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The Echo Between Us Novel Cover

The Echo Between Us

Sloane Everhart maps souls for a living. As one of the rare few with vivid past-life residue, she knows things no one should — including the fact that her previous incarnation’s love affair ended in catastrophic destruction. She’s spent nine years burying those memories. Then Callum Voss walks into her Savannah office for a routine soulprint reading, and every wall she’s built starts to crack. He doesn’t remember her. His soul does. When an anomaly resurfaces — the same echo pattern that preceded the disaster she relives in her dreams — Sloane realizes the past isn’t just haunting her. It’s reloading. Stopping it means working with the one person she swore to stay away from. And the cost of rewriting fate? Sacrificing the only gift that makes her who she is. Some loves are worth dying for. But is this one worth forgetting?
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Chapter 1

The scanning equipment hummed its familiar tune as I prepared for another routine soul imprint reading. Tuesday afternoons at the Savannah branch of the Soul Imprint Research Institute were usually quiet—a few walk-ins seeking past-life clarity, maybe a couple wanting to understand their karmic connections. Nothing that would make my hands shake or my breath catch.

Until he walked in.

The moment Callum Voss stepped through the frosted glass door, my world tilted on its axis. Tall, lean frame moving with unconscious grace, dark hair slightly tousled from the humid Georgia air. But it wasn't his appearance that made my heart stutter—it was the thin, crescent-shaped scar beneath his left eye.

I know that scar.

The recognition hit me like a physical blow, stealing the air from my lungs. In my dreams—no, my memories—I'd traced that exact mark with trembling fingers as smoke filled our lungs and the ground shook beneath our feet. The same scar that had been the last thing I'd seen before the world ended in fire and ash.

"Ms. Windsor?" His voice carried a slight British accent, cultured but warm. "I have a 2:30 appointment."

My soul imprint scanner chose that moment to emit a piercing alarm, its sensors going haywire as they detected the unprecedented energy radiating between us. Red warning lights flashed across the display, and I lunged forward to silence the machine before he could process what was happening.

"Sorry, just a calibration issue," I managed, my voice sounding foreign to my own ears. My fingers fumbled with the controls, slick with sudden perspiration. The scanner's readings were off the charts—soul resonance patterns I'd never seen in five years of conducting these readings.

Callum stepped closer, concern etching his features. "You alright?"

Those two words, spoken in that exact tone—gentle, protective, tinged with worry—sent ice through my veins. It was identical to how he'd asked the same question three hundred years ago, when I'd woken screaming from visions of volcanic destruction. When I'd tried to warn him about the disaster that would claim us both.

I gripped the edge of my desk, fighting to keep my expression neutral. "Fine. Just fine. Please, have a seat."

He settled into the chair across from my desk, and I forced myself to go through the motions. Standard intake forms, explanation of the soul imprint process, consent documentation. All while my hands trembled and my scanner continued to register readings that defied everything I understood about reincarnation patterns.

"First time having this done?" I asked, though I already knew the answer. His soul signature was blazing like a beacon, completely untapped by conscious memory but burning with residual imprints.

"Yes. Honestly, I'm not sure why I'm here." He ran a hand through his hair, and the gesture was so familiar it made my chest ache. "I moved to Savannah six months ago from London. No particular reason—just felt like this place was calling me, you know?"

I knew. God help me, I knew exactly why he'd been drawn here.

The scanner beeped softly as I initiated the reading, and immediately the display lit up with data that made no sense. Callum's past-life residue was stronger than anything I'd ever recorded, but his conscious access was completely blocked. It was as if his soul remembered everything while his mind remembered nothing.

But there was something else. Something that made my blood run cold.

Buried in the swirling patterns of his soul imprint was a resonance signature I'd only seen in theoretical models—a bidirectional search pattern. His soul wasn't just carrying memories; it was actively seeking someone. The wavelength was perfectly calibrated to match my own spiritual frequency.

He was looking for me. Had been looking for me across lifetimes.

"Interesting readings," I murmured, fighting to keep my voice steady as more data streamed across my screen. "You have very strong past-life connections. Most people show faint echoes, but your imprint is remarkably vivid."

"Does that mean something significant?" He leaned forward slightly, and I caught a hint of his cologne—something woody and clean that triggered a cascade of sensory memories. Sitting by a fireplace, his arms around me as we planned our future. The scent of pine and smoke and safety.

"It could." I scrolled through the data, my heart hammering as I spotted another anomaly. Embedded in his soul signature was an echo pattern that matched the warning signals from my own recurring dreams. The same electromagnetic disturbance that had preceded the volcanic eruption that killed us both.

The rational part of my mind insisted this was coincidence. Soul imprint readings were complex, and pattern recognition could play tricks on even experienced practitioners. But my body knew better. Every cell was screaming recognition, every instinct demanding I reach across the desk and touch his face, confirm that the scar was real.

"Your readings show some unusual resonance patterns," I said carefully. "I'd recommend a follow-up appointment to monitor any changes. Sometimes strong past-life connections can surface gradually."

Lie. I needed time to research, to understand what I was seeing. To figure out if the disaster warnings in his soul imprint were echoes of the past or harbingers of something new.

"Next Thursday work for you?" I pulled up my calendar with hands that barely cooperated.

"Perfect." His smile was warm, genuine, and utterly devastating. "I have to admit, I was skeptical about all this, but there's something about you that feels...familiar."

Familiar. If only he knew.

After he left, I sat alone in my office, staring at his file on my computer screen. The readings were impossible to ignore, but they raised questions I wasn't prepared to answer. I pulled up my own classified records—the complete soul imprint analysis I'd undergone when I first discovered my abilities.

Page after page of data, past-life connections, karmic patterns. I'd read it dozens of times over the years, but now I scrolled to the very end, to a section I'd always skipped over as irrelevant technical notes.

My breath caught as I read the final entry: "Bidirectional resonance anomaly detected. Last recorded occurrence: 300 years ago. Result: volcanic catastrophe, Mount Vesuvius region. Recommend monitoring for pattern recurrence."

Three hundred years ago. The exact timeframe of my dreams, my memories of dying in Callum's arms as the earth split open beneath us.

I stared at the screen until the words blurred, my mind racing. If this was real—if we'd found each other again—what did it mean for the disaster patterns embedded in our souls? Were we destined to repeat the same tragic cycle, or was there a way to break free?

One thing was certain: I couldn't ignore this. Whatever was happening between us, whatever force had drawn him to Savannah and me to this moment, I had exactly one week to figure out if our reunion was a second chance or a countdown to catastrophe.

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