THE CURSED TOWN
THE CURSED TOWN
Author: Oma.p
The arrival
Author: Oma.p
last update2025-04-18 15:41:52

The wind in Cedar Hollow was different. Not the kind that swirled playfully around you, inviting a crisp breath. No, this wind carried something heavier—an oppressive weight. Sophie Rivers could feel it as soon as she drove past the dilapidated town sign. “Welcome to Cedar Hollow,” it read, the words faded and chipped, as though the town itself had been waiting to die for a long time. The trees lining the roads, dark and twisted, leaned toward her car like silent sentinels. The fog rolled in thick from the forest, encircling the town like a cloak, swallowing everything in its path.

Sophie had heard of Cedar Hollow, of course. Everyone in the city had heard of it—the strange town on the edge of the state, forgotten by time and the outside world. It was the kind of place people drove through on their way to somewhere else, but never stayed. And for good reason. Its reputation preceded it, woven into the threads of old local legends and whispered rumors that only the brave, or the foolish, dared to investigate. It was a town of ghosts, or so the stories went. People disappeared here—mysterious, unexplainable disappearances—and no one ever spoke of it again. Some said the town was cursed, trapped in a perpetual cycle of darkness. Others said it was just the fog.

But Sophie wasn’t here for the stories. She wasn’t interested in folklore or ghost tales. She was here for a much more personal reason. Her brother, Nathan Rivers, had disappeared two months ago while living in Cedar Hollow. The police had written it off as another missing person case, but Sophie knew better. Nathan wasn’t the kind of person to just vanish. Not without a trace. And she wasn’t the kind of person to sit idly by while the world pretended everything was fine.

The town looked just as it had been described—run down, forgotten. The streets were eerily quiet, save for the occasional distant bark of a dog or the creak of an old porch swing. Sophie drove past rows of weathered houses with peeling paint, each one sitting in a stagnant stillness, as though no one had bothered to check on them in years. The old post office was boarded up, its glass windows cracked and shattered. A single streetlight flickered intermittently, casting strange shadows on the cracked pavement. The town felt like a place stuck in time, like the kind of place you visited in dreams that left you unsettled when you woke up.

Sophie parked in front of the small, crumbling inn at the edge of town, the last building on the main street. The wooden sign swayed with the breeze, its letters barely visible beneath layers of dust and decay. “Hollow Inn,” it said, and Sophie wondered just how many people had stayed there in recent years. She grabbed her bag from the passenger seat and stepped out into the cold air, pulling her coat tighter around her. Her heart was heavy with the weight of unspoken fears, but she pushed them down. There was no room for fear now. Nathan needed her.

The bell above the door jingled as Sophie entered the inn, the sound a stark contrast to the silence outside. The interior was dimly lit, the musty smell of old wood and stale air filling her nose. The walls were lined with faded photographs of the town’s past—families, festivals, and forgotten moments frozen in time. The reception desk was empty, save for a young woman in her late teens, sitting hunched over, her face buried in a book. She looked up as Sophie entered, her expression blank.

“Can I help you?” the girl asked, her voice monotone, almost lifeless.

“I have a reservation,” Sophie replied, setting her bag on the counter. She wasn’t sure why she felt the need to offer the girl a smile, but it felt like the only natural thing to do in a place that seemed so inhospitable.

The girl’s eyes lingered on Sophie for a moment, and then she reached for a dusty key from a wooden rack behind her. “Room 7. It’s on the second floor. The stairs are creaky, so be careful. People don’t come here often.” She handed Sophie the key with a strange look in her eyes, like she knew something Sophie didn’t.

Sophie took the key, her curiosity piqued. “What do you mean, people don’t come here often?”

The girl shrugged, her gaze drifting to the window. “People come to Cedar Hollow to disappear,” she said softly, almost as if she were speaking to herself. “But you’ll figure that out soon enough.”

Sophie froze. She wasn’t sure if it was the eerie calm of the girl’s voice or the unsettling words themselves, but something about the way she said it sent a chill down her spine.

