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In the fall of 1997, five cousins gathered for what was supposed to be a quiet weekend reunion at their grandfather’s remote lodge in the Texas Hill Country.

They were young adults, full of life, full of plans.

By Monday morning, they were gone.

No footprints, no signs of struggle.

The lodge doors locked from the inside, their cars still parked outside.

For over two decades, families have been haunted by one question.

What happened to the five cousins of Hollow Creek? If you’re new here, subscribe for more stories where the past refuses to stay buried.

The lodge sat at the edge of the valley, half swallowed by cedar trees and limestone cliffs.

It wasn’t much to look at.

Cedar plank walls gone gray with weather, a sagging porch swing, and windows that seemed to blink at strangers like tired, suspicious eyes.

But to the H Hallstead family, it had always been the place of return.

On that Friday evening in late October 1997, the cousins arrived in separate cars, headlights cutting through dusk as deer scattered off the gravel road.

They hadn’t all been together in years.

Car doors slammed, trunks opened.

Laughter, hesitant at first, then freer as the old rhythms returned.

There was Thomas, the eldest at 24, steadyvoiced and serious, studying law at UT Austin.

He was the one who had convinced everyone to meet.

He believed a weekend here might bring the family closer after too many years of silence following their grandfather’s death.

Clare arrived next, her silver sedan rattling up the drive.

She was 23, already hardened by working two jobs in Dallas, the edges of her voice sharper than she meant them to be.

Still, when she saw Thomas waiting on the porch, her arms opened easily.

Jacob, only a year younger, carried his guitar case in one hand and a six-pack in the other.

The peacemaker, always filling silence with music or jokes.

Then came Elena, small but fierce, her camera swinging around her neck.

She was studying photography, intent on documenting everything.

Finally, Lily, the youngest at 19.

Her car was the loudest, the music thumping as she pulled in.

She tumbled out with too much energy, too much recklessness.

But that was Lily, the spark none of them could quite control.

The five of them stood in front of the lodge, staring up at its shadowed windows, as though trying to see the ghost of their grandfather waving from the porch.

For a moment, the air seemed too still, the woods too quiet.

But then Jacob made a joke about the swing still hanging on with rusty chains, and laughter broke the tension.

That night they built a fire in the great stone hearth, roasting hot dogs, telling stories.

Elena filmed parts of it.

Shaky half-lit footage later turned over to police as the last known images.

In the video, their faces glow in the fire light.

They look impossibly young, unfinished.

Hours pass.

Voices grow quieter.

One by one, they drift to bed.

By morning, Hollow Creek was silent again.

Neighbors reported no strange cars, no shouting in the night, no broken windows.

When the sheriff arrived 2 days later, he found the cousin’s cars still there.

Jackets left on hooks, coffee mugs lined up on the kitchen counter as if someone had just rinsed them.

The only anomaly was Elena’s camera left behind on the table.

The final frame captured nothing but darkness, a blurred streak of light in the corner as though the shutter had clicked mid-motion and then nothing.

For 26 years, that silence has held until now.

The road into Hollow Creek looked different now, wider, straight.

The ditches were filled with years of gravel, and the old handpainted mile markers had been replaced with green metal signs stamped by the county.

But for Margaret Lane, the drive back into the valley carried the same weight in her chest that it always had, a slow tightening, as though the land itself were holding its breath.

She pulled her rental car to the shoulder and cut the engine.

For a moment, she just sat there, listening to the tick of cooling metal.

The air smelled faintly of cedar and burnt dust.

It had been more than 25 years since her cousins vanished.

She had been 17 then, too young to join the weekend reunion.

Her mother hadn’t let her go, saying she was still too much of a child to spend nights drinking with the older ones.

Margaret had sulked all weekend.

Then Sunday came and no one came back.

Her family’s lives fractured that year.

Holidays fell silent.

The lodge was boarded up.

Rumors gnawed at the family name until no one spoke it aloud anymore.

Margaret had learned to carry her own silence, to turn the page whenever she felt herself dwelling too long on the missing five.

But now she had been asked to break that silence.

The producers from Deep Shadows, a true crime documentary series on YouTube, had reached out 3 months ago.

They were planning a season devoted to long, unsolved American disappearances, and the Hollow Creek case topped their list.

They wanted her perspective, her memories, her insight.

At first, she had refused.

The thought of cameras digging into wounds left raw for decades made her stomach turn.

But something in the producers’s voice had unsettled her.

“There’s new evidence,” he’d said, “the kind that could reframe everything.

That had been enough to bring her here.

” Margaret adjusted her glasses and stepped out of the car.

The September sun was strong, but the air carried the first bite of autumn.

She walked across the gravel shoulder and peered through the trees.

Somewhere beyond the cedar wall lay the lodge, still standing, though she had not seen it since she was a girl.

A voice broke the quiet.

You, Margaret Lane, she turned.

A man was approaching from the opposite car, a beatup Ford Explorer that bore the faded logo of the Deep Shadows crew.

He was tall, thin, his hair tied back.

He carried a camera bag slung across his chest.

“Yes,” Margaret said, squaring her shoulders.

“I’m Ryan,” he said, extending his hand.

“Field producer.

Thanks for meeting us here.

” She shook his hand.

His palm was warm.

Steady.

I almost didn’t.

He gave a half smile.

That’s how these usually start.

They walked toward the explorer where two others waited.

A young woman with headphones around her neck and a man leaning against the hood, arms crossed.

