A Missing Nurse Was Found Beneath a Mansion, and the Name Broke Him-myhoa

Cold concrete was the first thing Megan Turner remembered when she came back to herself.

Not her apartment.

Not the hospital parking lot.

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Not the cheap paper coffee cup she had left going cold beside the nurses’ station after a sixteen-hour shift.

Just concrete against her cheek, metal around her ankle, and darkness so thick it felt almost alive.

The basement smelled like wet earth, rust, mold, and old wood.

Somewhere in the shadows, water dripped with a patient little tap that had become the clock she hated most.

Tap.

Tap.

Tap.

For three months, that was how Megan knew the world had not ended.

It kept dripping.

At first, she tried to stay organized because nurses are trained to stay useful in crisis.

She counted breaths.

She checked her own pulse with two fingers.

She inspected the chain around her ankle whenever the light under the door gave her enough to see by.

She tore a strip from the bottom of her scrub top and wrapped it around the worst place where metal had rubbed skin raw.

She scratched tiny marks into the wall with a broken piece of pipe.

One mark for one day.

Then another.

Then another.

But darkness does something cruel to time.

It bends it.

It stretches one hour until it feels like a whole day, then folds three days together until you cannot tell which hunger belonged to which morning.

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