CHAPTER 5: the deal

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When I was four years old, I had the not-so-bright idea to jump into my aunt Theresa's pool even though I had absolutely no clue how to swim. The shock of the cold water biting at my skin had frozen me to the core. When I'd finally been pulled out, I couldn't hold back the shivers that wracked through me, and I'd spent several minutes gasping for air.

The same unpleasant, frightening sensation washed over me as I stood on the sidewalk outside the church, staring up into the depthless black eyes of the man who claimed to be Death.

"Er . . ." I snapped my mouth shut to keep my teeth from chattering. "Umm . . . I think . . . I-I . . ."

Every fiber of my being was screaming at me to move, to start running and to not look back, but I couldn't force myself into motion.

An almost amused expression crossed Death's face. "You must be made of much stronger stuff than I thought, Kang Y/N. I was expecting you to have already taken off running and screaming by now."

"Give me another second and I will be," I managed to say, unable to keep back a shiver.

"Oh, I don't think you really mean that," Death mused with a shake of his head. He dropped his cigarette onto the ground and snubbed it out with the toe of his boot. "I think you're interested in what I have to say."

"I-I . . . I'm not—"

"Let's take a little walk, shall we?"

Death had a sudden vise-like grip on my arm and began pulling me right into the middle of oncoming traffic.

"What, are you crazy?" I shrieked, trying to yank my arm out of his iron grasp. "You're going to get us killed!"

Death let out an annoyed sigh, sinking his nails into my arm. "Oh, do be quiet, will you? I know when you're going to die, and I can assure you, it's not going to be tonight."

Somehow, that wasn't reassuring.

Death stepped up onto the sidewalk across the street and set off walking at a brisk pace, all but dragging me along behind him. I tried digging my heels into the ground, relentlessly tugging at my arm, but I was afraid that if I struggled any further I would end up breaking a bone. I thought about screaming at the top of my lungs, maybe making a grab at someone walking by, but not one person on the sidewalk would even meet my eyes. It was as if they were completely oblivious to the teenage girl being dragged down the street by some man who looked like an extra from Interview with the Vampire.

We made it two blocks before Death abruptly stopped and bent down to mutter in my ear, "You and I both know I'll just catch you and drag you back by your hair if you try to make a run for it. So I suggest you play along for now, hmm?"

I swallowed hard, fighting back the bile rising in my throat. I did not consider myself a wimp. I was a New yorker; I could look after myself. But right at that moment? I wasn't sure if I had ever been so frightened in my entire life.

"Fine," I said, my voice more like a squeak.

"Good girl."

I stopped trying to bolt, even though the urge had now become overwhelming.

By the time Death finally stopped walking, my feet ached inside my heels. "Here we are," Death said, pulling the door to a Starbucks open with a little flourish.

I stumbled my way into the coffee shop, holding my arms tightly around myself. This had to be some strange, terrifying nightmare; had a guy claiming to be Death really just shown up at my classmate's funeral to escort me all the way to a Starbucks? Death's hands descended on my shoulders and forcefully steered me up to the front counter. The girl at the register looked up with a cheery smile that was immediately wiped clean once she laid eyes on Death.

"Erh . . ."

"Good evening," Death said, his tone suddenly formal. "We'd like two black coffees, please."

The girl nodded robotically, fumbling around for the cups with shaking hands. Death slid a crisp ten-dollar bill across the counter, smiling kindly. "No change."

"Erhm . . . thank you."

From the way the girl stumbled around, not meeting our eyes, it was obvious my plan of mouthing help me was not going to work. I grabbed the two coffee cups when the girl handed them over, and Death steered me over to a table by the window that sat beneath a row of paper snowflakes. My stomach did a little flip-flop when Death took a seat, the fluorescent lighting above casting his face into brighter light.

It was like looking at someone terminally ill; his skin was the color of parchment, which stretched taut across his sharp cheekbones, and his eyes were sunken in. No wonder he went by Death. He looked like it. Even stranger were the black markings crisscrossing every inch of his hands, slipping up the sleeves of his jacket, and creeping under the collar of his shirt. It took me a second to realize that the markings were actually small, crudely shaped clocks.

Death's lips twisted into a grim smile as he stared up at me, gesturing to the seat across the small table from him. As he moved his arm, I could've sworn I saw the tiny hands on each of the clocks moving. "Have a seat."

I carefully lowered myself into the seat, clutching my cup of coffee. "Right." I cleared my throat, hoping to muster up even the smallest amount of courage to get through whatever this was. "What is this about?"

Death set his coffee cup down and clasped his hands together, leaning across the table toward me. "I thought we could have little chat about Min Yoongi."

I downed a swallow of coffee, the hot liquid scalding my throat, and shuddered at the bitter taste. "I'm not . . ." I grasped the coffee cup compulsively. "I think you're . . ." I wasn't sure if I was tongue-tied because of this situation with Death, or because Death wanted to talk about Yoongi. "I . . . I really think I should be—"

Death's hand was on my shoulder, forcing me back into my chair before I'd even gotten to my feet.

"Listen closely, Y/N, because I'm only going to say this once. I am going to offer you the chance to go back in time twenty-seven days to prevent Yoongi from ending his life."

It was quite possible that my heart stopped beating in the silence that fell after Death's words. He wanted me to do what?

"Sorry, what did you just say?"

"I told you I was only going to say it once."

"Is this some kind of joke to you?" Somehow, I'd gotten up, and I was leaning across the table, getting right into Death's face. "Do you think it's funny that one of my classmates killed himself?"

Death stared at me with a blank look before suddenly bursting into laughter.

It was all I could do to keep from grabbing my coffee and throwing it in his face.

"On the contrary, Y/N," he said after a moment, still chuckling. "I find this to be a very serious matter."

He snapped his fingers.

What followed had to be the strangest thing I'd ever seen before. The effect was slow moving, like rolling fog, but one by one, every last person in Starbucks froze right in the middle of whatever they had been doing. The stream of liquid pouring from an espresso maker remained suspended in midair. A woman in the process of blowing her nose was stuck with her face screwed up in an awkward expression. A man and a woman stepping into the shop, wih a little boy in between them clutching at their hands, were stopped right in the middle of the doorway, and a cold breeze was wafting in from outside.

"What . . ."

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Hi besties, one more day to PTD.

I can't wait for it. Also peeps it's our birthday tommorow.

Happy army day besties:) 

I purple y'all.



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