Arrival
The bus hissed as it came to its final stop, brakes grinding against the silence of a town that seemed to be holding its breath. Evelyn Hale pressed her palm against the cool glass of the window, watching the small green sign creak under the push of the evening wind.
ASHWICK FALLS – POPULATION 3,982.
The number looked painted over too many times, the digits thick with correction, as though the town itself couldn’t settle on how many people it actually held.
Evelyn drew in a breath, tasting the copper tang of rain about to fall. She hadn’t meant for the ride to feel like exile, but it did. The rickety bus had rattled over backroads and through stretches of pine forest so dense the world had seemed to shrink, until Ashwick Falls emerged from the dark like a forgotten postcard.
The driver glanced at her in the rearview mirror. “End of the line.”
She nodded, gathering her bag. Just one. She had left the rest in storage somewhere far away, along with her old life. That was the plan: strip herself down to the basics, carve out something new. Her mother’s death had made staying unbearable—every street, every classroom where Evelyn had once taught, every face too eager to remind her of condolences she didn’t want.
Ashwick Falls wasn’t random. She’d traced the name on an old map her mother used to keep folded in a drawer, one of those things that stuck in her mind long after it should have faded. She couldn’t explain why the name had drawn her here. It just had.
The bus door squealed open. Cool air pressed in, carrying the faint, earthy smell of the falls themselves—water and moss and stone. Evelyn stepped down onto cracked pavement and heard the bus doors slam shut behind her.
The street stretched in both directions but not far. One traffic light swayed above the intersection, its green bulb flickering like it wasn’t sure it wanted to hold. Storefronts lined the block: a diner with its blinds half-closed, a general store with a window display of canned goods, and a few shops that seemed abandoned, their signs faded into illegibility.
She shifted her bag on her shoulder. There was no welcoming committee. Just the sound of her own breath and the crunch of her boots on uneven concrete.
A woman passed by, tugging at a dog that resisted the leash. She gave Evelyn a look that hovered between curiosity and suspicion, then walked on without a word.
So much for small-town warmth.
Evelyn turned her eyes upward. The sky was pale gray, fractured by the shadows of rooftops leaning at odd angles. The air smelled heavy, swollen with something waiting to break.
She thought of her mother again, of the way she used to sit at the kitchen table late at night, fingers tracing the folded map as if searching for somewhere else to be. Evelyn had asked her once why she kept it. Her mother had smiled, tired and far away, and said, “Some places call you before you know why.”
Ashwick Falls had called her. And now here she was.
---
The general store’s bell jangled overhead as she stepped inside. The air smelled faintly of cinnamon and dust. Shelves were lined with everything from bread and coffee to fishing lures and heavy work gloves. A small-town store that seemed to want to be everything at once.
Behind the counter stood a woman in her sixties, hair pinned back in a tidy bun, glasses perched low on her nose. She smiled the moment she saw Evelyn, as though she had been waiting.
“New face,” the woman said warmly. “I’d have noticed you before.”
Evelyn adjusted the strap on her bag. “Just arrived. Evelyn Hale.”
The woman’s smile deepened. “Margaret Kettle. But everyone calls me Mags. Welcome to Ashwick Falls.”
Her voice was too friendly, Evelyn thought. Not insincere exactly, but layered, like she was greeting Evelyn and measuring her in the same breath.
Mags leaned forward on the counter. “You staying for long?”
“That’s the plan. I’ve taken a teaching position at the school.”
“Ah, the school,” Mags said softly, almost like it was a word with more weight than it should have. “Yes, we’ve been needing a steady hand there.”
Something about the way she said it raised the hairs on Evelyn’s neck.
Mags reached under the counter and set down a small notepad. She scribbled an address. “You’ll want to speak to Sheriff Doyle, if you haven’t already. He makes sure everything runs smooth around here. Folks look to him.”
“Sheriff Doyle,” Evelyn repeated.
Mags nodded. “Tall, broad-shouldered. Looks like the sort of man who doesn’t smile often. You’ll find him in the station off Main Street.”
Evelyn tucked the note into her pocket. “Thanks. I’ll… stop by.”
Mags’s eyes lingered a moment too long. “Do. It’s better if he knows where everyone belongs.”
Belongs. The word unsettled her.
She bought a bottle of water she didn’t need, just to make the exchange feel normal, then stepped back onto the street.
---
The sheriff’s station was only two blocks down. A square brick building, old but sturdy. The front steps creaked under her weight as she climbed them.
Inside, the place smelled of coffee and paper. A man looked up from behind the desk. He was exactly as Mags had described: tall, broad-shouldered, with lines carved deep into his face and eyes that seemed too tired to ever soften.
“Help you?” he asked.
“Evelyn Hale. I’m the new teacher. I just arrived and thought…” She trailed off, feeling oddly like a child called to the principal’s office. “I thought I should introduce myself.”
Sheriff Doyle studied her, unreadable. Then he rose, extending a hand. His grip was firm, almost too firm.
“Sheriff Conrad Doyle,” he said. “Welcome to Ashwick Falls.”
His tone carried no warmth, but no hostility either. Just weight.
He gestured toward a chair. “Sit.”
She did, her bag at her feet.
“Teaching’s good work,” Doyle said after a pause. “Important here. Children need stability.”
“I’ll do my best.”
His eyes narrowed slightly, as though the promise itself was suspicious. “This town doesn’t take well to change, Miss Hale. You’ll learn that quick. Folks like their routines.”
“I understand,” she said carefully.
“Do you?” His voice dropped lower. “Ashwick Falls has a way of testing outsiders. Best you keep to your work, mind your own business. That way, everyone gets along.”
It was both advice and warning.
Evelyn nodded, unsure what else to do.
Doyle studied her a moment longer, then leaned back. “Good. Enjoy your evening. And Miss Hale—”
She met his eyes.
“Don’t go wandering near the falls after dark. Roads get slippery. Easy to lose your footing.”
There was something unspoken in the words, but she couldn’t read it.
She thanked him and left, the air outside feeling colder than when she’d entered.
---
That night, in the small rental room she had secured above the diner, Evelyn unpacked her bag. Clothes. A notebook. A framed photograph of her mother. She set it on the bedside table, the smile in the picture both comforting and unbearable.
She tried to sleep, but the town pressed against her. The silence wasn’t empty—it was layered. Like a voice just below hearing.
When she finally drifted off, she dreamed of water rushing over stone, a roar that seemed to swallow her name.
---
Morning brought clouds heavy with rain. Evelyn’s first walk to the school was along narrow streets where neighbors paused to watch her, eyes unreadable.
The school building was red brick, old but upright. Inside, the air smelled of chalk and something damp.
Her classroom was small but bright, rows of desks neatly arranged. She stood by the window, trying to ground herself.
That was when she noticed the girl.
Sitting in the back row, even though the bell hadn’t rung. Pale, thin, dark hair tucked behind her ears. She was sketching in a notebook, her pencil moving fast.
“Hello,” Evelyn said gently. “I didn’t expect anyone this early.”
The girl looked up. Her eyes were far too steady for fifteen.
“Clara Jennings,” she said simply.
Evelyn smiled. “Nice to meet you, Clara. What are you drawing?”
Clara turned the notebook around. Evelyn’s breath caught.
It was her. Evelyn herself—standing by the window in this very classroom.
But the drawing was dated two weeks earlier.
Clara’s voice was calm. “You came back.”
Evelyn stared at her, pulse thundering. “What do you mean?”
Clara closed the notebook. “You’ll remember soon.”
The bell rang.