Margaret recognized him at once from the email signature.

Daniel Price, investigative journalist, former print reporter turned documentary host.

His voice had narrated countless episodes she’d watched, always with that calm, measured cadence that made even horror feel digestible.

Now in person, he seemed heavier, his hair streaked with gray, his eyes sharp, but tired.

He stepped forward.

“Miss Lane, I’m grateful you came.

” “I don’t know how much help I’ll be,” Margaret admitted.

“You’ll be more than you think,” Daniel said.

“You lived in the aftermath.

That perspective matters.

” Ryan hoisted his camera.

“We’re going to start with some B-roll, exterior shots, the road in, establishing mood.

Then we’ll walk you to the lodge.

Just natural conversation.

Nothing staged.

Margaret swallowed hard.

The lodge is still standing.

Daniel’s gaze flicked toward the trees.

Mostly.

The county wanted to tear it down years ago, but it fell into dispute.

No one claimed ownership after your grandfather’s estate dissolved, so it’s just been there waiting.

The word hung heavy.

waiting.

They moved together down the narrow track.

The road bent, dipped, and then opened into a clearing.

Margaret stopped dead.

There it was.

The lodge sagged under the weight of time.

Its porch collapsed at one corner, its shingles modeled with moss.

The windows were empty sockets, some broken, some fogged with grime.

The swing still dangled from its rusted chains, one side lower than the other, creaking faintly in the breeze.

Margaret’s throat tightened.

She had dreamed of this place countless times, sometimes bathed in golden light, sometimes crawling with shadows.

To see it again in daylight, solid and rotting before her, was like seeing a ghost with skin.

Ryan was already circling, camera raised.

The young woman uncoiled cables capturing ambient sound.

The creek of branches, the rustle of dry grass.

Daniel stood beside Margaret.

Tell me what you see.

Her voice wavered.

I see emptiness.

I see what’s left when life goes missing.

He nodded slowly.

And do you believe they’re gone for good? She turned to him.

Don’t you? His eyes lingered on the lodge.

I’ve learned not to believe anything too soon.

They entered through the warped front door, stepping into air thick with dust and mildew.

The living room stretched before them, its stone hearth blackened, the shelves toppled.

A longforgotten beer can lay crushed in the corner.

The place smelled of wet earth and rust.

Margaret’s stomach churned.

She remembered the photographs, her cousin’s faces glowing in the firelight.

Now the hearth was nothing but ashes and spiderw webs.

Ryan’s camera word.

Daniel moved closer to the hearth, crouching.

“Do you know what was found here the morning after?” he asked.

Margaret shook her head.

“Nothing,” he said.

“No broken glass, no overturned furniture, no signs of struggle, just mugs lined up at the sink.

A fire burned low in the hearth.

It looked as if they had simply stood up and walked out.

Margaret shivered.

Daniel continued, “But here’s what most reports didn’t mention.

The fire had been started again that morning.

Fresh wood, fresh ash.

Someone tended it after the time they vanished.

” Margaret’s eyes widened.

“You’re saying someone stayed or someone came back?” Daniel said softly.

Ryan lowered his camera.

The silence pressed in.

Margaret’s pulse thudded in her ears.

She thought of Elena’s camera left behind on the table.

She had seen the blurred frame printed in the newspapers, a streak of light, motion, frozen.

She had always assumed it was nothing.

Now she wasn’t sure.

Outside, a bird shrieked suddenly.

Margaret flinched.

Daniel straightened, brushing dust from his hands.

“This case has haunted people for decades, but what we’re going to uncover, Miss Lane, may haunt you most of all.

” The words landed like a weight in her chest.

She wanted to tell him she wasn’t afraid.

But she was terribly, and as she glanced once more at the collapsed swing, swaying gently in the breeze, she had the strange, unsettling thought that the house itself was listening.

The afternoon light shifted as clouds drew over the valley.

The lodge seemed to grow darker inside, its corners swallowing the camera lights no matter how bright they burned.

Margaret moved carefully across warped floorboards, her footsteps echoing.

Daniel motioned to Ryan to keep filming.

“We’ll start here,” he said.

“Natural impressions.

Don’t force it.

” Margaret nodded stiffly.

She turned toward the living room, her eyes adjusting to the shadows.

Dust layered everything.

Broken chairs, a warped bookshelf, the outline of where family photos had once hung on the wall.

Only faint nail holes remained, like tiny puncture wounds in the cedar paneling.

She felt the familiar ache in her chest.

“This place was supposed to be safe,” she murmured.

“It was where we gathered every summer as kids.

My grandfather built it with his own hands, and then it became a tomb without bodies.

Ryan’s camera hummed as he zoomed in.

Daniel studied her face.

“Do you remember the weekend it happened?” Margaret inhaled.

“Yes, I remember being angry.

I was 17, the only cousin left behind.

My mother said I was too young.

I remember sulking, listening to the phone ring and ring on Sunday when no one came home.

Then the police came to our door.

After that, everything splintered.

Her throat tightened.

Every family gathering after that was half empty, five chairs missing, five voices missing.

The room fell silent again, except for the distant groan of wood in the rafters.

Daniel crouched near the hearth once more, his eyes scanning the stones.

This is what puzzles me.

A fire tended fresh ash.

That suggests presents.

Either one of them alive or someone else entirely.

Why would that never make it into the official record? Margaret frowned.

Maybe the sheriff didn’t think it mattered.

Or maybe someone wanted it buried, Daniel said.

