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Fragments Of Yesterday

moorodoro
7
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 7 chs / week.
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Synopsis
Imagine a table where not only the living take their seats. Ethan, a broken detective, once shared this table with his late wife. They laughed, fought, cried, and built their love there. But what he never knew is that this table was more than a piece of furniture. It is a sanctuary for souls lingering before crossing over, a place where ghosts arrive to tell their stories, find comfort, and seek therapy before moving on. As shadows gather and memories resurface, Ethan finds himself drawn into their confessions. Each session chills him, moves him to tears, and yet offers a spark of hope. In helping lost souls heal, he may discover the path to his own redemption.
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Chapter 1 - Prologue

I wake up to the soft light creeping through the blinds. The room smells faintly of coffee I made last night and the faint scent of her perfume lingering in the air.

For a moment I reach over, expecting her presence, but the other side of the bed is cold and empty.

The kitchen is quiet as I pour myself a cup of coffee. I set it down on the old two person table. Our table. I can still see her sitting there, laughing at something small I said. The scratches from our games on the wooden surface are still there, faint but stubborn reminders. I let my fingers trace them for a moment before turning back to the coffee.

The day stretches ahead without much to fill it. I move through small tasks, paying bills, checking the mail, staring at the walls a little too long.

Outside, the world moves with loud indifference. People pass, talking, laughing, living. I feel like an observer now, separate from it all. My detective notebooks lie untouched on the shelf. I have no cases to solve, no criminals to chase. Even my own life feels unsolved, a mystery I cannot face.

I take a walk through the quiet park nearby. Leaves shift with the wind, and the cold touches my hands. I watch children play from a distance. Their voices echo, clear and free, and I remember taking her here, holding her hand, feeling that lightness.

I close my eyes for a moment, trying to breathe it in. The memories are both warm and sharp, a reminder of everything I have lost.

Returning home, I prepare a simple dinner. Two plates, two cups. One for me, one for her, though I know it is empty. I set the table and sit down. I talk to the empty chair. I tell her about my day. I speak about things that feel trivial. I do not know if she listens.

Sometimes it feels like she is there in a pause of the light, in the shadow at the corner of my vision.

The evening stretches slowly. I pick up a notebook, jot down small thoughts. I can hear the soft hum of the refrigerator, the quiet of the apartment wrapping around me. I sip my coffee again, staring at the untouched cup opposite mine. There is comfort in the ritual, a tether to the world that once felt whole.

Then I notice something.

A slight shift of air across the table. My cup moves a little. I freeze. Nothing else. I tell myself I am tired, that my mind is playing tricks. I lean forward, listening to the quiet. There it is again, a faint sound, almost a whisper. My heart picks up. I tell myself it is nothing.

I am alone.

I set the notebook down. I glance at the chair across from me. For a brief instant, the air seems heavier, almost alive. I catch a movement at the corner of my vision, a shadow too precise to be random.

My throat tightens.

I stare at the empty chair, my hands gripping the edge of the table. Something is there. I do not know if it is real or my mind cracking under the weight of silence and memory.

I take a breath and blink. The shadow is gone. The room is still. The quiet is absolute, and yet it feels different now.

Waiting. Watching.

I do not move. I sit there, staring at the empty chair.