MY DREAM DOLL Chapter 13 The Storm’s Arrival

By the time Ruby made it home, the rain had started to fall in heavy sheets, drenching her clothes and soaking the broken doll inside her bag. She slammed the front door behind her, leaning against it as she tried to catch her breath. Her parents weren’t home yet, and the house was empty and quiet—too quiet.

She climbed the stairs to her room, heart pounding, and pulled the broken doll and letters from her bag. She spread them out on her bed, staring at the fragmented porcelain face, and felt a surge of anger. The doll had taken Elizabeth, and it wasn’t going to take her. She grabbed the flashlight and the journal and went back to the garden, determined to end it once and for all.

The rain had turned the garden into a muddy mess, but she didn’t care. She dug until her fingers were raw, until the wooden box was exposed once again. She yanked it out of the ground and threw it open, grabbing the doll she had buried there.

“I’m not afraid of you!” she screamed, holding the broken doll in one hand and her own in the other. “You can’t have me!”

A sudden crack of thunder split the air, and the ground seemed to tremble beneath her feet. The dolls, as if sensing each other’s presence, began to change. The cracks widened, the porcelain flaking away to reveal something dark and moving beneath the surface. Ruby’s hands shook, and she knew she couldn’t stop now.

With a cry of rage and fear, she slammed the two dolls together.

They shattered, exploding into shards of porcelain and fragments of cloth. The air grew icy, and a scream—loud and piercing—filled the night, a sound that seemed to come from everywhere and nowhere at once. Ruby fell back, her ears ringing, as a swirling, shadowy figure rose from the fragments, twisting and writhing in the air.

It was the girl, the one from her dreams. But now, Ruby could see her face—pale and hollow, with eyes that were empty and endless.

“Help me,” the girl’s voice echoed, reverberating through Ruby’s mind. “Free me…”

Ruby didn’t know what to do. She reached for the journal, flipping frantically through the pages, and found the last, half-torn entry. Munin had written about a final ritual, a way to break the curse that bound the doll’s spirit—a ritual that involved burning the remains and speaking a name that had been scratched out, barely legible: Annabelle.

She scrambled to her feet, gathering the shattered pieces of the doll, and ran back to the house.

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