Chapter 1
I heard the glass crack before I felt the first nick on my skin. The sound was soft and low at first, like the pattering of deer hooves on summer-sweet grass, until it wasn’t. The glass coffin groaned under the weight of an unseen storm. A single shard dropped onto my cheek, coaxing out a drop of blood.
I imagined lifting my hand to touch it, and to my surprise, my hand actually moved.
My fingers twitched as they found purchase. My skin. I could feel my own skin again. I smeared the blood across my cheek with my thumb.
I ran my fingers down my face, settling on the soft spot just below my chin. I carefully pressed into my skin.
A heartbeat.
This was different from all of the other dreams. In the past, when I’d open my eyes, I’d find myself staring up at a milky-blue sky. Sometimes, I could almost imagine the scent of the forest air—like a blanket of mist laced with the familiar sting of nettle. The promising growl of thunder.
But I never felt the rain. I only heard it as the sky darkened and the purple underbellies of the clouds hovered close to the treetops. The incessant pulse of weather, of seasons, of life, all on the other side of the glass.
In all of the dreams, I’d felt the passage of time. Even in my half-slumber, I tasted the change of seasons in the hollow of my jaw, from the full-blossomed swell of summer to the sharp bite of winter. But every time I opened my eyes—though I was never quite sure if my lashes were actually fluttering open, or if I was imagining it—the sky above me stayed the same. The same satin sky that had always crested over the tree line of the Enchanted Forest. And I could only stare, watching
the endless blue.
Nothing changed, and everything changed.
But there was no blue.
There was only darkness on the other side of the spiderweb crack above me.
Slowly, I reached farther. My hand pressed against the glass.
Several tiny shards fell like stardust, making a pat, pat, pat sound as they landed on the bodice of my velvet dress. I gasped.
More fell, larger shards this time. They pitter-pattered like summer rain on the thatched roof of an old cottage, catching in my hair and on my skin. The glass groaned as the crack grew wider, and the black pressed in.
My heartbeat picked up speed. Was someone out there, finally smashing the hilt of their sword into this delicate prison? Someone to finally free me after all this time?
An image flitted through my mind, not quite a memory, but a promise. There had been someone—a prince—who was meant to come and release me. I’d imagined the sound of hooves caressing the earth, the huff of a horse as the rider dismounted. I never heard him arrive. There had
been a face, however, that had peered in on me from the other side of the glass. That I was certain of. Dark hair. Olive skin.
But he never removed the lid.
Just as quickly as it had appeared, the face had vanished. For long after, I dreamed of the almost-prince. The echo of his image haunted me as he watched me from the other side—the outside. His thumb would touch the glass just above my lips, as if he could brush it across them. As if his touch alone was infused with magic, the kind that could awaken me.
These were only dreams, though, and I always fell back into a restless slumber.
But something, or someone, was here now. Something was smashing the glass.
I reached toward the center of the crack. A large shard had fallen free, and some of the blackness from the outside had started to creep its way in. My fingers grazed it.
Moss.
“Oh,” I whispered. Moss. Something real and alive and from the outside. My whole body buzzed with the possibility.
The glass cracked, louder this time, and a large shard dropped onto my chest with a thump. More fell, sharp and deadly glitter that jabbed at my skin. I squeezed my eyes closed as glass rained upon me. My hands gripped at the thick blanket of moss above.
There was something wrong.
This moss, it wasn’t the same deep forest green that I remembered. It didn’t make my fingertips hum with life when I touched the earthy velvet.
This was a dead thing. ...
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