The words hung in the musty air.

Ryan shifted, lowering his camera slightly.

Dan, you want me to show her? Daniel’s gaze flicked toward him, then back to Margaret.

We weren’t going to reveal this so early, but maybe you should see it now.

Ryan dug into his bag, pulling out a manila folder.

He handed it over.

Margaret’s fingers trembled as she opened it.

Inside was a series of photographs, color slightly faded with age.

Each showed the lodge interior as documented by police the morning after.

She recognized the details she already knew.

The mugs by the sink, the table with Ellena’s camera left behind.

Jacob’s guitar leaning against the sofa.

But one photograph made her stomach lurch.

It showed the entryway just inside the front door.

In the dust along the floorboards were faint marks, elongated shapes, uneven footprints.

Bear, Margaret whispered.

Why? Why weren’t these released? Daniel’s voice was quiet.

We only obtained these last year through a retired deputy.

They were suppressed from the case file.

There was no reason to erase them unless someone didn’t want the story told in full.

Margaret stared.

The prints were small, narrow.

These are a woman’s.

Daniel nodded.

Or a girl’s.

They were never matched.

Her skin prickled.

She thought of Lily, youngest, always barefoot, always darting outside.

Could the prince have been hers? But if so, why cover them up? Her mind spun.

Ryan quietly repacked the photos.

Daniel rose, brushing dust from his knees.

We’ll get more footage tomorrow when the light’s better.

For now, we’ll head back to town.

You’ll meet someone tonight.

The former sheriff’s daughter.

She has things she wants to say.

Margaret followed them out into the afternoon air.

The clouds had thickened, making the lodge look darker, more abandoned.

She caught one last glimpse of the broken swing.

For a fleeting second, she thought it moved too suddenly in the breeze.

A sharp jerk like someone had pushed it.

Her heart skipped, but when she looked again, it swayed lazily, as though mocking her imagination.

They drove back into town in two cars.

Margaret followed Daniel’s explorer, the road winding between low hills.

She remembered this drive from childhood, the way the land opened into fields, the flash of cattle gates, the sun setting behind scrub oaks.

But now every mile carried unease, as if the land itself had swallowed secrets, it would not give up.

By the time they reached the town square, the sky was dim.

Neon signs flickered on above the diner in the gas station.

A few trucks lined the curb.

Daniel parked outside the diner and waited for Margaret to join him.

Inside, the air was heavy with coffee and fried food.

A waitress waved them toward a booth at the back.

Waiting there was a woman in her 50s with cropped gray hair and a face lined by years of sun.

Her eyes were sharp, restless.

Daniel introduced them.

This is Karen Wilks.

Her father was Sheriff Harold Wilks.

He led the investigation.

Karen extended her hand.

I’m glad you came, Margaret.

I was about your age when it happened.

I remember how fast everything went quiet.

Margaret shook her hand.

You said you had something to share.

Karen leaned forward, lowering her voice.

My father carried that case to his grave.

He believed something was wrong from the start.

He told me he saw evidence disappear.

Reports rewritten.

The case shut down too quickly.

He never said it outright, but I think he suspected someone powerful didn’t want it solved.

Margaret’s chest tightened.

Powerful how? Karen’s gaze flicked toward Daniel.

Land deals.

Old family money.

Your grandfather’s lodge wasn’t just some cabin.

That property was part of a larger track tied up in inheritance fights.

People had reasons to want the cousins gone, or at least to silence talk of what happened.

Margaret gripped the edge of the table.

You think they were killed over land? Karen shook her head.

I don’t know, but I do know this.

My father told me the last thing he saw before he was pushed off the case.

A notebook.

One of your cousins had been keeping it.

names, dates, strange entries.

He said it vanished before he could log it as evidence.

Margaret felt her pulse quicken.

Whose notebook? Karen’s lips thinned.

He wouldn’t say.

Maybe he didn’t know, but he told me this much.

Whoever wrote it, they discovered something about the family that was never meant to surface.

The words hit Margaret like a cold wave.

She thought of Elena’s camera, Jacob’s guitar, Lily’s laughter, and now a notebook hidden, stolen.

Her voice was faint.

Do you know what was in it? Karen shook her head.

Number only that my father died certain it mattered.

He said, “The kids didn’t just vanish.

They uncovered something, and that’s why they were silenced.

” Margaret sat back, her heart hammering.

The diner’s neon buzzed outside.

Somewhere across the square, a church bell told the hour.

For years, she had imagined her cousin slipping into darkness.

Faceless danger snatching them away.

But now, hearing Karen’s words, she realized the truth might be darker still.

Not strangers, not chance, family.

Margaret hadn’t planned to see her aunt that night.

She had hoped to ease into it.

Perhaps after the cameras had gone home, after she’d had time to steady her nerves.

But Daniel had insisted.

You’ll get truer answers if we approach before word spreads were digging.

People clam up fast when they feel exposed.

So now, hours after meeting Karen Wilks.

Margaret sat in the passenger seat of Daniel’s Explorer as he drove through the quiet grid of Hollow Creek’s neighborhoods.

Porch lights glowed faintly.

Dogs barked behind fences.

Most houses looked the same.

Brick ranchstyle trimmed hedges, faded flags fluttering on short poles.

Her stomach twisted.

Aunt Patricia lived in one of them.

The last Holstead sibling still in town.

She had been Thomas and Clare’s mother, and when they vanished, Patricia had become something else, too.

The voice that refused to speak.

