James heard the scream first. It wasn’t human. It ripped through the quiet house like something waking up angry, dragging him toward the attic where Liam shook, pointing at the old box no one ever touched. The air felt wrong, buzzing, like that storm in 2018 when the arborvitae split and the rusted container surfaced. They thought they’d buried the pas… Continues…
James tightened his arms around Liam, feeling the boy’s terror shudder through his small frame. The attic seemed to close in, the sloped ceiling bowing lower, the shadows thickening around the box everyone pretended not to see. That metallic tang in the air was memory made physical, the echo of a night when rain hammered the earth and the past clawed its way back up. He had told himself he’d protected his family by never speaking of it.
But the house had been listening all along. Every photo left in a drawer, every clipping folded and hidden, every object stained by someone else’s ending had soaked into the walls. Liam’s voice, thin and shaking, carried the question James had run from for years: “Who was the other boy?” In that moment, James realized silence had never buried anything. It had only given the dead more time to learn their names.