“I’m just here to find my brother,” Sophie said, her voice firmer this time. She wasn’t going to let herself be swayed by vague, cryptic remarks. “Have you seen anyone new in town recently?”

The girl’s eyes flickered briefly to the counter before looking back at Sophie. “Not lately,” she said, her voice flat. “But it’s hard to say. People come, people go. The town doesn’t really notice anymore.”

Sophie felt her throat tighten. She nodded stiffly, not wanting to press the girl further. She took her key and left the front desk, her footsteps echoing through the hollow hallways of the inn.

As she climbed the narrow stairs to the second floor, the air seemed to grow colder with every step. She paused on the landing, looking down at the dim hallway lined with closed doors. The hallway felt suffocating, the walls closing in around her as the floorboards groaned underfoot. Her heart was pounding now, and the sense of being watched crept over her like a thick fog.

Room 7 was at the end of the hall, its door slightly ajar. Sophie pushed it open cautiously, stepping into the dimly lit room. The walls were bare, except for a single photograph on the opposite wall—a black-and-white image of a small group of people standing in front of a house. Sophie couldn’t make out their faces, but there was something haunting about the photograph, something that made her feel uneasy.

She dropped her bag on the bed and walked over to the window, pulling aside the faded curtains. The view was grim—an overgrown garden that seemed to have once been cared for, but was now swallowed by the wildness of nature. Beyond it, the forest stretched into the distance, its dense trees dark and menacing in the dying light of the day.

Sophie pulled her gaze from the window and shook her head, trying to dispel the sense of dread that was beginning to settle in her chest. She was here to find Nathan. Nothing more, nothing less.

She sat on the edge of the bed, opened her laptop, and began to sift through the information she had gathered about Cedar Hollow. The town’s history was a patchwork of old legends and half-forgotten facts. There was no official record of Nathan’s disappearance, no statement from the police, nothing concrete. Just a few vague mentions in online forums and local news reports about a young man who had come to the town and vanished. It didn’t make sense. Sophie knew Nathan—he wasn’t the type to disappear. He was independent, yes, but never reckless.

The clock on the wall ticked louder, and Sophie glanced at the time. It was getting late. She closed her laptop with a sigh, the weight of the day pressing on her shoulders. She needed to sleep, but something nagged at her. A sense that she wasn’t alone in this room, that something was waiting in the shadows, watching her every move.

Sophie turned off the light, the darkness enveloping her almost immediately. She pulled the covers over her and closed her eyes, trying to push away the unsettling feeling that had settled in her gut. But just as she began to drift off, a soft whisper—almost imperceptible—reached her ears.

“Get out.”

Sophie’s eyes snapped open, her heart racing in her chest. She listened for a moment, but all she could hear was the sound of her own breathing and the distant rustle of the wind outside.

She shook her head, trying to calm herself. It was just her imagination. She was exhausted.

But deep down, she knew. Cedar Hollow wasn’t just any town. It was hiding something. And whatever it was, it didn’t want her here.

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  • THE CURSED TOWN   Shadows of the past

    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 sh

  • THE CURSED TOWN   The veil between worlds

    The air was thick with the scent of earth and damp leaves as Sophie followed Elliot through the narrow, winding paths of the old cemetery. The fog had lifted slightly, but the eerie mist still clung to the trees, swirling like an ancient spirit reluctant to leave. The world felt muffled here, as though the very land had been holding its breath for centuries.Sophie’s footsteps faltered as she caught a glimpse of the gravestones that lined the cemetery. Most were faded and weathered beyond recognition, but there were others—newer ones, carefully maintained, as though someone still visited them regularly. The hairs on the back of her neck stood on end as she realized that this place, this town, was not as abandoned as it appeared. Cedar Hollow had its ghosts—both living and dead—and they were far from silent.Elliot’s footsteps were quiet, measured, as he led her to the back of the cemetery, where a large stone archway loomed in the distance. Sophie hadn’t noticed it before, hidden by t

