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The Last Song Beneath Cedar Hill
The first time Emma Lawson heard the voice on the abandoned radio station, it whispered her name and begged her not to sell the town. Twenty eight years old, exhausted, and carrying a grief she had never fully escaped, Emma stood alone inside the dusty broadcasting room overlooking the tiny valley of Cedar Hill. Sunlight filtered through cracked windows. Dust drifted lazily through the beams of light. The station had been silent for nearly twenty years. Nobody should have been speaking through its microphone. Yet the voice had been unmistakable. Deep. Familiar. Impossible. “Emma, please don’t leave again.” Her heart nearly stopped. Because the voice belonged to Caleb Harper. The…
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The Summer We Found the Missing Stars
The first letter arrived on the day Harper Quinn buried her fiancĂ©, and what made her hands shake was that it had been written twenty-three years earlier. The envelope was yellow with age, its edges worn and fragile, and across the front was her name written in a handwriting she recognized immediately. Not because she had seen it recently, but because once, long ago, she had loved the boy who wrote it more than she had loved anyone in the world. Standing beside a fresh grave beneath a gray sky in the small town of Silver Creek, Harper stared at the name signed at the bottom. Mason Hale. Her first…
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The Girl in the Photograph Window
The morning Clara Whitmore saw her own wedding photograph displayed in the window of an abandoned shop, she nearly drove her car into the river. The picture was impossible. First, because Clara had never been married. Second, because the man standing beside her in the photograph was Owen Reed, the boy who had shattered her heart seventeen years ago. She slammed on the brakes at the edge of Briar Glen’s historic district, her pulse roaring louder than the engine. Rain clouds hung low over the small town she had sworn never to return to. Yet there she was, back because her grandmother had passed away and left her a crumbling…
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The Last House on Willow Lane
The eviction notice was nailed to the front door on the same morning Sadie Monroe discovered a wedding ring buried beneath her dead mother’s rose garden. The paper flapped in the wind like a warning, but it was the ring that made her knees weaken. Inside the band were four engraved words she had never seen before. For My Only Tomorrow. The inscription was not her father’s. She knew that instantly. Her father had died when she was ten, and he had never owned a ring like this. Yet somehow it had been hidden on their property for decades. Standing beneath a gray September sky in the small town of…
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The Name Hidden in the Rain Clock
The day Ava Collins learned she had inherited a clock that predicted heartbreak, the first name it revealed was the man she had spent twelve years trying to forget. The rain hammered against the stained glass windows of the Willowridge train station as she stood before a crate delivered from her late grandfather’s estate. Dust clung to the wooden surface. A faded note rested on top in her grandfather’s careful handwriting. Do not wind the clock unless you are prepared to know what time cannot hide. Ava almost laughed. Her grandfather had always adored mysteries. Yet when she pried open the crate, her amusement vanished. Inside stood an extraordinary antique…
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The Summer We Buried the Stars
The night Lucy Hart dug up a rusted tin box beneath the old church bell and found her own name written inside a love letter dated twenty years in the future, she knew someone in Willow Creek was keeping a secret big enough to break her heart. The summer air smelled of freshly cut grass and river water as she stood beneath the moonlit steeple, her hands shaking around the yellowed paper. The handwriting was unmistakably familiar. It belonged to Noah Bennett. Her Noah. The boy who had once promised to marry her beneath the giant sycamore tree at the edge of town. The boy who had vanished from her…
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The Photograph Hidden in Winter Light
The photograph arrived on the exact morning Amelia Frost decided to sell the house where she had once planned to spend the rest of her life. It appeared without a stamp, without a return address, slipped beneath her front door sometime during the night. The image was faded with age. A young woman stood beside the frozen lake outside Cedar Hollow, smiling toward someone behind the camera. Amelia recognized herself instantly. What made her blood run cold was the man reflected in the lake’s icy surface. Because the reflection belonged to Owen Hart, and the photograph had been taken three years after he supposedly left town forever. Amelia stared at…
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The Day the Church Bell Rang Twice
The church bell rang twice for Ethan Cole’s funeral, and the second ring came from a man who was still very much alive. Every conversation stopped. Every face in Maple Creek turned toward the white church at the center of town. Standing beneath the bell tower, wearing a dark coat dusted with spring rain, was Ethan himself. For one impossible heartbeat, the town seemed suspended between reality and memory. Then someone screamed. Twelve years earlier, Ethan had vanished during a storm while hiking the mountains beyond town. Search teams combed forests for weeks. They found his truck abandoned near a cliff, a torn backpack, and enough evidence to convince everyone…
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The Porch Light Across Winter
The night Nora Bell returned to Maple Hollow, she found a letter waiting on the porch of a house that no longer belonged to her, and the handwriting on the envelope belonged to the man who had broken her heart ten years earlier. Rain shimmered beneath the streetlights as she stood frozen at the edge of the porch, her suitcase forgotten beside her. The old farmhouse looked smaller than she remembered, its white paint worn thin by seasons she had missed. Her grandmother had been gone for three months, yet the scent of lavender still seemed to linger in the damp air. Nora stared at the letter for a long…
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The Letter Beneath the Maple Bridge
The first time Claire Whitmore saw her own name carved into the underside of the old maple bridge, she nearly drove her truck into the river. It was impossible. The carving was fresh, the wood pale around the edges where the knife had bitten deep, and beneath her name were four words that stole the breath from her lungs: You came back too late. She stood there in the fading gold of an autumn evening, staring at the message while cold water rushed beneath the bridge, and for the first time in ten years, she thought about Noah Bennett. Pine Hollow was the kind of town people left when they…