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"THE THINGS SHE FORGOT" Chapter 9

Chapter 9

Evelyn didn’t remember deciding to record.

Later, she would blame exhaustion for that part.

Or adrenaline.

Or the strange hollow numbness that sometimes arrived after panic, when emotions became too large to process cleanly and started leaking out sideways instead.

At three in the morning, her apartment looked less like a home than a place someone had abandoned in the middle of trying to solve a crime. Printed case files covered the coffee table. Two half-finished mugs of coffee sat cold beside the couch. Rain moved steadily across the windows in pale silver lines while police audio replayed softly through her headphones for what had to be the fiftieth time.

I did it.

The words no longer sounded entirely like her.

That frightened her most.

Evelyn sat cross-legged on the floor with her microphone positioned inches from her face, laptop glow washing the apartment in muted blue light. She hadn’t bothered turning on lamps. Darkness felt easier tonight.

She hit record before she could reconsider it.

“For years,” she said quietly, “I told myself memory loss was neutral.”

Her own voice sounded distant in the headphones.

Careful.

Controlled.

The way people sounded when trying not to collapse publicly.

“I told myself forgetting was something that happened to me. Like weather. Like trauma. Like surviving.”

Rain tapped softly against the glass behind her.

Evelyn stared at the audio waveform forming across the screen as she continued speaking.

“But lately I’ve started wondering whether forgetting can also be avoidance.”

She paused.

Not for effect.

Because the thought genuinely hurt.

“Five years ago, my best friend disappeared during a storm on Blackwater Bridge. The official story never changed. No body. No suspect. No answers.”

Her throat tightened slightly.

“And I remembered almost nothing.”

The city hummed faintly twelve floors below.

Evelyn leaned back against the couch cushions behind her, eyes fixed on the ceiling now rather than the microphone.

“I used to think memory made people trustworthy. That if I couldn’t remember something, then I couldn’t be held responsible for it.”

A bitter laugh escaped before she could stop it.

“That’s a comforting thing to believe about yourself.”

She should have ended the recording there.

Any sane version of herself probably would have.

Instead she reached for the archived police audio file sitting open beside the recording software.

Static crackled softly through the apartment.

Rain.

Police radios.

Then her own voice from five years ago, shaking apart beneath panic.

I did it.

Evelyn closed her eyes.

“When I first heard that recording,” she whispered into the microphone, “my immediate reaction wasn’t confusion.”

She swallowed slowly.

“It was recognition.”

Silence stretched for several seconds after that.

Not dramatic silence.

Just exhaustion.

The kind that settles into bones after too many nights spent circling the same fear.

“I don’t know what happened on Blackwater Bridge,” she said finally. “And maybe that’s becoming the problem.”

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Her breathing hitched faintly before she continued.

“Because if I can’t trust my own memory…”

Another pause.

“What exactly am I asking everyone else to believe?”

The recording ended there.

Evelyn sat motionless for a long time afterward, listening to the rain and the low electric hum of her laptop fan.

Eventually she exported the audio draft into the unfinished episode folder for later review.

Then she fell asleep on the couch sometime after four with the television still flickering silently across the room.

Her phone ringing woke her.

Not vibrating.

Ringing.

Aggressively.

Evelyn jerked awake with her neck twisted painfully against the couch cushion and sunlight leaking weakly through storm clouds outside the windows.

Her laptop still sat open on the coffee table.

Thirty-seven missed notifications covered the screen.

Her stomach dropped instantly.

The phone kept ringing.

Mara.

Evelyn answered too fast. “What happened?”

“What happened?” Mara sounded halfway between furious and terrified. “Please tell me you didn’t upload that draft intentionally.”

Cold spread through Evelyn’s chest.

“What draft?”

Silence.

Then:

“Oh my God.”

Evelyn sat upright immediately.

“No.”

“You exported it directly into the live publishing folder.”

The room tilted slightly.

“No, I didn’t.”

“You absolutely did.”

Evelyn grabbed the laptop with shaking hands.

The episode page had already loaded.

NEW BONUS EPISODE — BLACKWATER: THE MEMORY PROBLEM

Views climbed upward in real time beneath the title.

Twenty thousand.

Twenty-three.

Twenty-seven.

Comments flooded faster than the page could refresh.

Evelyn stopped breathing.

“No.”

“You need to pull it immediately,” Mara snapped.

But it was already too late.

Clips had spread everywhere.

TikTok edits.

Reddit threads.

Reaction videos.

Conspiracy breakdowns.

Her confession audio repeated endlessly beneath captions and slowed-down rain footage.

I did it.

The phrase looked monstrous typed out across strangers’ screens.

Evelyn scrolled downward helplessly.

She definitely remembers more than she admits.

This girl sounds guilty as hell.

Why does the psychiatrist know her personally?

Somebody investigate Adrian Cross.

She’s either the victim or the killer.

A newer comment climbed rapidly beneath the others:

You can hear how scared she is.

Another replied seconds later:

Scared people lie too.

Evelyn shut the laptop abruptly.

Her pulse hammered painfully against her throat.

“Mara,” she whispered, “I didn’t mean to upload it.”

“I know.”

But the damage already existed now.

Outside, rainwater slid slowly down the windows while the internet tore her life apart in real time.

The buzzer downstairs rang suddenly through the apartment.

Evelyn startled violently.

“Expecting someone?” Mara asked.

“No.”

The buzzer rang again.

Longer this time.

Evelyn crossed toward the intercom carefully.

“Yes?”

“Delivery for Evelyn Harper.”

“I didn’t order anything.”

A pause.

Then:

“No sender listed.”

Her stomach tightened immediately.

“Mara,” she said quietly, “I’m going downstairs.”

“Absolutely not.”

But Evelyn was already reaching for her coat.

The florist box sat alone on the lobby counter when she arrived downstairs.

White roses.

Rainwater still clinging to the paper wrapping.

The receptionist looked uncomfortable handing them over.

“No card?” Evelyn asked.

“There’s a note.”

Her fingers felt cold opening it.

Inside, written in neat black ink:

For the girl who forgot.

Something moved sharply through her chest.

Not fear exactly.

Recognition again.

That terrible feeling she kept having lately — like parts of her life were returning out of order.

“You Evelyn Harper?”

The voice came from behind her.

Male.

Rough with exhaustion.

Evelyn turned.

The man standing near the lobby entrance looked vaguely familiar in the unsettling way grief sometimes makes strangers resemble old photographs.

Early thirties.

Dark hair damp from rain.

Eyes carrying the exhausted anger of someone who had stopped sleeping properly years ago.

His gaze dropped briefly toward the flowers in her hands before returning to her face.

“I’m Simon Vale,” he said.

Lena’s brother.

And judging by the way he looked at her—

He already knew about the episode.

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