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Page 38 of Shadows of Obsession

As I navigated the winding trail, the headlights of my Jeep cut through the dense foliage, casting long, eerie shadows across the path. Each rustle of leaves, each distant sound, made my muscles tense and my eyes dart toward the source. I knew this forest like the back of my hand, but tonight, it felt foreign and hostile, as if the shadows had a life of their own.

Pulling the Jeep to a stop beside my cabin, I stepped out cautiously, my senses heightened as I listened intently for any sound that seemed out of place. The forest was quiet—too quiet, I thought. Just… silence.

With deliberate steps, I ascended the porch stairs, noting automatically that the third step still creaked the way it always did. I unlocked the door and slipped inside, carefully easing it shut behind me to minimize any noise. The silence of the cabin was oppressive.

Once the lock was secured, I made my way upstairs to the bedroom, my strides purposeful as I approached the closet that held my gun safe. The combination lock clicked open, and I retrieved my trusted Colt .45-caliber pistol, the weapon I'd carried through two tours. The familiar weight felt like shaking hands with an old friend.

Descending the stairs again, I stepped outside and headed toward the spot where Choco had been untethered. Despite our earlier search, I felt compelled to conduct one final sweep, my military training refusing to let go. I approached with cautious steps, eyes scanning every shadow, every blade of grass for a sign of movement. The ground was still trampled from before, but I refused to let any detail slip past unnoticed.

As I swept the area with the heavy Maglite from the Jeep, frustration began to mount. No footprints. No broken branches. No signs of anyone else having been here. The rope we'd used to tie Choco lay coiled where we'd left it, the cut end clean and deliberate. I lifted it closer to the light. Definitely cut, not frayed or chewed. But by what? A knife? Wire cutters?

Undeterred, I moved to the side of the house where the woodpile had toppled. With methodical care, I restacked each log, examining the ground beneath for any sign of disturbance. The soil was hard-packed, poor for footprints. Yet, to my growing vexation, nothing—no evidence to justify my unease. It was as if the entire incident had been staged, executed with precision, leaving no trace behind.

For a long moment, I stood there, staring at the neatly stacked pile, thoughts racing. If someone had been here, how had they vanished without a trace? And why? Random vandalism, or something more deliberate, something tied to Anna? The questions swirled through my mind, relentless.

After nearly an hour of searching, I conceded defeat and retreated inside. I double-checked that every window and door was locked, shades drawn tight. Extra precautions for an invisible threat. I evenwedged a chair under the back door handle, an old habit from deployment.

Upstairs again, I entered the adjoining bathroom and set the pistol on the granite counter before stripping off my clothes. My shirt was stiff with dried sweat, my jeans caked with dirt at the knees. I was desperate to wash away the grime and tension clinging to me.

The hot water hit my back in steady bursts, steam filling the small bathroom. Despite the unease of the day, a strange satisfaction settled over me. The surge of social contact in recent days, so different from my usual isolation, had left me drained, but in a way that felt... human.

When I finally crawled into bed, I placed the pistol on the nightstand within easy reach, a precaution that had long ago become instinct. The cool sheets felt good against clean skin, but sleep refused to come. My mind replayed every detail of the day, searching for answers that weren't there. Had someone really been out there, or was it my paranoia again—PTSD twisting shadows into threats?

The weight of uncertainty pressed down on me. I turned over, listening to the familiar creaks and groans of the old house settling for the night. Each sound was cataloged and dismissed by habit, my mind too alert to rest. No answers came. No sudden clarity. Only silence.

As exhaustion finally pulled at me, my thoughts drifted to Anna. I saw her in my kitchen earlier that day, coffee in hand, her quiet presence grounding me in a way I hadn't expected. Around her, the darkness inside me had eased, if only for a moment. Her voice, her smile, even that stubborn fire in her eyes when she'd suggested our truce, all of it had steadied something in me I hadn't realized was shaking.

I closed my eyes, her image still vivid. The sunlight caught in her blonde hair. The warmth of her hand on my arm as she thanked me. The vulnerability as she'd slept, trusting me to keep her safe.

What the hell is happening to me?

But I already knew the answer, even if I wasn't ready to admit it. Something inside me was shifting, cracks forming in the walls I'd spent years building. And Anna… Complicated, wounded, determined Anna—was the one breaking through.

My last conscious thought before sleep finally claimed me was of her blue eyes looking up at me in the moonlight, full of gratitude and trust Iwasn't sure I deserved.

CHAPTER 12

Daniel

Daniel's pacing had turned erratic, each step sharp against the thin, worn carpet of the cheap hotel room. The harsh fluorescent light overhead flickered intermittently, casting shadows that danced across the peeling wallpaper. He replayed the moment in Kansas over and over, twisting the memory into something darker each time. He could still see the terror in Anna's eyes when she'd spotted him inside the diner, that delicious flicker of recognition before she'd bolted like a frightened rabbit. The surge of power it gave him had been intoxicating, blinding him to the fact that she'd slipped through his fingers once again.

His reflection caught in the grimy mirror above the dresser. His dark hair was disheveled from running his hands through it repeatedly, his expensive navy polo wrinkled and untucked from his khakis. The three-day stubble on his jaw made him look haggard, feral. He barely recognized himself, but appearances only mattered when he needed to charm someone, and right now, there was no one to charm.

Turning to his laptop, a sleek MacBook Pro that looked absurdly out of place in this dump, he checked the tracker again, fingers flying over the keys with practiced precision. The screen flashed the same infuriating message:

Last Location: 35 days ago – Cedar Rapids, Iowa.

It had been over a month since her phone last pinged. She'd gotten rid of it, slipped out of his reach, and now he had no other leads to follow. His only source of information had dried up, and his options were running thin. His brother's resources had been a lifeline, but even that was starting to unravel.

Scott had been tolerant at first, wearing that same patronizing expression he'd had since they were kids, the responsible older brother humoring his impulsive sibling. He'd assumed Daniel's obsession with finding his ex-girlfriend was just another of his fixations, a phase that would burn out like all the others. But when Daniel had started talking about "ending things for good," when he'd said he "needed to make sure she couldn't leave again," Scott had drawn a line.

The fight that followed had been brutal—verbal, not physical, though Daniel's fists had clenched more than once. It ended with Scott, immaculate in his police sergeant's uniform and gleaming badge, making it crystal clear that if Daniel continued down this path, he and their parents would cut him off completely. No more money. No more covering for him. No more cleaning up his messes.

Daniel couldn't afford that. The trust fund from their grandmother was tied up in conditions he hadn't met, and his job at the marketing firm—he'd stopped showing up two weeks ago. They'd probably fired him by now. Not that he cared. None of it mattered without Anna.

That was when he'd hacked into Scott's work accounts, using the password he'd watched his brother type during Christmas dinner, when Scott had been stupid enough to check his email on the family computer. Gaining access to police resources he had no business using had been surprisingly easy. At first, he told himself it was only to make sure she was safe, to bring her home where she belonged, where she'd be taken care of.

But the truth, the dark truth he rarely admitted even in the dead of night, was that the chase itself had become an addiction.