I haven’t seen her in years, Margaret said, staring out the window.

Daniel kept his eyes on the road.

Do you want to? I don’t know, Margaret admitted.

She always looked at me like like I’d been spared, as if I should have gone instead.

The explorer slowed in front of a house at the end of a culde-sac.

A single porch light burned.

Curtains were drawn.

Margaret’s pulse quickened.

Daniel cut the engine.

If she doesn’t want to talk, we leave.

No pressure.

But Patricia opened the door before they even reached the steps.

She stood framed in yellow light, her body thin, her hair gray and loose around her shoulders, her eyes the same pale green as Claire’s, fixed on Margaret.

You look like your mother, Patricia said.

No greeting, no embrace, just those words.

Margaret swallowed.

Hello, Aunt Pat.

Patricia’s gaze flicked to Daniel, then to Ryan, who had followed with his camera.

“You brought them here.

” “They’re helping me understand,” Margaret said carefully.

Patricia’s jaw tightened, but after a long pause, she stepped aside.

“Then come in, but I won’t perform for that lens.

” Ryan set the camera down, backing off, while Daniel gestured for Margaret to lead the way.

The house smelled of lavender and something older, like mothballs.

The furniture was neat, surfaces dusted, but the walls were crowded with photographs, dozens of framed faces stared out, family reunions, holiday dinners, children in graduation gowns.

Yet the space on the wall where Thomas and Clare’s portraits should have hung was empty.

Patricia caught Margaret’s glance.

I don’t display ghosts.

They sat at the kitchen table.

Patricia folded her hands in front of her, her knuckles swollen with age.

She didn’t offer coffee or water.

She simply looked at Margaret as if measuring whether she would break.

“I spoke to Karen Wilks tonight,” Margaret began.

Patricia’s lips pressed thin.

Gossip, she said.

The sheriff saw evidence disappear.

A notebook.

Patricia’s eyes flickered almost imperceptibly.

He told her that? Yes.

Silence stretched.

Margaret could hear the refrigerator hum.

Outside a cicada whed.

Patricia’s voice when it came was low.

Thomas had it.

A small leather notebook.

He carried it everywhere that weekend.

said it was for law school notes, but he wouldn’t let me see.

Not even Clare.

He wrote in it constantly, like he was chasing something down.

Margaret leaned forward.

Do you know what was inside? Patricia shook her head only that he seemed unsettled, restless.

He said things like, “You don’t know what granddad was really involved in, and the land isn’t what you think it is.

” He frightened Clare with it.

She told me she wanted to leave the lodge early, but she didn’t.

None of them did.

Margaret’s pulse pounded.

Do you think the notebook is why they vanished? Patricia’s eyes narrowed.

I think people talk too much about mysteries when the truth is simpler.

Something terrible happened out there.

Maybe an accident.

Maybe someone from outside.

But people like to imagine secrets.

It makes grief easier.

Daniel finally spoke, his voice calm.

But why suppress evidence, Mrs.

Holstead? Why bury a notebook if it didn’t matter? Patricia’s gaze snapped to him.

Because people here protect their own.

Because land means more than lives in this county.

You dig deep enough, you’ll see it, too.

But you won’t like what you find.

Her words carried a tremor as though fear ran beneath her anger.

Margaret whispered.

“Do you want the truth, Aunt Pad?” Patricia’s face softened for the first time.

“The truth won’t bring them back.

” She looked at Margaret, eyes glistening.

“But maybe it will take you with them.

” A long silence settled.

Patricia rose, walked to a cabinet, and returned with a small tin box.

She placed it on the table.

“This is all I kept,” she said.

Margaret opened it.

Inside were scraps, a Polaroid of Thomas leaning against the lodge porch, scrolled grocery lists, a movie stub dated 2 weeks before the reunion, and at the bottom, a torn slip of paper folded and worn.

Margaret unfolded it carefully, written in Thomas’s neat hand.

October 10th, 1997.

Hollow Creek, the ledger exists, hidden in the walls.

Margaret stared, her breath caught.

Ledger.

Patricia closed the tin.

That’s all I know and that’s all I’ll say.

Please don’t come back here.

Her voice cracked, but her eyes hardened.

The conversation was over.

Minutes later, Margaret stepped into the night air, her heart racing.

Daniel walked beside her, silent, until they reached the car.

Then he spoke.

a ledger in the walls.

That’s not grief talking.

That’s a lead.

Margaret clutched her coat.

She could still hear Patricia’s voice.

Maybe it will take you with them.

And for the first time since agreeing to this investigation, Margaret wondered if she’d already stepped too far into the dark.

The next morning broke with a sharp clarity.

Pale light bled over the limestone hills, setting the cedar tips glowing silver.

Margaret hadn’t slept.

Patricia’s warning had replayed endlessly in her head.

The truth won’t bring them back.

Maybe it will take you with them.

She’d considered leaving Hollow Creek altogether, packing her bag, driving to the airport, and letting the past rot where it lay.

But when she looked at the torn note again, Thomas’s handwriting curling across the page, she felt him pulling her forward.

The ledger exists hidden in the walls.

She couldn’t walk away now.

Daniel picked her up just after 7.

Ryan drove the explorer this time with camera cases stacked in the back.

The air inside smelled faintly of burnt coffee.

Daniel glanced at her.

You didn’t sleep.

Margaret shook her head.

That might help, he said.

The tired mind notices things the trained eye misses.

They reached the lodge as the sun climbed higher.

