Clementine:
"Alright, we need to head out," I said, pointing toward the exit.
"So what were you saying about not wanting to go into the antique shop?"
After we broke the hug, Leysa turned around and slapped Troy on the chest with the back of her hand.
He playfully rubbed his chest and groaned as he knelt down.
"Ouch! Why would you do that?" he complained like a child.
She rolled her eyes, hands on her hips.
"You seriously want me to go and get you a wedding dress from the antique shop?" he asked in a serious tone.
"Leysa, then you will have to go there to get me a suit as well," he commented, mirroring her action playfully by placing his hand on his waist.
"Why can’t you do both? Look at Ian. He would do both for her," Leysa complained.
Ian wrapped his arm around my waist and pulled me closer, making me collapse against his chest while we watched the two argue.
They looked adorable.
"My dear Leysa, maybe you are forgetting we do not have a lot of time. The minute we bury the stone, we need to be out of here, or we will be stuck here for the rest of our lives, or for however long. Do you want that?" Troy teased her, though there was a slight serious edge to it, probably because he did not want to deny her idea of getting married here, but at the same time the circumstances were really scary.
"Fine, we will just leave," she responded, sticking her tongue out.
The way he watched her was full of love.
"I promise you the best wedding on the mainland."
Then Troy lovingly pulled her closer and hugged her.
"I promise you," he repeated.
She hugged him back, resting her head against his chest before it was time for us to face the reality that we were still not done.
"What monster is outside?" Leysa asked, concern written all over her face.
"There aren’t any major ones. Just the small ones."
The moment I said that, Troy slapped his forehead.
"Your ’small’ monsters are still creepy, Clementine," he muttered with a groan.
The rest of us laughed.
"Still, they’re better than the others," Leysa reminded him. "At least we can avoid them."
She was right. We had seen those smaller monsters around before, and they hadn’t harmed us.
As soon as we opened the door, I pointed ahead.
"Across this road, that castle appeared," I explained. "That’s where the watch was."
Leysa already remembered.
I had told her how the watch ended up in Charles’s hands and how he had come after it.
She immediately began retelling the story to Troy, excitedly filling in the details.
While we were crossing the road, we saw the Hollow man again.
"This thing is seriously following us," I complained, agreeing with Troy and Leysa.
It was literally everywhere. It hadn’t been like this before.
Now the moment we stepped onto the road, it appeared.
"Just keep moving," Leysa said firmly as she walked ahead.
We had barely stepped into the woods when Ian caught my hand.
"After this, we’re going back, okay?" he said, reminding me that once this was over, we were heading home. "By then, they’ll have buried their stone too."
"Yeah, and after that, Yorick said he has a card. He’ll scan it and we’ll go home," Troy added. Then he paused. "But guys, there’s another problem."
He had given us half good news before remembering the bad part.
"How do we know the train will come back?"
The moment he said that, we all looked at each other.
He had a point. What if the train didn’t return?
"What if it never comes back?" Leysa asked quietly.
But Ian still looked confident.
"Guys, my father is on the mainland. Don’t worry. The train will come," he said.
We all nodded.
Then another thought struck me.
"But what if the North disappears before the train even arrives?" I asked.
Ian’s confident expression began to fade.
He started scratching the back of his neck.
None of us had thought about that.
Now we were all staring at each other in confusion.
We had the stone in our hands and had come here to bury it.
But before doing that, we needed to know how we were getting out of here.
"I think we should finish this first," Troy said. "It’ll take some time for the North to disappear. I think we’ll be fine."
He pointed toward the fence.
"If nothing else works, we’ll break that fence and leave. Once the North starts disappearing, that fence won’t matter anyway."
I remembered clearly that breaking that fence wasn’t easy.
But for now, burying the stone was our only option.
If we were late, the others on the opposite side, Yorick and Haiden, might bring their tower down.


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