Home / Mystery/Thriller / THE CURSED TOWN / Shadows of the past
Shadows of the past
Author: Oma.p
last update2025-04-18 15:43:57

Sophie sat in the quiet darkness of Room 7, her fingers tracing the cold, worn edges of the photograph on the wall. The black-and-white image, a relic of a time long passed, seemed to stare back at her with eyes that had seen far too much. The people in the photo stood rigid, almost too perfectly aligned, as if they were forced to be there. There was an unsettling quality to their expressions, a kind of hollowness that made Sophie’s skin crawl. Something about the scene didn’t sit right. She couldn’t put her finger on it, but there was an undeniable tension radiating from the image, a warning perhaps, from those who had come before her.

Her gaze shifted from the photograph to the window. The night had settled in completely, and the fog outside had grown thicker, blurring the already dim view of the town below. The trees, twisted and ancient, loomed like silent sentinels at the edge of the town, their branches knotted in strange formations that appeared almost human. Sophie couldn’t shake the feeling that she was being watched—by something far older and more sinister than she was prepared to face.

She snapped out of her reverie and reached for her laptop, hoping to focus on something practical. The town’s history—its unsettling past—was what brought her here. The internet connection was spotty, but it was enough for her to gather some fragments of information. She sifted through pages of local news archives, piecing together stories of strange disappearances, inexplicable deaths, and the town’s chilling reputation for being cursed. The more she read, the more it became clear that the people of Cedar Hollow weren’t just affected by their past—they were trapped by it.

Nathan had been one of them. The disappearance that had brought Sophie here was only the most recent in a long line of mysterious vanishings, and yet, the authorities seemed uninterested. There had been no media coverage, no search efforts, no calls for help. It was as though the town itself had erased him from existence, and no one dared question why.

Sophie leaned back in her chair, rubbing her tired eyes. It was past midnight, and the only sound in the room was the occasional creak of the old floorboards beneath her. A low, hollow knock on the door startled her. Her heart skipped a beat, and for a moment, she thought she imagined it. She hesitated, listening for any further noise, but there was nothing.

Another knock.

This time, Sophie stood and walked to the door, her breath shallow. It was odd for anyone to be out this late, especially in a town as desolate as Cedar Hollow. She opened the door cautiously, half-expecting to see the hotel receptionist standing there with some cryptic message or a warning. But there was no one. The hallway outside was empty, the flickering light from the single overhead bulb casting long, eerie shadows across the floor.

Confused, Sophie stepped out into the hall, her footsteps soft against the old wooden floorboards. She looked up and down the corridor, but it was deserted. No sign of anyone at all. She glanced down at the worn carpet beneath her feet, where a faint trail of dust had been disturbed, as though someone had recently walked through.

Frowning, Sophie stepped back into her room and closed the door behind her. There was no logical explanation for the knock, and yet, she couldn’t shake the feeling that something—or someone—was just out of her reach. She quickly locked the door and turned back to her laptop, determined to focus on the task at hand.

The cursed history of Cedar Hollow was no accident. The town had a long history of strange occurrences, each one seemingly linked to the land itself. Some said it was the result of an ancient betrayal, others spoke of a curse passed down through generations. But the more Sophie researched, the more she realized that there was something darker at play, something that reached far beyond the town’s superficial history.

Her phone buzzed on the desk beside her, cutting through the silence. Sophie glanced at the screen, recognizing the name instantly—Elliot Voss. She hesitated before answering, not sure if she was ready to confront the only person in town who might have answers. But then again, she couldn’t afford to turn down any lead.

“Hello?” she answered, trying to keep her voice steady.

“Sophie Rivers?” Elliot’s voice came through the line, rough, as though he hadn’t spoken in days. “You’re staying at the Hollow Inn, aren’t you?”

“I am,” Sophie replied, glancing warily at the door, which seemed to creak in the silence. “How did you know?”

“I saw you arrive earlier,” he said. “I also know that you’re here looking for answers. You won’t find them at the inn, at least not easily. The people here won’t tell you anything, not directly. But I can help.”

Sophie’s pulse quickened. “What do you know about my brother?”

There was a long pause on the other end of the line, and Sophie could almost hear Elliot weighing his words carefully. “Your brother wasn’t the first person to disappear here. And he won’t be the last if things continue the way they are.”