Dew clung to the grass, sparkling around the sagging porch.

From a distance, it looked almost beautiful, a trick of light disguising rot.

Margaret hesitated at the threshold.

The memory of the photographs pressed in.

Bare footprints, blurred images, the final ash in the hearth.

Now they were here to peel back the walls themselves.

Ryan set up two cameras on tripods to cover wide angles.

He adjusted the levels, then gave Daniel a nod.

Daniel pushed open the door.

All right, let’s see if Thomas was right.

Inside, the air was still heavy, but brighter than yesterday.

Shafts of sunlight broke through cracked shutters, illuminating dust moes that swirled in slow motion.

Daniel carried a small crowbar.

Ryan had packed gloves, flashlights, and a metal detector wand.

Margaret brought only her trembling hands.

They started with the living room.

Daniel moved along the cedar paneling, tapping methodically.

Each knock echoed hollow, then solid, then hollow again.

The sound seemed to pulse in Margaret’s chest.

At the far wall beneath a crooked window, Daniel paused.

He tapped again.

The thud rang oddly, muffled, as if something more than insulation lay behind it.

“Here,” he said.

Ryan moved in, camera focused.

Daniel wedged the crowbar into a seam between boards and pulled.

The wood groaned, then splintered free, releasing a puff of stale dust.

Behind it, darkness.

Then faintly the edge of a wooden box, Margaret’s breath caught.

Daniel reached in, dragging the box forward.

It was small, about the size of a shoe box, its surface blackened with mold.

Its brass latch corroded.

“This could be it,” Daniel whispered.

Margaret’s pulse thundered.

She reached for the latch, but Daniel stopped her.

“Gloves first.

If this is evidence, we preserve it.

” He pulled on latex gloves and carefully pried open the box, hinges squeealled.

Inside lay a stack of papers, brittle, stained, edges curling.

On top sat a leatherbound book, its cover cracked, initials embossed faintly.

JH Margaret’s voice trembled.

Jim Holstead, my grandfather.

Daniel lifted the book gently.

Dust cascaded.

The spine threatened to crumble.

He opened to the first page.

Rows of numbers, dates, transactions written in Jim H.

Hallstead’s neat hand, columns of cash amounts alongside initials Margaret didn’t recognize.

Some entries were circled in red ink.

Others were crossed out entirely.

This isn’t just a ledger, Daniel murmured.

It’s a record of dealings, payments, maybe bribes, names hidden in initials.

And look here.

He turned a page.

Scrolled in darker ink.

Not her grandfather’s hand were words that made Margaret’s stomach twist.

They know.

Stop using the lodge.

Too many eyes.

Burn the rest.

Her voice was barely audible.

Who wrote that? Daniel shook his head.

Could be Thomas.

Could be someone else.

Ryan zoomed in, capturing every detail.

The pages crackled like fragile skin.

Margaret flipped further, more numbers, then a list of parcels of land, acreages, coordinates, and beside them strange notations.

Water writes, deep sink, no record.

One phrase repeated three times, underlined.

Hollow Creek, stay quiet.

Margaret’s hands shook.

He was hiding something here, something tied to the land.

Daniel nodded grimly, and Thomas must have found it.

The sound of the wind outside deepened suddenly, as though the trees had shifted closer.

Margaret turned sharply toward the broken window.

For an instant, she thought she saw movement among the cedars, a dark shape retreating into shadow.

Her skin prickled.

“Did you see that?” Ryan lowered the camera.

“What? Someone out there?” Margaret whispered.

They stood still, listening.

Only silence, heavy and unmoving.

Daniel closed the ledger carefully and returned it to the box.

We’ll take this back to town.

Digitize it.

The less time it spends here, the better.

As they carried the box toward the door, Margaret glanced back once more.

The empty hearth, the crooked swing visible through the window.

For the first time, she felt certain.

The lodge wasn’t just the sight of a disappearance.

It was the center of something larger, something her grandfather had written down, something Thomas had uncovered, and someone somewhere had been watching them just now.

When they reached the explorer, Ryan strapped the box carefully into a case.

Margaret looked once more at the treeine.

The wind had stilled.

The branches hung motionless, but the feeling of being seen lingered like a weight on her back as they drove away.

The Hollow Creek Library was small, a singlestory brick building with narrow windows and a copper roof dulled green by rain.

Inside, though, it carried the hushed weight of history.

Rows of county records filled the back room, stacked in heavy binders and brittle manila folders.

Daniel had secured permission from the archivist to work at one of the large oak tables.

Ryan arranged cameras discreetly, their red recording lights faint against the lamp light.

The ledger box sat in the center, sealed inside a clear plastic sleeve.

Margaret’s hands itched to touch it again, but she forced herself still.

She had not stopped thinking about the scrolled warning inside.

Stop using the lodge.

Too many eyes.

Burn the rest.

Daniel pulled on gloves, opened the box, and set the ledger gently on the table.

The air filled with a faint smell of mildew and ink.

“Okay,” he said quietly, more to himself than to anyone else.

“Let’s start decoding.

” The first entries were dated in the late ‘7s.

columns of cash amounts, large sums far beyond the reach of an ordinary dentist like Jim Holstead had been.

Initials accompanied each line.

HB CK Jr.

Ryan leaned closer, camera focused on the faded ink.

These initials mean anything to you? Margaret shook her head.

Not yet.

Daniel flipped further.

More transactions growing larger as the years passed.

Then in the margins, one notation.

HC Well, number three, $12,000 cash.

