRIED.
redraw of old doodle i did
for @toby-13s-blog !!!