Sophie’s throat tightened. “What do you mean?”

“Meet me tomorrow morning, at dawn,” Elliot said. “I’ll show you something. Something that might change everything you thought you knew about this place. But you have to be careful. It’s not just the people in Cedar Hollow that you need to worry about. There’s something else, something that’s been here much longer.”

Sophie’s mind raced as she processed his words. “Where?”

“The old cemetery,” Elliot replied. “It’s just outside of town, near the woods. There’s a path leading there from the inn. I’ll be waiting for you.”

Before Sophie could ask more questions, the line went dead. She stared at her phone in confusion, her mind swirling with questions. The cemetery? What could Elliot possibly want to show her there?

Sophie knew one thing for certain now: She was no longer just here to find her brother. Cedar Hollow had a darkness that ran deeper than anyone had dared to admit. And if she was going to uncover the truth, she would have to confront it head-on—no matter what the cost.

The following morning, Sophie awoke to the unsettling silence of the inn. The heavy fog had rolled in again, thick and suffocating, as though the town was trying to keep her from leaving. She dressed quickly, the weight of the night’s events still fresh in her mind. Every creak of the floorboards, every gust of wind outside, felt like a reminder of the dangers lurking within Cedar Hollow. She didn’t know why she was so eager to meet Elliot, or why his cryptic message had drawn her in, but something told her that he was her only chance to understand what was happening.

Sophie left her room and made her way down the stairs, the old building groaning underfoot. The receptionist was nowhere to be found, as usual, and Sophie stepped out into the cold morning air without hesitation. The fog was even denser now, and the town looked like a ghostly memory, its streets empty and lifeless.

She walked towards the cemetery, the path Elliot had mentioned winding its way through the overgrown woods behind the inn. As she stepped onto the narrow trail, Sophie couldn’t shake the feeling that she was being watched. The trees loomed tall and menacing around her, their branches twisting and reaching like skeletal fingers. The farther she walked, the more isolated she felt, as though the world outside Cedar Hollow no longer existed.

And then, just as the path seemed to narrow and the fog thickened even more, Sophie saw him. Elliot was standing by a small iron gate, his dark coat blending with the shadows. He didn’t speak at first, just motioned for her to approach. When Sophie stepped closer, he turned and led her through the gate into the cemetery.

“What’s so important about this place?” Sophie asked, her voice barely above a whisper. The atmosphere here was oppressive, as if the very ground beneath her feet carried the weight of countless secrets.

Elliot paused in front of a large, crumbling gravestone. The name etched into it was barely legible, worn away by the ravages of time. Sophie leaned in closer, her breath caught in her throat as she read the inscription: Margaret Holloway – 1837-1859.

“Who was she?” Sophie asked, her heart beating faster.

Elliot didn’t answer immediately. Instead, he turned to face her, his expression serious. “Margaret Holloway was the last person to survive the curse.”

Sophie stared at him in disbelief. “The curse?”

Elliot nodded gravely. “The curse that’s been haunting Cedar Hollow for generations. And the one that will claim you and your brother if you don’t find a way to stop it.”

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Latest Chapter

  • EPILOGUE :the hollow sleeps

    Years later, a child stood at the edge of the woods. She had never known Sophie Rivers—not really. Only stories whispered by her father, and the scent of wildflowers that always grew stronger near the ridge. “Why do they call this the Hollow Bloom?” she asked. Her father knelt beside her, brushing his hand gently over the petals. “Because it grew where something broken healed.” “Was it magic?” “No,” he said softly, “it was someone.” The child was quiet, then touched the flower with a reverence she didn’t fully understand. Far above them, clouds parted. A single white bird passed overhead, wings outstretched against the sun. The woods did not whisper anymore. They breathed. And somewhere deep in the land’s remembering, the Hollow slept— Finally, at peace. Years had passed since Cedar Hollow had last whispered. What was once a town teetering on the edge of oblivion now breathed with quiet grace. The forest, once twisted by the Hollow’s influence, had softened. Wildflowers

  • Where the hollow ends

    The town was quiet.Not the haunted kind of quiet Cedar Hollow had grown used to—but a deeper stillness. A long exhale after a lifetime of holding breath.Birdsong returned to the woods.The fog no longer crept from the earth each dawn.And for the first time in a century, the land did not feel hungry.⸻Nathan stood in the heart of the forest, at the spot where the altar once was. Nothing remained but scorched roots and a single white flower blooming from ash.It hadn’t been planted.It simply… appeared.The locals called it the Hollow Bloom. A sign, they said, that the curse was over.But Nathan knew the truth.Sophie had left it for him.She was still part of this place.Just not in a way he could ever hold again.⸻The new mayor—a woman named Tilda Craine, the first outsider elected in over seventy years—oversaw the rebuilding efforts. The mines were sealed for good. The old chapel ruins were preserved as a historic site. The Founders’ artifacts were placed in a community archive.

