
The phone rang just as the fog began to rise over the hills. I was halfway through my second cup of coffee, the kind that tastes more like rust than caffeine, when the sound cut through the silence of my small cottage. The clock on the wall read 2:47 a.m. Calls at that hour never brought good news.
“Detective Crowe,” I answered, my voice rough from sleep.
“Sir,” came the voice of Officer Grant from the station. “We’ve got a situation out by Miller’s Creek. A woman’s been found dead. It looks… bad.”
The line went quiet for a moment. I could hear the distant hum of radios on his end, and the soft rustle of papers.
“Who found her?” I asked.
“Neighbor. Said she heard shouting around midnight but didn’t check until she saw the front door open.”
I jotted the address down with a shaking hand. My first thought wasn’t about the crime, it was about who lived near Miller’s Creek. A faint ache stirred in my chest, one I hadn’t felt in years.
“Name of the victim?” I asked, though some part of me already knew.
There was hesitation. Then: “Lydia Marcus.”
The world seemed to narrow into a single point of sound — the quiet hum of the refrigerator, the whisper of the wind against the windowpane. Lydia. I hadn’t heard that name spoken to me in fifteen years.
I forced a breath through my teeth. “I’ll be there in twenty.”
Miller’s Creek sat just beyond the edge of town, where the fog never seemed to lift. The houses there were built decades ago small, wooden, and quiet, like the kind of place people went to forget the rest of the world.When I arrived, two patrol cars were already there, lights flashing dimly against the mist. I parked behind them and stepped out, the cold air biting at my skin. Officer Grant met me halfway up the path, his face pale under the glow of his flashlight.
“She’s inside,” he said quietly. “Husband’s at the station. He’s the one who called after the neighbor found her.”
“Husband?” My voice sounded steadier than I felt. “Marcus?”
Grant nodded. “Yes, sir. Marcus Hale. Says he was out of town last night. Drove back early this morning when no one answered his calls.”
Marcus Hale. My oldest friend. Or at least, he used to be.
I’d known him since university, the kind of man everyone liked instantly. Calm, confident, good with words. He was the one who’d introduced me to Lydia back when she was still mine. The memory pressed at the back of my skull like an old bruise. I pushed it away.
The house was quiet when I stepped in, except for the faint creak of boots on wooden floors and the low murmur of officers taking notes.She lay in the living room. Lydia.
Even in death, she looked untouched by time, her features still soft, her auburn hair spread like a halo against the rug. But the blood told a different story. A dark stain had spread beneath her, seeping into the fibers of the carpet.
I crouched beside her, my hand hovering above the floor. “Any signs of forced entry?”
“None,” said Grant. “Doors were unlocked. Windows closed. No valuables taken.”
I nodded slowly. “So whoever did this… she knew them.”
It was habit, the detective in me speaking. But beneath the professional calm, my thoughts tangled. I had imagined seeing her again a thousand times, but never like this.
There was a small frame on the coffee table, Lydia and Marcus on their wedding day. She was smiling, her hand resting gently on his chest. I felt something twist inside me.
“Bag that,” I said softly, standing up.
Detective Lee arrived twenty minutes later, her coat still damp from the rain. She was younger than me, sharp-minded, with a sense of intuition that made her good at reading people — including me, which was sometimes inconvenient.She stepped beside me, glancing down at Lydia. “Do you know her?”
I paused for just a second too long. “I’ve seen her around,” I lied. “Marcus and I crossed paths back in the day.”
She nodded, not pressing further. “It looks clean. No struggle, no sign of robbery. Whoever did this was careful.”
“Careful,” I repeated. The word echoed in my head.
We spent the next hour collecting samples, photos, anything that might tell the story of what happened here. But stories have a way of lying, of showing only what they want to be seen.
As the sun began to rise beyond the fog, I stepped outside. The air smelled of wet grass and ash. Across the field, the mist swirled around the old fence line, hiding everything beyond it.
Lee walked up beside me, her hands tucked into her coat pockets. “You look like you’ve seen a ghost.”
“Maybe I have,” I murmured.
She studied me for a moment, then turned back toward the house. “Her husband’s coming in later for questioning. You want to handle it?”
I hesitated before answering. “Yeah,” I said. “I’ll handle it.”
As she walked away, I stayed there, staring into the fog. Fifteen years, and the past had found me again.
I thought I’d buried it, the heartbreak, the anger, the nights I spent wondering why she left. But as the first light of morning touched the field, I realized something simple and terrible.
Some things never stay buried.
