A flashlight.
Flick.
The beam slices through the night like a blade, and I exhale as light floods the space around me.
I check the supplies:
Protein bars.
A bottle of water.
One Liquid IV packet.
A pathetic first aid kit.
Matches.
Great.
Bare bones survival.
No sweater. No real food. No comfort. Just enough to stay breathing.
But I don’t need comfort. I need that fucking key. I’m trying to get my brain to focus on this one task so I don’t think too wildly about the rest—or the consequences for losing.
With the light in hand, I push forward.
Then I hear faint footsteps up ahead.
I kill the flashlight. My back slams against a tree, chest rising slow and shallow. I don’t breathe.
The steps aren’t heavy. Not a man.
A woman.
I creep forward, slow as death, waiting for a glint of her in the moonlight.
And there—a silhouette, feminine, about my size.
I flick the flashlight back on.
She whips around and freezes.
And I see it.
The key. Hanging from her hand on a chain.
I remember the rules. I can fight her. I just can’t kill her. Can I really be this woman?
I’m Contestant Ten. The last woman left. This might be it. My shot. I’ve probably been dropped in this part of the woods for a reason.
She tightens her grip on the key and takes a step back. We’re evenly matched.
She bolts.
And I go after her. Fight or flight, I chose to survive.
My legs scream as I push harder, faster, the flashlight shaking in my grip, tracking her. I’m trying to be quiet, but every branch I snap sounds like a gunshot in the silence.