CK Margaret frowned.

HC Hollow Creek.

Daniel nodded slowly.

And wells.

That could mean water rights, drilling, maybe even oil.

These aren’t casual notes.

This ledger is tracking money through land.

They checked the parcels list again.

Coordinates scribbled beside acreages.

Words like deep sink and no record.

Margaret whispered.

Sinkholes.

Daniel looked at her.

This land is riddled with limestone sinkholes.

My cousins and I used to play near one as kids.

We were told never to get too close.

If someone wanted to hide something, anything.

Those would be the places.

Her voice faltered.

Even bodies.

The word hung in the air.

Daniel exhaled slowly.

Thomas must have pieced this together.

He saw his grandfather’s clean public face.

Dentist, lodgebuilder, family man, and then he found this.

Money, land, unrecorded wells.

He started connecting dots, and then he vanished.

Margaret pressed her palms together.

You think he was silenced? Daniel didn’t answer.

His silence was enough.

Ryan closed the box carefully, sealing it again.

We’ll need to cross reference county deeds, see which parcels Jim Holstead owned, see who bought them later.

The archavist, a softspoken woman with round glasses, approached with a stack of records.

I pulled these based on the dates you gave me.

Holstead properties, transfers, and disputed claims.

They spent the next hours sifting through brittle pages.

Margaret’s eyes blurred with ink and paper, but she began to notice patterns.

The same initials appeared repeatedly, HB CK JR, across property deeds and water rights transfers.

One name finally crystallized.

Charles KS.

His signature sprawled across multiple documents tied to wells and land purchases.

Daniel tapped the name with his gloved finger.

CK KS.

Same initials from the ledger.

This man received money from your grandfather.

He acquired land around Hollow Creek and he’s still alive.

County records show he owns property 20 mi out near the river.

Margaret felt her stomach twist.

I’ve heard that name KS.

He was at family gathering sometimes.

A friend of my grandfather’s.

Always kept to himself.

But I remember his laugh.

Too loud.

Too forced.

She remembered something else.

Patricia once telling Clare to stay away from Charlie.

Daniel scribbled notes.

So here we have a direct line.

Jim Holstead paying KS properties linked to sinkholes and Thomas sniffing it out.

Then five cousins vanish.

That’s not coincidence.

Margaret rubbed her temples.

It means my grandfather was involved.

Silence followed.

She looked up, her voice cracking.

My grandfather who gave us Christmas, who built the lodge for us to gather, he was paying off land deals that may have gotten his grandchildren killed.

Daniel’s expression softened, but he didn’t refute her.

People are never just one thing, Margaret.

The face they show at the dinner table and the face they wear when money’s at stake can be different creatures.

Margaret closed her eyes.

For the first time, she felt shame.

Not just grief, but a twisting shame that her bloodline might be soaked in corruption.

The clock above the desk ticked loudly.

Ryan cleared his throat.

We need to consider what the warning note meant.

Burn the rest.

If some of these records were destroyed, this ledger might be the only surviving evidence of whatever operation was going on.

And if someone risked hiding it in the lodge instead of burning it, maybe they wanted it found someday.

Margaret opened her eyes, clinging to that thought.

Maybe Thomas hid it.

Or maybe someone else, Daniel said grimly.

Someone who knew this day would come.

The library’s fluorescent lights flickered.

A storm gathered outside.

Thunder low and distant.

Daniel closed the ledger, sealing it back into the box.

We’re done here for now.

Next step is finding KS.

Margaret felt her pulse quicken.

“You think he’s connected?” “I think he never left this place for a reason,” Daniel said.

“And if your grandfather trusted him, then KS knows more than anyone else still alive.

” Thunder cracked sharply, rattling the windows.

Margaret flinched.

For a moment, she thought of the treeine by the lodge, the shadow she’d glimpsed.

It was as if Hollow Creek itself had ears.

That night, back in her motel, Margaret couldn’t sleep again.

She sat at the desk, staring at Thomas’s torn note.

The ledger exists, hidden in the walls.

He had been right.

He had left her a trail.

But what terrified her most was what came next.

Following the trail beyond blood, beyond silence, to a man whose name now echoed in her mind with dread.

Charles KS.

and the sudden chilling thought that maybe, just maybe, one of her cousins hadn’t died at all, but had been forced into Karn’s shadow.

The road to Karns’s property wound along the river, a two-lane strip of cracked asphalt that narrowed the farther they went.

The landscape grew rougher here.

Cedar thicket, rusted barbed wire fences, cattle gates leaning at crooked angles.

The clouds that had gathered the night before still clung low, pressing the sky into a dim ceiling.

Margaret sat stiffly in the passenger seat, staring at the land sliding past.

Each mile felt like a descent into something she couldn’t name.

Daniel drove in silence, one hand on the wheel, the other tapping a rhythm against his thigh.

Ryan followed in the explorer with the equipment, far enough back to be discreet.

Margaret broke the silence.

I keep wondering what my grandfather would say.

If he’d deny it all, if he’d look me in the eye and call me crazy.

Daniel’s gaze stayed fixed on the road.

Or maybe he’d just say nothing.

Silence is its own kind of guilt.

They passed a sagging billboard.

Ka’s ranch, private property.

The paint was flaked, the letters fading.

Margaret’s stomach nodded.

He’s expecting us.

I left word, Daniel said.

Didn’t say why, just that we wanted to talk.

Margaret turned to him.

And if he refuses, Daniel’s jaw tightened.