  • THE CURSED TOWN   Whispers beneath the stone

    The air in the mausoleum was thick, damp with an unsettling, oppressive stillness. Sophie’s fingers trembled as she clutched the weathered Book of the Pact, the spine cracking under her touch. Elliot stood beside her, his eyes shadowed, his expression a mixture of solemnity and caution. He had warned her about the dangers of opening the book, but there was no turning back now. The answers she needed—about her brother, about the curse, about everything that had led her to Cedar Hollow—were right in front of her.The pages of the book were yellowed with age, and the ink had faded, some words nearly illegible, smudged by time and neglect. But as Sophie turned the pages, she began to piece together a story, one more horrifying and bizarre than she had ever imagined. She could feel the weight of the history pressing down on her, the invisible eyes of those who had come before her watching, waiting for her to uncover their secrets.Elliot leaned in, his breath cold on the back of her neck.

  • THE CURSED TOWN   The ties that bind

    Sophie couldn’t shake the feeling of being watched. As she stepped out of the mausoleum, the damp morning air felt colder than before, biting at her skin like unseen hands. The fog had returned in full force, thick and suffocating, clinging to the trees like a shroud that refused to lift. It felt as though the world had grown smaller, more confined, as if the town itself were closing in on her.Elliot followed her out of the mausoleum, his eyes scanning the surroundings with a tension Sophie hadn’t noticed before. He seemed on edge, his jaw clenched tight, his gaze darting to the shadows between the gravestones. It was as though he, too, could feel the curse tightening its grip around the town, watching, waiting for them to make the wrong move.For a moment, Sophie didn’t know what to say. The weight of everything they had learned hung heavy between them—the pact, the curse, the sacrifices. And yet, despite all the horror she had uncovered, there was still a part of her that refused t

  • THE CURSED TOWN   The hollows heart

    The darkness of the forest seemed to pull at Sophie as she ventured deeper into the woods, each step heavier than the last. The air was thick with the smell of wet earth, the leaves crunching underfoot, but beneath that, there was something else. A distant hum, a vibration in the ground, like the pulse of the earth itself. Sophie shuddered, pulling her jacket tighter around her shoulders, but the cold seemed to seep into her bones.Elliot walked beside her, his face set in a grim expression, eyes scanning the woods as though he were waiting for something to jump out from behind the trees. He’d been quiet since they left the cemetery, but Sophie could feel the tension rolling off him, the weight of what they were about to face settling on his shoulders like a heavy cloak. She had no illusions that they were about to embark on a simple search for answers. The curse had its claws in this town, and every step they took closer to the truth would only make it more dangerous.“I don’t like t

  • THE CURSED TOWN   Whispers of the hollow

    The darkness had swallowed the town whole.Sophie stood at the edge of Cedar Hollow, her fingers still tingling from the touch of the ancient stone altar. The Hollow God’s presence, which had been just a whisper in her mind, was now a heavy weight in the air—alive, watching, waiting. She could feel it pressing against her chest, pushing against her heart. Whatever this thing was, it was ancient. Older than anything she had imagined, and certainly far more dangerous.Her breath came in shallow gasps, the air thick and unnaturally still. She couldn’t remember the last time the woods had felt this quiet. Even the wind seemed afraid to stir the leaves. It was as if the trees themselves were holding their breath, anticipating the next move. Sophie glanced at Elliot, whose face was shadowed, his jaw tight as he surveyed the forest around them.“Is it here?” Sophie whispered, though she wasn’t sure if she was asking him or herself. The Hollow God was everywhere, and nowhere at the same time.

