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Chapter 37 - A Voice Beneath the Floorboards

The rain started just after midnight.

Not a soft drizzle or gentle rhythm. It came down like it was trying to bury something. Like the sky was tired of holding back secrets.

I couldn't sleep.

Not because of the thunder — but because the silence between them was louder.

That's when I heard it.

A faint thud. Then a scrape. Then another.

Coming from beneath the floorboards.

I froze in bed, pulse in my ears. It was the old storage room under the staircase — the one we hadn't used in years.

The one Dad always locked up after the accident.

I got out of bed, careful not to wake anyone. Each creak of the floor felt like it echoed across lifetimes.

I grabbed the small key from the top drawer. It had rust on its teeth, but I remembered where it fit.

The lock turned with a reluctant click.

I opened the wooden panel and was met with a wall of cold, stale air.

Dust danced in my flashlight beam. The room was tiny — just enough space to crouch. Old cardboard boxes, a rusted tricycle, half a photo album. Familiar. Harmless.

Until I noticed the edge of a notebook poking out from under a broken suitcase.

I reached for it.

The first page had my handwriting.

But I'd never written it.

"If you're reading this, it's already begun."

My hands trembled as I flipped through the pages.

Every entry felt like me — my voice, my thoughts — but they described things I hadn't done yet. Places I hadn't been. Conversations I hadn't had.

One page in particular stopped me cold:

March 20th — Harish will lie. You'll want to believe him. Don't.

Today was March 20th.

I shut the notebook, heart pounding in my throat.

The next morning, I couldn't look at Harish the same way.

He waved to me in class, same grin, same warm familiarity. But I kept hearing the words from the journal echoing:

He will lie.

We sat together during lunch.

"You okay?" he asked, biting into a samosa. "You've been weird since yesterday."

I swallowed my suspicion. "Just tired."

Then I asked, "Do you remember March 23rd?"

He paused. Blinked. "Why would I?"

Because I remembered.

It was the day he told me everything was fine… just before it all burned.

Just before the betrayal.

Back home, I hid the notebook under my bed. Locked the storage room again.

But I couldn't unsee what I saw. Couldn't unread what was written.

And then came the second text.

From the same unknown number.

"Truth is heavier than lies. Be careful what you carry next."

I stared at the screen.

Rain still pelted the window. The power buzzed softly in the background.

And somewhere beneath the house, something was still breathing.

Watching.

Waiting.

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