Lina fiddled her key into the lock. I saw her hand shake slightly, but I didn't mentioned it as she twisted the knob. We both held our breath as the door swung open, neither of us wanting to see what was in front of us. But we both looked.
"What the hell?" came a questioning voice from the stairs. Andi must've looked over our shoulder at the mess that unfolded inside. "Does your apartment usually look like that?"
The apartment itself wasn't even the worst of it. The most that could classify it as messy was the papers scattered all across the ground. The real issue was when you looked passed the main room and at the kitchen sink. From the spot where the faucet should've been, there was a fountain of water spilling out, soaking the floor and nearby carpet.
"N-no," Lina sputtered, entering. We followed her close by, watching where we stepped. Lina immediately went over to the sink, standing close enough to get sprinkled with water coming off of it.
Not far away, the faucet was lying on the counter, clearly knocked off with some force. Probably waterbending.
I hadn't meant to jump to conclusions, but it was very clear what happened here. Based on our enemy and the scene before us, there had clearly been a struggle that Jemma hadn't won.
"You want some help fixing the sink?" I offered to Lina, who was still staring at it with total despair.
"Sure," she said, snapping back to reality. I turned off the water for her as she screwed the nozzle back on. I used waterbending pick up what water I could off the ground and dump it back into the sink, but there was a lot of it.
Lina wandered the apartment, going on a hunt for a note of any kind. Something to signal where her mom might've gone, or where she might've been taken.
"Are we really expecting to find a note?" Andi asked me quietly. "I don't think bad guys usually do that."
"We don't know it was Luca," I said defensively. She shot me a come on sort of look. "Besides, this could all be a ploy to get to Lina. Maybe he mentioned where he was going, knowing she would try and save her mom."
"That doesn't add up, and you know it. Lina was supposed to be gone for another couple of days. By then, Luca has already bolted. If he wanted to get to Lina, he wouldn't kill her mom." Andi was a bit blunt about it, but she was using more logic than the rest of us.
"What do you suggest we do, then?"
Andi only shook her head. "I don't know. Just not this."
"We've got to do something," I reminded her.
With no other suggestions, we considered wandering the city. It seemed like a hopeless task, but no one was willing to say that out loud.
I ventured one final look in Lina's room, though she had already torn it up top to bottom. Things were now scattered every where, papers checked front and back. Nothing.
"I know what you're looking for!"
I jumped and spun around, searching for the squeaky voice that had announced that. It sounded a lot like a child, but I couldn't see anyone.
"Who are you? Where are you?" I demanded.
There was a fit of giggles. "Over here," it explained. I tried to turn towards the sound, but it didn't seem to come from a specific direction. Turning around, I got my answers.
I couldn't hear where the voice was coming from because it was in my head. Another spirit.
"What are you doing here? Do you work for Enide?" I asked. I managed to hush my voice to a whisper as I spoke down to the floating jellyfish like creature curled up on Lina's carpet.
"I know what you're looking for," it echoed, avoiding the question.
I let it slide as I crouched down to maintain eye level with it. "A note?"The spirit hesitated. "No, not that."
"Then what?" I wondered.
"Luca," it responded, as if it were really that simple.
I didn't know if I wanted to hug the thing or strangle it. "Where is he?" I asked through clenched teeth.
At that, the spirit sprung up so it was now floating midair. "Follow me!" It floated out the door and into the kitchen, passed Lina, Andi and Jaxon. None of them reacted to the flying creature in the house.
They must not see it, I decided. When I rushed in, I got a lot of questioning looks.
"Come on," I said, "I know where to go."
"You do?" Andi asked skeptically. Lina started to follow me out the door without another question. The spirit already traveled right through the solid door and was probably out of the building by now. I rushed after it, hardly glancing to make sure the rest were following me. They were.
I followed the spirit across town, now completely sure no one else could see it. People on the street gave me dirty looks when we banged shoulders but made no note when the spirit floated right through their heads.
"How do you know where we're going?" Andi demanded, just barely catching up with me. We made a sharp turn down an alley, following the spirit.
"I just do," I insisted. Something told me Andi wouldn't like the idea of conspiring with spirits. I didn't need her comparing me to Mom.
"How, though?"
"I know the city a lot better than you," I reminded her.
"Not better than Lina," she argued. I was too focused on the spirit's path to look at Andi's expression. It had come to a halt in front of an old, clearly abandoned warehouse.
The crowd came to a halt around me. They all looked at me expectantly. I wasn't sure I had any words for them. Where the hell are we?

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Don't Stop Now [Finding My Path Sequel]
FanfictionAfter two years, Tomi makes the bold decision to leave the illegal bloodbending camp he has come to call home. After discovering he can't bloodbend, Tomi makes it his mission to hunt down his mom and figure out why. Before he can find her, Tomi will...