Then we film him refusing.

The road ended at a rusted cattlegate strung with chain.

Beyond it stretched a wide pasture, grass gone to seed, scattered with rusting equipment.

A house stood far back.

Two stories of gray clapboard, its windows dark.

A barn leaned to one side like a weary sentinel.

An old pickup was parked by the house.

Daniel got out, unchained the gate, and drove through.

The gravel cracked under the tires as they approached the house.

Margaret’s pulse pounded.

Every instinct told her to turn back, but she forced herself to stay seated, hands gripping her knees.

The front porch sagged under Daniel’s boots as he climbed the steps.

He knocked firmly.

Margaret stood behind him, her heart hammering.

For a long moment, nothing.

Then the door opened.

Charles KS filled the doorway.

He was older now, late7s maybe, but still broad, shoulders thick under a faded flannel shirt.

His hair was white, cropped close, his jaw shadowed with stubble.

His eyes were pale blue, piercing but dulled with something Margaret couldn’t name.

“Daniel Pierce,” he said, voice grally.

“You’ve been sniffing around.

” Daniel extended his hand.

KS didn’t take it.

This is Margaret Holstead, Daniel said.

“She’s Thomas’s cousin.

” K’s gaze shifted to her.

For a heartbeat, Margaret thought she saw recognition flash.

But whether it was pity, guilt, or something darker, she couldn’t tell.

“You look like your mother,” he said, echoing Patricia’s words.

“Margaret stiffened.

” “You knew my grandfather.

I knew Jim.

” KS leaned against the door frame.

“Everybody knew Jim.

” Daniel kept his voice calm.

“We’d like to ask about the Ledger.

” “A flicker?” K’s jaw worked.

“Ledger? The one your initials are all over, Daniel pressed.

Transactions, wells, land, all tied to Hollow Creek.

K’s expression didn’t change, but his hand gripped the door frame tighter.

Don’t know what you’re talking about.

Margaret’s voice broke the silence.

My cousins disappeared.

Five children, 16 years, and your name was in his book.

K’s pale eyes locked onto hers.

That book should have burned with the rest.

The words fell heavy.

Margaret’s breath caught.

Daniel leaned in slightly.

So it exists then.

Ka’s face hardened.

For a moment, Margaret thought he might slam the door, but then he stepped back.

Come in.

If you’re going to stir ghosts, might as well hear how they died.

The house smelled of stale tobacco and dust.

Curtains blocked most of the light.

Papers and boxes cluttered the living room.

stacks leaning precariously.

A rifle rested above the mantle.

KS lowered himself into a chair, joints creaking.

He gestured for them to sit.

Daniel kept his camera bag close, though he didn’t pull it out yet.

Margaret perched on the edge of the sofa, unable to steady her hands.

Ka studied them.

Jim was smart.

Too smart.

He knew where the money was.

Not in teeth, not in patience, but in the ground.

Water, minerals, land.

He made deals.

Deals that needed grease.

That ledger you found.

It was just numbers.

Didn’t show what really mattered.

Margaret swallowed.

And what really mattered? K leaned forward.

His breath smelled of smoke.

Where things were buried.

Where you could hide what you didn’t want found.

Margaret’s chest tightened.

bodies.

K’s eyes glittered.

Sometimes, sometimes just records.

Sometimes both.

Daniel’s voice stayed calm, though Margaret heard tension in it.

You’re saying your deals with Jim Holstead involved hiding things.

KS leaned back, a cruel smile tugging his lips.

I’m saying this county was built on secrets, and your family was no different than the rest.

Maybe worse.

Margaret’s hands balled into fists.

What happened to my cousins? The old man’s smile faded.

He looked at her for a long, unbearable moment.

Then he said quietly, “Some secrets rot where they’re buried.

Dig too deep.

You’ll just choke on them.

” The air seemed to thicken.

Thunder rolled distantly outside.

Daniel finally pulled the camera from his bag, lens clicking.

Say that again, Mr.

KS on record, but K’s eyes had already shifted to the window.

His jaw tightened.

You need to leave now.

A silence fell.

Margaret glanced over her shoulder, suddenly aware of movement outside.

A figure near the barn, half hidden, watching, her stomach dropped.

Daniel stood, camera still rolling.

We’re not done.

Yes, you are, KS growled.

Next time you’ll be trespassing.

They stepped out onto the porch.

Rain had begun to fall, spattering the dirt.

Margaret looked toward the barn again, but the figure was gone.

As they reached the truck, Daniel whispered.

He admitted more than he meant.

Ledger burials your family’s involvement.

Margaret pulled her coat tighter, shivering, but her eyes were fixed on the barn.

Because for the briefest moment before the figure vanished, she thought she recognized something impossible.

A face.

A cousin’s face.

Margaret didn’t remember the drive back into town.

She must have been awake.

Her hands still hurt from clenching the seat belt, her throat raw from holding words she couldn’t say.

But the road blurred into a gray smear.

When Daniel finally pulled into the motel parking lot, she startled as if waking from a dream.

“Get some sleep,” he told her.

His voice was steady.

“Calm! Too calm!” She nodded automatically, though sleep felt impossible.

“Inside her room,” she paced.

The beige walls seemed to lean closer.

The thin curtains, drawn tight, whispered against each other as though stirred by unseen breath.

Every sound outside, footsteps, a car door, the hum of the vending machine, landed like a threat.

But what tormented her most was the memory of that fleeting glimpse by K’s barn.

