PART 3 : I thought I was driving to my late wife’s mountain house to finally let her go. Instead, I found two abandoned twin girls standing barefoot on the porch, clutching stale bread like it was the last thing keeping them alive. Minutes later, one of them whispered my wife’s name… and led me toward a hidden trail only Olivia had ever known.

I thought I was driving to my late wife’s mountain house to finally let her go. Instead, I found two abandoned twin girls standing barefoot on the porch, clutching stale bread like it was the last thing keeping them alive. Minutes later, one of them whispered my wife’s name… and led me toward a hidden trail only Olivia had ever known.

My name is Ethan Brooks, and three years after losing my wife, I still hadn’t learned how to survive the silence she left behind.

The mountain cottage in the Blue Ridge Mountains of North Carolina had once been our escape from the world. Olivia loved the place more than anywhere else on earth. After she died, I couldn’t bring myself to return. My therapist called it “closure.” I called it torture.

By the time my SUV rolled over the gravel driveway that Friday evening, I had already decided I wouldn’t stay long. Maybe one night. Maybe less.

The cedar-and-stone cottage looked exactly the same as it had the day I left it behind. The porch sagged slightly from storm damage. Wild blackberry bushes wrapped around the edges of the meadow. Olivia’s old copper wind chime still hung beside the front door, swaying softly in the mountain breeze.

For one impossible second, I almost imagined she would walk outside smiling at me in one of my oversized flannel shirts.

But someone else was there instead.

Two little girls.

At first, I honestly thought grief was making me hallucinate.

They stood motionless near the porch railing, staring at me with enormous pale-blue eyes. They couldn’t have been older than seven. Barefoot. Dirty. Thin enough to make my stomach twist. Each of them held a hard piece of stale bread in one tiny hand.

Neither smiled.

Neither spoke.

The entire mountain seemed to go silent around us.

I stepped out slowly, my pulse hammering harder with every step toward them. Up close, the twins looked even worse. Their blond hair was tangled and uneven like someone had hacked at it with scissors. Mud stained their faded dresses. Scratches covered their arms and knees.

And there was nobody else around.

No parked car.

No voices.

No sign of parents.