  • THE CURSED TOWN   Into the depths

    The fog rolled in thick from the woods, curling around the streets of Cedar Hollow like the fingers of some unseen creature. The town had grown eerily quiet in the last few hours, as if the entire place were holding its breath, waiting for something—or someone—to make the next move. Sophie could feel the weight of the town’s history in every step she took. Cedar Hollow had always been a place steeped in superstition, but now, it felt like a tomb, a place trapped between the past and the future, neither fully alive nor fully dead.“Where are we going?” Elliot’s voice broke through the silence, a hint of frustration lacing his tone. They had left the clearing behind and were now walking through the town, the streets empty and silent. It was the calm before the storm, Sophie knew, the moment before everything went wrong.Sophie glanced at Elliot, her eyes narrowing slightly. He looked exhausted, his face drawn tight with concern. The exhaustion was not just physical; it was something dee

  • THE CURSED TOWN   The house that spoke in whispers

    The rain returned to Cedar Hollow like a curse renewed.Sophie stood at the edge of the Caldwell family property, the once-charming house now loomed before her like a forgotten mausoleum. The shutters clattered in the wind, and the paint peeled in jagged streaks across the siding. She hadn’t been back here since Nathan disappeared, not really. She’d driven by a few times, unable to make herself stop, but tonight something was different.She had dreamed of this place. In the dream, the house bled.Sophie’s fingers trembled as she fitted the old key into the front door. A familiar click echoed through the silence, but the resistance behind the knob sent a chill through her. It was as if the house didn’t want her back.Inside, the air was thick with the scent of mildew, wood rot, and something else—something metallic and sour. Dust coated the floor like skin. A quick scan of the foyer brought back memories she didn’t want: Nathan dancing in socks on the hardwood, her father cursing about

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

  • The heart Beneath the hollow

    The journey was silent. The Keeper of the Veil led them through the decaying remnants of Cedar Hollow, moving as though she knew the streets better than anyone who had lived there for years. Sophie and Nathan followed, their steps heavy, each of them weighed down by the knowledge of what they were about to face. The Hollow had already shown them its darkest face, but now, they were walking into its heart.The town, once vibrant and full of life, seemed to have become something else entirely. The air was thick with a sense of dread, the shadows stretching in unnatural directions. Every house they passed appeared to be abandoned, the windows dark and hollow like eyes turned inward. It felt as though the very essence of Cedar Hollow was withdrawing from the world, retreating into a place where only darkness could thrive.Sophie glanced at Nathan, her hand brushing against his. His face was tense, his eyes scanning the surroundings, but there was something different about him now—a subtle

  • The shattered veil

    Sophie stood motionless as the echo of shattering glass reverberated through the air. The Hollow’s presence, once a suffocating weight that had pressed against her very being, seemed to waver and fade like the last remnants of a storm cloud. Her hand, still pressed against the broken mirror, trembled, not from fear, but from the realization of what they had just done.The world around them felt different—quieter, as though something had shifted in the very fabric of reality. The air no longer hummed with malevolent energy. The oppressive weight that had gripped the town for so long seemed to be dissipating. But Sophie couldn’t shake the feeling that something else was still lingering, just beneath the surface, waiting to make its final move.Nathan stepped beside her, his hand brushing against hers, grounding her in the moment. His expression was a mix of awe and relief, but there was a hint of doubt in his eyes. He could feel it too—the unsettling calm after the storm.“Is it over?”

  • The unburied secrets :2

    The world around Sophie went black, the air around her thickening with the weight of something ancient and unforgiving. Her pulse raced, her breath coming in shallow gasps as the darkness seemed to fold in on her. The voice—familiar and powerful—still echoed in the back of her mind, urging her, pulling her forward.“Sophie! Nathan! Come back!”She felt herself moving, though she didn’t know how. It was as though her body was being guided by forces beyond her control, forces tied to the Hollow itself. She tried to fight it, to claw her way out of this suffocating blackness, but something in the depths of her mind told her she wasn’t meant to escape—not yet.Her fingers brushed something cool and metallic, a sharp contrast to the warmth of her skin. A sudden flash of light cut through the darkness, illuminating the space around her. But it wasn’t light—it was an ethereal glow, a soft, ghostly blue that seemed to swirl around her, pulling her deeper into whatever this was.The voice agai

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