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Chapter 4 - CRUELTY OF FATE

A collective sigh of relief rippled through the crowd as Ethan stepped off the ledge, walking slowly towards Liv. Sarah Aquah choked back a sob of pure, overwhelming relief, clinging to David, who visibly sagged, his strength returning now that his son was seemingly safe. Liv's hand was raised, poised to deliver a much-needed, desperate slap, the can of fruit juice resting innocently at her feet. For a fleeting moment, the universe seemed to hold its breath, teetering on the precipice of a fragile, hard-won peace.

But fate, it seemed, had one last, cruel card to play.

Suddenly, a blur of motion erupted from the far end of the bridge. A man, wild-eyed and desperate, tore through the gawking onlookers. He was clutching a snatched bag, the distant wail of police growing louder behind him. He was a thief, on the run, a desperate scramble for freedom. Several police officers, alerted to the chase, surged forward to intercept him, shouting commands.

The thief, seeing the crowd and the police convergence around Ethan, saw an unexpected opening. In his frantic attempt to evade capture, he veered sharply, dashing through the very spot where Ethan, Liv, and his parents stood. It was a terrifying, chaotic surge of bodies. As he barged past, his shoulder slammed into Liv.

She gasped, thrown off balance. Her raised hand dropped, her eyes wide with shock. Her foot, already unsteady, landed squarely on the can of fruit juice she'd placed on the ground. The can, slick and round, became a deadly roller skate. Liv's ankle twisted, and she stumbled, falling forward. Her hands instinctively shot out to brace herself, but instead, they connected with the one person closest to her: Ethan.

With a desperate, accidental shove, Liv's momentum propelled Ethan forward.

He was caught completely off guard, just as he was lowering his guard. His feet, only moments ago on solid ground, flew out from under him. There was a horrifying, sickening crack as the back of his head struck the rough concrete edge of the bridge, a dull, resonant thud that everyone heard. Then, with a desperate, guttural cry that was abruptly cut short, he toppled over the side, plunging headfirst into the dark, swirling waters of the Ravenwood River below.

A collective scream erupted from Sarah. David roared, a primal sound of agony. Liv stared, paralyzed, at the empty space where Ethan had stood, her hand still tingling from the accidental push. The thief was already gone, lost in the confusion, but the devastation he'd wrought was stark and absolute.

The splash echoed through the horrified silence that followed Ethan's fall. Time seemed to slow, stretching into an agonizing eternity even as events unfolded in a terrifying rush. Sarah Aquah's scream was now a continuous, raw sound of utter devastation. David Aquah, his face a mask of disbelief and terror, rushed to the railing, peering frantically into the dark water, his hands outstretched as if he could pluck his son from the depths. Liv had gotten to her feet but stood frozen, the image of Ethan's head hitting the concrete, the sound of his choked cry, replaying in a horrifying loop in her mind.

It had been her.

Her hand.

She had pushed him.

Chaos erupted on the bridge. Police officers, who moments ago had been focused on a thief, now scrambled to the railing, shouting into their radios for emergency services. A few brave souls from the crowd, propelled by instinct, began stripping off jackets, preparing to jump.

From the swirling darkness below, Ethan registered the shocking cold of the river. It enveloped him instantly, a merciless, suffocating embrace. His lungs burned, screaming for air, but his body, disoriented and battered from the impact, refused to obey. He felt the dull ache where his head had struck the bridge, a throbbing pain that quickly faded into a numb distance. He had gotten cut and so the water around him began to reddden.

"Life truly is unfair," he thought, a bitter, ironic clarity cutting through the encroaching darkness. Just when he'd seen it, felt it—that faint glimmer of care, of people who truly worried about him—it had been ripped away, snatched by a cruel, random act.

He dimly perceived a splash above him, a blurry shape plummeting into the water. Someone had jumped in. To save him? A fleeting flicker of something akin to surprise, even gratitude, sparked within him. But his mind was already slipping, the cold stealing his senses, the current dragging him further down. He noted, with a strange detachment, that they wouldn't make it in time. The person, a dark silhouette against the fading surface light, seemed too far away, too slow.

Death by drowning isn't a pleasant experience, he thought, the words forming with difficulty in his fading consciousness. Yet, oddly, he couldn't feel anything anymore. No panic, no pain, just a profound, pervasive numbness. If he could react in anyway,it would be laugh. A person who wanted to kill himself now hoped to be saved from death.

How ironic.

"Is it because I'm…unconscious?" The thought drifted away, unanswered. His back gently scraped against the riverbed, the soft mud giving way beneath him. He felt the reach of the other person, a desperate grasp, but it was too late. The darkness consumed him completely.

Ethan Aquah was dead.

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