  • The hollows last breath

    The season turned colder faster than anyone expected. Leaves browned too early, the air thinning with a brittle stillness that wasn’t quite natural.Some said it was the land recovering.Others, like Elliot, weren’t so sure.“The Hollow doesn’t let go easily,” he told Nathan as they stood over a fresh series of cracks that had opened near the old mining trail. “It adapts. Twists. Learns how to survive.”Nathan stared down at the fracture. It didn’t look like natural erosion. More like something had clawed upward, trying to surface.“But Sophie’s keeping it back,” Nathan said. “Right?”Elliot didn’t answer immediately.“She’s holding it, yes. But for how long—no one knows.”⸻That night, Nathan returned to the ridge. The mist was dense again, curling higher than his knees now, brushing his shoulders.And in it—he saw her.Not a vision.Not a dream.Sophie.She stood by the Hollow’s edge, her skin pale but her eyes sharp and golden as firelight.“You’re fading,” Nathan whispered, breath

  • The girl in the fog

    They didn’t find a body.No bones. No ashes. No trace.Just a hollow in the earth where the blackroot tree had once stood, its roots turned to dust and the air charged with something Nathan couldn’t explain. The kind of silence that felt watched.Cedar Hollow began to heal. Slowly. Like a town recovering from both surgery and war. Roads were repaved. The Hollow’s Field was cordoned off and eventually declared a memorial site. Children returned to school. The mist began to lift from the hills.But no one truly forgot what happened.Especially not Nathan.He walked every morning to the tree’s remains, often long before the sun rose. Sometimes he thought he heard her voice, carried in the wind or whispered in birdsong.Other times, he thought he saw her.A flicker of a figure at the edge of the woods.Dark curls. Bare feet. A silhouette standing just where the fog thickened.The first time it happened, he sprinted toward her—but she was gone before his feet touched the place she’d stood.

  • The hollows bargain

    The town of Cedar Hollow held its breath.The air was still—eerily so. Not with the stillness of peace, but the kind that came before something broke. Every house groaned as if the walls remembered things the people had tried to forget. Trees leaned in closer. The mist never fully left now, curling through alleyways and schoolyards like a patient serpent.Sophie stood at the edge of Hollow’s Field, where it had all begun—and where, she knew, it had to end.Nathan stood behind her, battered but alive, his eyes dark with a fear he didn’t try to hide. “Sophie,” he whispered, voice cracking. “There has to be another way.”She didn’t turn to him. Her gaze remained locked on the heart of the Hollow—where the last of the blackroot trees stood, its bark pulsing faintly like a vein beneath skin. “We’ve searched for ‘another way’ our whole lives, Nathan,” she said quietly. “There isn’t. This thing—it doesn’t just want the town. It wants me. It always has.”The Hollow God’s voice was no longer j

  • The last sacrifice

    The air was still, too still. Sophie’s breath echoed in the cavernous silence of the old church as she stepped closer to the altar, the dagger still clenched tightly in her hand. The weight of it was heavy, but it wasn’t the metal that burdened her—it was the decision that lay ahead. The final act, the one that would either save Cedar Hollow or doom it forever.Nathan stood beside her, his eyes reflecting the same unease. He wasn’t speaking, but Sophie could feel his presence, his energy merging with hers. They were in this together, but the uncertainty still gnawed at the back of her mind.“Do you feel it?” she asked, her voice barely above a whisper.Nathan nodded, his gaze never leaving the altar. “Yeah. It’s like everything is… waiting. Like it’s holding its breath.”Sophie didn’t answer immediately. She had been feeling it too—the thick, suffocating presence that lingered in the air, the pulse beneath the town that seemed to grow stronger with each passing moment. The Hollow was

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