Download Chereads APP
Chereads App StoreGoogle Play
Chereads

The Enigma of Echo Falls

nakhaas_ec
42
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 42 chs / week.
--
NOT RATINGS
724
Views
VIEW MORE

Chapter 1 - Chapter 1: Shadows Over Echo Falls

Echo Falls was a town wrapped in layers of fog and silence, where the past clung to the cobblestone streets as stubbornly as ivy on old brick walls. It sat tucked away in a valley, surrounded by jagged peaks and dense forests. The town's history was buried beneath layers of forgotten stories—whispers of long-gone generations that no one bothered to ask about anymore. Echo Falls, with its quaint shops, narrow streets, and old stone buildings, was a place that never seemed to change, as if it were suspended in time.

For twenty-year-old Daniel Cross, this town had been his world for as long as he could remember. He had never considered leaving, not even when he turned eighteen and technically could. He was content, or at least, he had always told himself he was. The slow rhythm of life in Echo Falls had become comfortable—too comfortable, perhaps. Nothing ever really happened here. People went to work, kids went to school, and the elderly passed their days gossiping in the local diner.

But the longer Daniel lived in Echo Falls, the more he couldn't shake the feeling that something was off—a slight unease, like a shadow on the horizon, always just out of sight but never truly fading.

Daniel wasn't the kind of person who believed in superstitions or town myths. He didn't care for the stories that the older folk loved to tell, about the dark things lurking in the woods or the strange disappearances that no one ever spoke of. It wasn't that Daniel was cynical—he simply preferred to rely on logic, on what could be seen and proven. After all, there was enough going on in his own life to keep him occupied.

He had his family. His mother, Miriam Cross, had raised him on her own ever since his father disappeared when Daniel was just a young child. Miriam was a woman of quiet strength and practicality. She rarely spoke of the past and even less about Daniel's father, who had simply vanished one day without a trace. Miriam always said there was no need to dwell on things that couldn't be fixed, and Daniel had learned to accept that.

Then there was Chloe. At eighteen, she was everything Daniel wasn't—spontaneous, reckless, and always up for an adventure. She'd made a name for herself in town with her wild streak and impulsive nature. Miriam often worried about Chloe's lack of caution, but Daniel didn't see it that way. He loved his sister, even if her unpredictability sometimes drove him mad. Chloe's laugh was the kind that filled the whole room, her energy infectious, and though Daniel often found himself trying to keep her out of trouble, he couldn't help but admire her adventurous spirit.

On a late October afternoon, after finishing his shift at the local bookstore—The Old Book Nook—Daniel made his way home. The fog had rolled in early that evening, thick and damp, shrouding the town in a ghostly veil. Echo Falls, already quiet, seemed even more distant and detached tonight, as if it were lost in the mists of time.

Daniel pulled his jacket tighter around him as he walked down the winding streets, the familiar sights of the town hazy through the fog. The bookstore, a small, weathered building nestled between two older homes, was the only place in town where he truly felt at home. There, amidst the stacks of books, he could forget about everything else—the empty spaces left by his father's absence, the weight of his mother's silence, and the uncertainty that always seemed to hang in the air.

But tonight, as Daniel made his way home, something felt different. The fog wasn't just a physical presence—it was oppressive, like it was closing in on him. He quickened his pace, not out of fear but out of a strange urgency. His footsteps echoed through the empty streets, the sound unnervingly loud against the thick stillness.

As he approached his family's cottage, nestled at the far end of the town, he noticed that the porch light was on, casting a faint yellow glow against the creeping fog. His mother had always been a creature of habit—she kept the lights dim, the house warm, and the windows closed. The light was a sign that she was home, though Daniel had expected her to be in the kitchen preparing dinner by now.

When he stepped inside, the first thing he noticed was the silence. The kind of silence that filled every corner of the room, settling like dust. No sound of pots clattering, no hum of the television, no light conversation.

"Mom?" Daniel called, his voice cutting through the stillness. He slipped off his shoes and walked down the narrow hallway.

Miriam was sitting at the kitchen table, her hands wrapped around a cup of tea, staring at nothing. Her posture was stiff, as though she were bracing herself against something. When Daniel entered the room, she didn't immediately look up.

"Mom?" he asked again, his voice softer now.

She blinked and slowly lifted her gaze, her eyes dark and distant. For a moment, Daniel thought he saw something in her expression—something more than the usual tiredness that marked her face. Fear? Worry? She opened her mouth to speak, but then hesitated, her lips pressed together as if she were struggling to find the right words.

"Daniel," she began, her voice unusually quiet. "I'm just... I'm just worried. About Chloe."

Daniel felt a cold rush in his chest. His sister had been acting strangely the past few days, disappearing without notice, coming home late, and sometimes, not coming home at all. Miriam had tried to dismiss it, brushing off Chloe's behavior as her usual recklessness, but Daniel could see the concern etched in her features.

"Where is she?" Daniel asked, glancing toward the kitchen window, where the mist outside had thickened. The town felt isolated, as if the fog had separated it from the rest of the world.

"I don't know," Miriam replied, her voice tight with anxiety. "She didn't come home last night. And I haven't heard from her all day. She's been... different, Daniel. The last few weeks..."

Daniel's brow furrowed. Chloe's sudden disappearance wasn't like her. She might disappear for a few hours, but never for days without a word. Miriam's voice quivered slightly as she continued, "I just have a bad feeling about all of this."

Daniel could feel the weight of the silence settling between them. Miriam's worry wasn't just about Chloe being out all night—it was something more. Something deeper.

"I'll go look for her," Daniel said, his voice calm but firm. "Don't worry. She's probably just out with friends or... I don't know, on one of her 'adventures.' She'll turn up."

But even as he said it, Daniel wasn't sure he believed it himself. Something about tonight felt wrong, the air thick with a tension that hadn't been there before.

Miriam nodded, though her expression remained strained. She stood up from the table, her movements slow and deliberate. "Be careful," she said softly, her eyes locked on his. "Don't go too far into the woods. You know how Chloe is... she doesn't always make the best decisions."

"I know, Mom," Daniel said, but the words felt hollow. Something about the way his mother spoke—so cautious, so fearful—sent a ripple of unease through him.

As he left the house, the cold air hit him with a rush. The fog seemed to swirl even thicker now, as though it were alive, pressing in from all sides. Daniel pulled his jacket tighter, determined to find Chloe and ease his mother's fears. But as he walked down the winding streets toward the edge of town, a strange sense of dread washed over him. It wasn't the kind of dread that made you panic—it was the kind that made you wonder if things would ever be the same again.

The fog clung to the town like a secret, hiding something in its depths. Daniel could feel it now, deep in his bones—the same uneasy feeling that had been lingering for days, only stronger.

And then, from somewhere deep in the mist, he thought he heard a sound. A whisper, barely audible, as if the town itself was trying to speak.

 

End of Chapter 1