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The Day the Clock Began Again
At exactly 6:17 every evening for twelve years, the broken clock in the center of Briar Glen chimed once despite having no working mechanism, and on the day it suddenly began keeping perfect time again, Sophie Quinn received a letter written in the handwriting of the man who had shattered her heart. The envelope appeared in her mailbox without a return address. Her hands trembled before she even opened it because she recognized the slant of every letter. There were some things grief never forgot. She stood on the porch of her bakery while golden afternoon sunlight spilled across Main Street, and for a moment she simply stared at the…
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The Song Hidden in December
The first snow of the year carried a voice that should not have existed, and when Harper Quinn heard it drifting across the frozen town square, she dropped the engagement ring into the snow and forgot how to breathe. The voice was singing a melody she had not heard in eleven years. A melody written by a boy who vanished without a goodbye. A melody no one else in the world should have known. Harper stood motionless beneath strings of holiday lights while people hurried around her carrying shopping bags and cups of hot cider. The tiny town of Willow Creek glowed with December charm. Snow covered rooftops. Lanterns flickered…
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The Lighthouse Kept Her Secret
On the morning of her wedding, Charlotte Reed found a photograph of herself kissing a stranger she had never met. The image was tucked inside her mailbox with no note, no return address, and no explanation. For a full minute she simply stared at it while cold terror spread through her chest. The woman in the photograph was unmistakably her. The man was undeniably not her fiancĂ©. Yet what unsettled her most was not the kiss. It was the expression on her own face. She looked deeply, desperately in love. Charlotte dropped the photograph and gripped the edge of the mailbox to steady herself. Beyond the road, waves crashed against…
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The House With Her Light On
The obituary announced Claire Bennett’s death on a Tuesday morning, but by Thursday evening she was standing on the porch of her old house watching the man she once loved read the notice that claimed she no longer existed. Rain gathered on the brim of her borrowed hat as she stared across Maple Ridge, a quiet lakeside town tucked between forests and rolling hills, and for a terrifying moment she considered turning around and disappearing again. Five years earlier, Claire had left town without warning, without explanation, and most painfully, without saying goodbye to Owen Mercer. Then the world had quietly moved on without her. At least that was what…
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The Summer He Never Remembered
The man standing beside the burning farmhouse was holding a photograph of Lily Hart against his chest, yet when she called his name, he looked at her with the empty eyes of a stranger. Smoke curled into the twilight sky above Cedar Hollow, a small mountain town where everyone knew everyone else’s history, and Lily felt her heart fracture all over again as Noah Walker stared at her without recognition. Three years earlier he had left town after promising he would come back for her. Six months later a devastating car accident had stolen nearly every memory of his life before that day. He had never returned. Until now. The…
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When Autumn Forgot to Leave
The day Emma Lawson received a bouquet of fresh wildflowers from a man who had been buried three years earlier, she nearly drove her truck straight into the lake. The flowers sat on the passenger seat wrapped in brown paper, their petals trembling in the wind pouring through her open window. Attached was a note written in handwriting she knew better than her own. I never stopped looking for my way back to you. Emma pulled onto the shoulder of the road overlooking Silver Pine Lake, her hands shaking so violently she could barely breathe. Three years ago, the entire town of Ashridge had attended Owen Carter’s funeral. She had…
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Whispers Beneath the Lavender Sky
The night Lily Mercer found a wedding photograph with her face torn out of it, hidden inside the wall of the century old farmhouse she had just inherited, she had no idea the man standing beside her in the picture would return to change her life forever. Briar Hollow was the kind of small town where generations lived and died within sight of the same church steeple, where every front porch held stories older than memory, and where secrets seemed to linger in the air like woodsmoke. Lily had spent most of her life trying to escape it. At twenty eight, she had built a successful career as an architect…
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When the River Returned Your Name
The first time Ava Monroe saw her own name carved into the underside of the old river bridge, she nearly drove her truck into the water because the man who had carved it was supposed to be dead. Willow Bend was the kind of town where everyone knew who bought a new mailbox, whose dog escaped the yard, and what pie won the county fair, yet for eleven years nobody had spoken the name Ethan Hale without lowering their voice. At nineteen, Ethan had disappeared during a flood that swallowed roads, homes, and nearly half the riverbank. They never found his body. Eventually people stopped searching. Then they stopped hoping.…
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The Letters Hidden in the Bell Tower
The church bell rang at midnight on a summer evening when no one in Willow Creek had touched the rope in twenty years, and Emma Carter knew before she opened her front door that the past had finally come back for her. The sound rolled across the sleeping town like a heartbeat from another life, pulling her from the quiet routine she had built so carefully after heartbreak had taught her how dangerous hope could be. She stood on her porch beneath a sky crowded with stars and saw a single light glowing in the abandoned bell tower on the hill. No one should have been there. No one except…
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The Letter Hidden in the Bell Tower
The church bell began ringing at midnight on the anniversary of Ethan Cole’s disappearance, and in a town where everyone knew everyone else’s secrets, that sound was enough to make Clara Bennett drop the tray she was carrying and run into the cold summer rain. Five years had passed since Ethan vanished without a goodbye, leaving behind a broken engagement, a hundred unanswered questions, and a wound in Clara’s heart that no amount of time had managed to heal. The bell tower had been abandoned for decades. Nobody had touched it in years. Yet as the echoes rolled across the sleeping streets of Maple Creek, Clara knew with terrifying certainty…