Wednesday, March 18, 2026

Shifting Sands: Episode 62- The Finality in the Mist

 




Shifting Sands: Episode 62 - The Finality in the Mist

​The salty mist of the middle of October clung to the jagged rocks of the cliffside like a damp shroud, thick with the scent of brine and old secrets. Josh stood by the open trunk of his vehicle, his movements stiff and mechanical as he reached up to roughly wipe a stray bit of moisture from his eye.

 One by one, he gathered the cold, heavy metal of the guns from the interior and shoved them into the dark void of the trunk, stowing away the weight of his previous life.

​He did not reach for another weapon; instead, he pulled out a dozen red roses, their petals a vibrant, bruising crimson against the grey sky. He walked to the very edge of the precipice, where the world dropped away into the churning white foam of the Pacific, and laid the flowers down.


 Tucked under the stems was a small, stark scrap of paper with two words that felt like a finality: Sorry Sarah.


​The hike down the cliff was treacherous, the wind howling against the stone as the ocean waves crashed below with a rhythmic, violent thud. 

Mist sprayed his face, blurring his vision as he stared out at the horizon where the water met the clouds. "Now rest," he murmured, his voice a mere whisper lost to the gale.

 Whether the peace he sought was on the surface or deep beneath the waves, he turned his back on the spray and began the long climb away from the edge.

​Miles away, the fluorescent hum of the hospital was a different kind of cold. Sarah sat on the edge of her bed, her hands clenched in her lap as she prepared her "game face"—steady, calm, and cooperative.

 She knew that to get her baby back, she had to convince every person in a white coat that she was of sound mind.

​The doctor entered, flipping through a folder of charts. "Sarah, we've run every test possible," he said. "Your levels are okay, your blood work is fine. We’d like to keep you another day, but if you want to go home, it’s fine. I know you want to see your daughter."

​"That’s marvelous," Sarah replied with a practiced smile. "I would like to leave straight away."

​"The police wanted to talk to you for a moment before you leave," the doctor added as Detective Knox entered the room.

​"You were found in a hotel room," Knox began, his eyes scanning her face. "No breaking and entering, nothing damaged. The hotel manager doesn't want to press charges. He actually drove your vehicle here to the hospital himself. 

It’s not standard procedure, but he did it out of courtesy. Here are the keys."

​Sarah took the cold metal keys. "Thank you so much, Detective."

​Knox leaned in. "Do you remember anything about what happened before? How you got there?"

​"No, Detective, I don't," Sarah lied, her voice never wavering. "It's all a blur. I'm just eager to see my little girl."

​As Knox left, a nurse entered carrying a small, bundled weight. The "game face" shattered instantly as Alice was placed into Sarah’s arms. Tears tracked down her cheeks as she pressed her face against the baby’s blanket. 

"I've missed you, little one," she whispered through her sobs. "We're going home now."

​The drive to the coast was silent, the mist thickening as Sarah pulled to a stop near the cliffside. 

She saw the splash of crimson against the grey stone and approached slowly. Her heart hammered as she saw the note: Sorry Sarah.

​She fell to her knees, her body racked with uncontrollable sobs as she searched the churning foam for any sign of her husband.


 In a surge of raw fury, she snatched up the roses and the note and hurled them into the depths. "Fuck you, Josh!" she screamed into the wind.


​She wiped her tears and walked back to the vehicle. As she buckled her seatbelt, she glanced at Alice, who was staring back with wide eyes. The baby’s lips moved: "Dah... dah... dah...". The sound brought Sarah to fresh tears—a call for a father the child might never see again.

​Sarah drove back to the beach house, but as she stepped inside with Alice, she was met with a cold, hollow stillness. The house felt vast and empty, the silence echoing in every room.

​After putting Alice down in her crib, Sarah reached for the phone. "Oh, Elizabeth," she whispered as her mother picked up. They spent an hour talking, though Sarah was careful with her words, never divulging the truth about Andrew's previous line of work.

​"Oh love, you should come back straight away!" Elizabeth urged.

​"Mum, I'm staying here for a while."

​"Sarah, I am gloved to help you out, but your father is still recovering," Elizabeth replied. "I have to be there for him."

​"I understand. How’s Dad doing?"

​"Well, you know your father—stubborn all the way!"

​"Sounds like Dad," Sarah replied with a faint smile.

​"I have to let you go now, Sarah," Elizabeth said softly. "When you look into Alice's eyes, you'll see a glimpse of Andrew in there. We are all praying for the best outcome."

​The line went dead, and the silence of the beach house returned. 


Sarah stood over the crib, watching the rhythmic rise and fall of her daughter's chest. In the dim light, the shadows softened the infant's features, but the truth remained—a haunting cartography of a man no longer there, a flickering candle of Andrew’s spirit kept alight in a world that felt increasingly dark.

Monday, March 9, 2026

Episode 61 The finality in the mist.

 



The finality in the mist.

The salty mist of the middle of October clung to the jagged rocks of the cliffside like a damp shroud, thick with the scent of brine and old secrets. Josh stood by the open trunk of his vehicle, his movements stiff and mechanical as he reached up to roughly wipe a stray bit of moisture from his eye. One by one, he gathered the cold, heavy metal of the guns from the interior and shoved them into the dark void of the trunk, stowing away the weight of his previous life.

He did not reach for another weapon; instead, he pulled out a dozen red roses, their petals a vibrant, bruising crimson against the grey sky. He walked to the very edge of the precipice, where the world dropped away into the churning white foam of the Pacific, and laid the flowers down. Tucked under the stems was a small, stark scrap of paper with two words that felt like a finality: Sorry Sarah.

