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The Dead Air

Rahma_Zadran
14
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 14 chs / week.
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Synopsis
When the sun sets in the quiet valley of Oakhaven, the silence is a lie. After his father’s mysterious death, Leo discovers that the local airwaves are haunted by a predatory frequency known as "The Dead Air." It doesn't just mimic the voices of the dead to lure the living—it rewrites reality itself. ​As the townspeople begin to turn into hollow "echoes" for the signal, Leo must team up with a paranoid radio engineer to reach the source. In a world where every electronic device is a potential doorway for a nightmare, can Leo find the frequency to shut it down before he becomes part of the static forever?
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Chapter 1 - Chapter 1: The Signal in the Dark

​The radio in the kitchen didn't just turn on; it screamed.

​It happened at exactly 3:14 AM. I was standing at the sink, glass of water in hand, when the silence of the farmhouse was shattered by a burst of white noise so loud it felt like a physical blow. I lunged for the dial, my fingers trembling as I twisted the knob to the 'Off' position.

​Nothing happened.

​The static continued, rhythmic and pulsing, like the breathing of a giant. I pulled the plug from the wall. The cord fell to the floor with a dull thud, but the radio stayed alive. The light behind the frequency display glowed a sickly, bruised purple.

​Then, the static began to clear.

​"Is anyone... there?" a voice whispered. It was thin, distorted, and drenched in a sound like rushing water. "It's so dark. I can't find my way out of the static."

​My heart hammered against my ribs. I knew that voice. It belonged to my father—the man we had buried in the valley two weeks ago.

​"Dad?" I whispered, my voice cracking.

​"Don't look at the windows, Leo," the radio hissed, the signal growing sharper, clearer. "Whatever you do, don't look at the glass. It's not a reflection anymore. It's a door."

​I felt a cold draft on the back of my neck. Slowly, I turned my head toward the kitchen window. The moon was bright, casting the backyard in a silver glow, but my reflection wasn't there. Instead, standing on the other side of the glass was a figure made of flickering grey lines, like a ghost trapped in a television screen.

​It raised a hand. On the radio, the sound of a fingernail scratching against a metal grate filled the room.

​"It's cold in the dead air, Leo," the radio sobbed. "Let me in."

​The glass began to vibrate, and then, with a sound like a thousand whispers, it began to crack.