A face thin, pale, familiar.

She tried to force herself rational.

The mind invents shapes in shadow.

You were tired.

You were frightened.

You wanted to see someone, anyone.

But the more she replayed it, the more certain she became it wasn’t invention.

It was recognition.

A cousin.

She pressed her palms to her eyes until colors bloomed.

When she dropped them, the room swam.

By midnight, she gave up on rest.

She spread Thomas’s torn note.

the photocopies of the ledger pages and the county records across the motel desk.

Her fingers traced the ink like braille, as if by touch alone she could force them to speak, hidden in the walls.

Hollow Creek, stay quiet.

Burn the rest.

Her grandfather’s handwriting.

Then another scroll layered across it, almost violent.

They know who was they.

She flinched at a knock on her door, heart hammering, she looked through the peepphole.

Daniel.

She opened the door, relief flooding and then receding almost instantly.

You’re still up, he said.

So are you.

He stepped inside, eyeing the papers.

You shouldn’t be doing this alone.

Margaret’s laugh cracked.

Isn’t that what I’ve always been doing? 16 years of silence.

16 years of birthdays with an empty chair.

Of course I do it alone.

Daniel closed the door gently.

You saw someone today.

Margaret froze.

What? You’ve been spiraling since we left K’s place.

I know the look.

You saw something you can’t reconcile.

Her throat closed.

She wanted to lie to say she’d just been tired.

But the words pushed through.

I saw a face, she whispered.

By the barn.

I think it was one of them.

Daniel studied her carefully, expression unreadable.

Which one? Margaret shook her head violently.

I don’t know.

I only saw a flash, but it was there.

Don’t tell me I imagined it.

Daniel sat on the edge of the bed.

I’m not telling you that.

I’m telling you that sometimes trauma fills gaps with ghosts.

I’ve seen victims swear they recognized someone long dead.

It wasn’t a ghost.

Margaret’s voice sharpened.

What if at least one of them lived? What if KS? She broke off, swallowing bile.

What if he kept one of them? The silence that followed was unbearable.

Daniel finally spoke.

Then we need to know.

Margaret leaned across the desk.

Stake out the property.

Cameras, night vision.

Catch him if he’s hiding someone.

Daniel didn’t move.

That’s not a documentary play.

That’s law enforcement territory.

Law enforcement ignored this for 16 years.

Margaret snapped.

They let evidence vanish.

They let my cousins disappear into a file cabinet.

I won’t wait another year, another day.

We saw something today.

Her voice cracked on the word saw.

She pressed her hands against her temples, fighting the throbb.

Daniel exhaled slowly.

If we stake him out, we do it right.

No trespassing, no direct confrontation.

Cameras from the road.

Motion sensors if Ryan can rig them.

But Margaret, his tone softened.

You need to understand something.

If KS is hiding someone, if your cousin has been alive in that barn all this time, what state do you think they’ll be in? Margaret’s stomach twisted.

Images flooded, a figure pale from years indoors, eyes sunken, voice lost.

A shell.

Still, she whispered.

Alive is better than gone.

Daniel nodded once.

Then we prepare tomorrow.

He gathered a few of the scattered papers into neat stacks as if the act could restore order.

Try to rest.

When he left, Margaret sat in the dim motel light, staring at the ledger copies.

On one page, she noticed something she had missed before.

A set of initials repeated three times in 1996.

MC.

The amounts beside them were smaller than the others, almost like allowances.

Her hand trembled as she traced them.

Micah Carowway.

She remembered the name suddenly, an old ranch hand who used to drink with Carnis, who once fixed the lodge’s generator.

She had heard Patricia mention him years ago.

The ledger linked not only Carnings, but others.

And if K still had company at that property, maybe Micah was part of it.

Margaret’s throat tightened.

Tomorrow couldn’t come fast enough.

She lay on the bed, staring at the ceiling until dawn.

The last thought before sleep finally dragged her under was a question she couldn’t silence.

What if the face she’d seen wasn’t one of the cousins at all, but someone who wanted her to think it was? Ryan’s explorer rolled quietly onto the gravel shoulder half a mile from Ka’s property.

The sun had gone down an hour earlier, leaving only the pale afterglow bleeding into the western sky.

Clouds dragged across the moon, breaking its light into fragments.

They killed the headlights and coasted to a stop.

The house and barn were just visible in the distance.

Faint outlines against the fields.

Margaret hugged her coat tighter.

The cold was sharper tonight, cutting through the thin motel fabric.

Her nerves felt exposed.

Every sound amplified, the tick of cooling metal, the faint wine of cicadas, the rasp of her own breath.

Ryan opened the back, pulling out cases of gear, small infrared cameras, a parabolic microphone, two motion sensors.

He handled them with a quiet efficiency of practice.

Daniel leaned in close to Margaret.

We stay outside the property line.

Cameras hidden along the fence.

One on the barn, one covering the back of the house.

No lights, no noise.

If we see activity, we record and pull out.

Margaret nodded, though her throat was dry.

And if we see someone, then we have evidence, Daniel said.

Nothing more tonight.

They moved slowly through the thickets along the fence line.

The grass was damp, soaking Margaret’s shoes.

The barn loomed across the field, its roof sagging, a pale strip of moonlight catching the tin.

Ryan planted the first camera against a cedar trunk, its infrared lens glowing faintly before vanishing into darkness.

He adjusted its angle toward the barn.

The second camera went up along a fence post, aimed at the rear of the house.

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