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Chapter 4 - Chapter 4: The Fortune Teller's Omen 

The incense didn't mask the smell beneath—it amplified it.

Like copper pennies left to rot in stagnant water, like the staleness of a room

where someone had died but no one had noticed yet.  

The tarot deck on Roman's table wasn't shuffled; it

breathed, the cards expanding and contracting with a rhythm that made

Maryanne's skin crawl. His reading table, draped in black velvet, gleamed with

carved symbols of drowning figures reaching upward—echoes of ancient submersion

rites.  

Maryanne, pregnant and anxious, stumbled inside, mistaking

the place for the bookstore she sought. Roman Thorne, charismatic yet cold,

rose to greet her. His eyes glinted with suppressed rage—a shadow of

sin.  

"Destiny led you here. I'm Roman Thorne. I own this

shop," he said, his voice smooth as oil on water.  

Maryanne clutched her belly, "Just looking

around," she murmured, her maternal hope straining for guidance amid the

growing dread.  

Roman leaned forward. "What good is looking around,

tossing books aside? How about a reading instead?"  

"I'm not superstitious," she said. "I just…

need answers for my mom's death—"  

"Then let the cards fall where they may."  

He shuffled with trembling fingers. The cards dropped: The

Tower (chaos). The Devil (temptation). The Star (hope).  

Roman's voice deepened, menacing: "A child of promise,

but darkness hunts her. Sacrifice looms, as it did for those who sought to rise

above heaven."  

Maryanne's heart pounded, her love for her unborn child

igniting. "No one touches my baby," she declared, her cross burning

warm against her chest—a quiet defiance.  

Roman smirked, masking resentment. The reading had been a

Covenant trap.  

A faint sound rose from the walls. Maryanne's vision

intensified, her child whispering: Mother…  

She fled, the shop's door slamming behind her.  

At her car, she fumbled with the keys. The battery was dead.

"God damn it!" she muttered, panic rising. "I'd rather die than

go back to that freak."  

From a one-way window, Roman watched. "Minnie, go help

her," he ordered. "Bring the Penance Engine—just in

case."  

Minnie's lips curled into a sadistic smile. "Sure,

Roman. I'll make sure she catches our drift."  

She approached lightly, and Maryanne reluctantly rolled her

window down.  

"I'm Minnie," she said, voice a mix of politeness

and resentment. "Looks like you're in a bind. I can help."  

"Are you with that weirdo in the shop?" Maryanne

snapped.  

Minnie's eyes narrowed. "That weirdo is my

husband. Still want my help?"  

A shiver of unease ran through Maryanne. "Yes… but I

dread it."  

Minnie chuckled, winking. "Maybe you

should."  

She pulled jumper cables from her trunk, connecting them

with deliberate care. "If I do this, you owe me one."  

"As long as it's reasonable," Maryanne said

warily.  

"It will be." Minnie pressed a brittle, yellowed

note into her hand. "Read it later, as a favor."  

The car sputtered to life. Minnie stepped back. "Bye

for now."  

As Maryanne drove toward her new apartment, she unfolded the

note. Images of warped faces flickered in her conscience. The words crawled

across her vision even after she closed it:  

Years served to the pact. Not jail—something older,

hungrier.  

The steering wheel grew slick under her palms. Minnie hadn't

helped her out of kindness—she'd marked her, the way predators mark prey to

circle back for.  

Will you seek beyond the masses, into the fire?  

Shock rooted her to the seat. Yet as she drove, curiosity

stirred.  

She knows my face now. I pray she doesn't come knocking. 

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