Latest Chapter
Chapter Eleven-Echoes Left Behind
Six months after Alan Crowe vanished, Miller’s Creek forgot how to talk about him. The town learned to wrap its silence in routine, to replace unease with habit. The station buzzed again, but the air carried something brittle, as if one wrong word could shatter it. People moved like they were pretending not to remember. They pretended well.Lee stopped pretending the day she found his notebook. It was buried beneath a drawer in the evidence room, between old case files and dust. No name on the cover, only a single mark, an ink line drawn straight through the center. She didn’t open it right away. She placed it on her desk and stared at it for hours, waiting for courage or forgiveness, whichever arrived first. Neither did.The bureau had closed the Crowe file two months earlier. Official record: Missing, presumed dead. The divers had searched the lake twice. No body. No footprints beyond the pier. His car engine was cold when they found it, keys still in the ignition, badge resting on
Chapter Ten-The Vanishing
They started calling it “The Crowe Case” on the news the kind of irony that only small towns and gossip could twist into legend.By the time the reporters arrived at the station, I was already gone.No one saw me leave. No one stopped me.The last thing they had of me on record was a keycard swipe at 8:47 p.m., the night Lee turned in her report to Internal Affairs.She had done what she promised: told the truth.I sat in my car at the edge of Miller’s Creek, engine off, watching the reflection of the courthouse lights shimmer across the black water.The night was colder than usual, the kind that seeped into the bones and refused to leave. A storm was coming, the clouds low and bruised, pressing down on the earth.Inside the glove compartment sat the letter. My confession. Or maybe it wasn’t. Maybe it was just another version of the truth, written to sound like remorse.I’d written it three times and torn it up twice.What do you even say when the person you’ve been chasing your whole
Chapter Nine-The Unravelling
The first thing I noticed when I walked into the precinct that morning was the silence. Not the usual kind, this one was heavy, deliberate. Conversations stopped when I passed. Papers shuffled louder than necessary. Someone had been talking about me.I set my coffee down on my desk and opened my laptop.The Hale case file blinked on the screen, the same one I thought I’d buried beneath a mountain of other reports. But it had been reopened. A new tag sat on the header in bold red: “Independent Review: Active.”Lee’s desk was empty, but her jacket hung on the chair. She was here somewhere.The sound of footsteps came from behind me, Chief Donnelly, flanked by two people I didn’t recognize. Suits. Not locals.“Crowe,” he said, his voice carefully neutral. “This is Agent Rosner and Inspector Hale from Internal Affairs. They’ll be going through our open and closed casework this week.”“Internal Affairs?” I forced a half-smile. “Didn’t know we were that interesting.”Rosner didn’t smile bac
Chapter Eight-Echoes Of The Truth
The courthouse in Miller’s Creek was older than the town itself, stone walls, heavy doors, and the faint smell of damp wood that never left no matter the season.When Marcus Hale walked in that morning, the air shifted. He looked thinner, quieter, like someone who’d aged a lifetime behind bars. He didn’t meet my eyes, but I felt the weight of his silence.His lawyer, a sharp-eyed man from the city, placed a thick folder on the judge’s desk. “Your honor,” he began, “new forensic analysis raises serious doubts about the original investigation.”Lee sat beside me, her pen motionless above her notes.The lawyer continued. “The fabric evidence, the so-called ‘key link’ between Mr. Hale and the victim, has been proven contaminated. Chain of custody errors, improper labeling, and most importantly, missing timestamps on the original data logs.”The judge frowned. “Are you implying the evidence was tampered with?”“I’m saying,” the lawyer replied, “that it was handled carelessly. And my client
Chapter Seven- The Cracks Deepen
The morning fog clung to the station like a ghost that refused to leave.When I stepped out of my car, Lee was already by the front steps, a coffee in hand and that look in her eyes — the one that meant she’d found something she shouldn’t have.“Morning,” I said.“Alan,” she replied flatly. “We need to talk.”Inside, she led me to the briefing room. The blinds were drawn, light thin and gray across the table. She laid a file down between us.“Remember the evidence log you signed the night Lydia’s phone came in?” she asked.I nodded slowly.“The timestamp doesn’t match your shift records,” she said. “It’s off by nearly two hours.”“That’s a system glitch,” I said. “It happens all the time.”“Maybe.” She tilted her head. “But I checked the CCTV footage from that night. You were still at the house when the entry was logged. Which means someone else signed it under your name, or you returned later without logging it.”The air between us went still. I forced my tone calm. “What exactly are
Chapter Six-Fractures
The days that followed blurred into one another. The town moved on, but the echoes hadn’t faded. Every café, every corner, every conversation carried Marcus Hale’s name like a whisper.At the station, the energy changed. People smiled when they saw me, pats on the back, quiet congratulations. They called it closure. I called it fragile.Lee was different, though. She didn’t smile much anymore.She came into my office late one afternoon, a file tucked under her arm. The blinds were half-drawn, strips of gray light cutting across the desk.“I’ve been going through the case notes again,” she said.I leaned back in my chair. “Still can’t sleep?”Her lips twitched. “Something like that.”She opened the folder and slid a page toward me, a forensics report. “Look here,” she said, tapping a line with her finger. “The fingerprint match on the window frame, one of them was partial. It’s only a 60% probability match for Marcus.”“That’s still within range,” I said.“It is. But the partial was li
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