
Letter from the dead
Chapter 2
Clara stayed on the couch with the paper crumpled in her hands. At first the words felt harmless, even sweet. Daniel had written about when they first met,how she spilled coffee on him, how she panicked with tissues while he just stood there laughing. He mentioned the car that broke down on their first trip, both of them stranded on the side of the road all night, telling dumb stories until the tow truck came. He even wrote about her habit of leaving every light on in the house, the thing he always teased her about but admitted made the place feel less empty.
It should have comforted her, but it didn’t. The note was too heavy. The way he wrote, it felt less like memory and more like goodbye.
She read it twice. Then a third time. She told herself it had to be a joke, one of his strange ideas for their anniversary. He liked confusing her, then laughing when she finally caught on. That had to be all this was.
Clara set the letter on the table and forced herself to wait. He’d walk through the door, grin at her pale face, and make some crack about her being too serious. She would shove the paper in his hand and tell him he wasn’t funny. That was the picture in her head.
But the night dragged on, and he never came.
The silence in the cabin grew heavier with every passing hour, settling into the walls like dust, thick and unmoving and annoying. Each creak of the floorboards under her feet felt loud , echoing through the stillness like a question without an answer. She moved through the small space restlessly, searching each room with growing urgency—first the bedroom, then the kitchen, and finally the bathroom—hoping to find some overlooked clue, a sign that he had only just stepped out. But everything remained just as it had been: his coat still hanging by the door, his boots untouched.
Unable to sit still any longer, she grabbed the flashlight and stepped out into the night, her breath catching in the sudden chill. She called his name again and again, her voice pushing into the trees, searching for any reply. But the woods held their secrets close. Only the insects answered, a low, constant buzz that filled the air , swallowing her words before they could find their way back to her.
Morning came. She told herself he might have gone into town, maybe chasing some last-minute plan. By the second day she still held onto that thought. By the third, it started to slip away. By the fourth, she knew something was wrong.
She sat at the table with the letter spread in front of her, running her fingers over the paper like it might explain itself. Questions circled through her head, sharper each time. Had someone taken him? Had he left her? Was he lying hurt somewhere close, waiting for her to find him?
Her hand shook as she reached for her phone. She scrolled until she saw the name she wanted and hit call.
“Elena?” Her voice cracked. “Hey… I know it's late, but could you please come over? I—I just can't be alone tonight. Something feels off,Can you come? Daniel’s gone. I don’t know what to do, I don’t want to sleep here by myself… please?”
She clutched her phone tightly, her voice trembling.
Her best friend since college arrived that evening, arms pulling Clara into a hug before she even spoke. “He’s fine,” Elena said softly. “You know how he is. He probably thought this letter would throw you off, make you worry a little. He always pushes too far.”
Clara shook her head hard. “It’s been days, Elena. He would’ve stopped by now.”
Elena stayed calm, even when she picked up the letter and read it herself. She set it back on the table carefully. “This sounds like him. The way he talks, the way he jokes. I don’t see danger here, Clara. I see Daniel.”
Clara pressed her palms to her face. “No. Something’s wrong. I can feel it.”
That night proved her right.
A letter slid under the door while they were in the living room. Clara went outside to check who had dropped it. Apart from a passerby and a pair of black cats staring at her—as if anticipating something—there was no one. She stepped back in, closed the door, unfolded the letter, and read the words out loud.
If you want the truth, stop waiting and start looking.
Both women froze.
Elena’s face changed for the first time. She whispered, “This isn’t a joke.”
Clara’s chest tightened. “Then where is he?”
Elena didn’t answer at once. She paced, arms wrapped around herself. Finally, she stopped. “We can’t just sit here. But we can’t go straight to the police either. If this is aimed at you, we need to be careful. I know someone,Michael. He used to be a detective around here. He still takes cases.”
Clara stared at her. “Do you think he’ll help?”
“Yes,” Elena said firmly. “Let me call him.”
By the end of the week Michael had agreed to meet them. For the first time since Daniel disappeared, Clara felt a thin thread of hope. Maybe someone could actually find him.
But the second letter stayed in her mind, its words cutting deeper each time she remembered them. Stop waiting and start looking.
She didn’t know who wrote it or what they wanted, but she knew one thing,whatever life she thought she had, it wasn’t coming back,at least till Daniel is found.
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