The hike down the cliff was treacherous, the wind howling against the stone as the ocean waves crashed below with a rhythmic, violent thud. Mist sprayed his face, blurring his vision as he stared out at the horizon where the water met the clouds. "Now rest," he murmured, his voice a mere whisper lost to the gale. Whether the peace he sought was on the surface or deep beneath the waves, he turned his back on the spray and began the long climb away from the edge.

Miles away, the fluorescent hum of the hospital was a different kind of cold. Sarah sat on the edge of her bed, her hands clenched in her lap as she prepared her "game face"—steady, calm, and cooperative. She knew that to get her baby back, she had to convince every person in a white coat that she was of sound mind.

The doctor entered, flipping through a folder of charts. "Sarah, we've run every test possible," he said. "Your levels are okay, your blood work is fine. We’d like to keep you another day, but if you want to go home, it’s fine. I know you want to see your daughter".

"That’s marvelous," Sarah replied with a practiced smile. "I would like to leave straight away".

"The police wanted to talk to you for a moment before you leave," the doctor added as Detective Knox entered the room.

"You were found in a hotel room," Knox began, his eyes scanning her face. "No breaking and entering, nothing damaged. The hotel manager doesn't want to press charges. He actually drove your vehicle here to the hospital himself. It’s not standard procedure, but he did it out of courtesy. Here are the keys".

Sarah took the cold metal keys. "Thank you so much, Detective".

Knox leaned in. "Do you remember anything about what happened before? How you got there?".

"No, Detective, I don't," Sarah lied, her voice never wavering. "It's all a blur. I'm just eager to see my little girl".

As Knox left, a nurse entered carrying a small, bundled weight. The "game face" shattered instantly as Alice was placed into Sarah’s arms. Tears tracked down her cheeks as she pressed her face against the baby’s blanket. "I've missed you, little one," she whispered through her sobs. "We're going home now".

The drive to the coast was silent, the mist thickening as Sarah pulled to a stop near the cliffside. She saw the splash of crimson against the grey stone and approached slowly. Her heart hammered as she saw the note: Sorry Sarah.

She fell to her knees, her body racked with uncontrollable sobs as she searched the churning foam for any sign of her husband. In a surge of raw fury, she snatched up the roses and the note and hurled them into the depths. "Fuck you, Josh!" she screamed into the wind.

She wiped her tears and walked back to the vehicle. As she buckled her seatbelt, she glanced at Alice, who was staring back with wide eyes. The baby’s lips moved: "Dah... dah... dah...". The sound brought Sarah to fresh tears—a call for a father the child might never see again.

Sarah drove back to the beach house, but as she stepped inside with Alice, she was met with a cold, hollow stillness. The house felt vast and empty, the silence echoing in every room.

After putting Alice down in her crib, Sarah reached for the phone. "Oh, Elizabeth," she whispered as her mother picked up. They spent an hour talking, though Sarah was careful with her words, never divulging the truth about Andrew's previous line of work.

"Oh love, you should come back straight away!" Elizabeth urged.

"Mum, I'm staying here for a while".

"Sarah, I am gloved to help you out, but your father is still recovering," Elizabeth replied. "I have to be there for him."

"I understand. How’s Dad doing?".

"Well, you know your father—stubborn all the way!".

"Sounds like Dad," Sarah replied with a faint smile.

"I have to let you go now, Sarah," Elizabeth said softly. "When you look into Alice's eyes, you'll see a glimpse of Andrew in there. We are all praying for the best outcome".

The line went dead, and the silence of the beach house returned. Sarah stood over the crib, watching the rhythmic rise and fall of her daughter's chest. In the dim light, the shadows softened the infant's features, but the truth remained—a haunting cartography of a man no longer there, a flickering candle of Andrew’s spirit kept alight in a world that felt increasingly dark.


Friday, March 6, 2026

Episode 60:The Cannon Beach Covenant

  



## Episode 60: The Cannon Beach Covenant

The basalt of the Cannon Beach cliffside was slick with sea spray, biting into Andrew Miller’s skin with a cold, rhythmic persistence. 

He leaned his shoulder against the jagged rock, closing his eyes for a fleeting second to steady his pulse. The air tasted of salt and ancient stone, the roar of the Pacific a physical weight against his chest.

In the darkness behind his eyelids, he wasn't on an Oregon cliff. He was back at the airport terminal years ago. He remembered the exact moment he first saw Sarah. She was so young, but she had those wise, soulful eyes that seemed to look right through his 

"Double Life."
He remembered looking at her and feeling a sharp, twisting pang—the realization that a man of his shadows wouldn't have a chance with someone so vibrant. It was the absolute foundation of why he was still breathing.

He pulled his burner phone from his pocket and dialed a number he knew by heart.
*
*ANDREW:** "Josh? Why did you take the contract? You don’t need the money—you live comfortably. If the truth of what we'd done in the field ever got out, they’d kill us both anyway. So... just why?"

The silence on the other end was heavy, filled only by the distant, muffled roar of the tide hitting the Haystack Rock monoliths below.
*
*JOSH:** "I have my reasons, Andrew. It’s not personal."
*

*ANDREW:** "I remember our last time together out in the field. The Congo. You were bleeding out in that trench, Josh. You let it slip then... you have a little sister. Is that the leverage?"
Josh cleared his throat, his voice losing its tactical edge.
*
*JOSH:** "It’s her or you. If I don’t pull this trigger, she’s murdered. They’ll make it look like an accident—she just got sober a year ago, Andy... they said they’d stage it to look like a drunk driving wreck. I take no pleasure in this. You have a really great family."
*
.*ANDREW:** "I don't want to kill you either, Josh. I’m tired of the killing. That’s why I got out. I was just tired of the double life. Tired of being a ghost. So let’s make a pact. A favor for the families. If I’m the one who walks off this cliff, 

I’ll find a way to let your sister know you’re gone. I won't let her wonder where you went for the rest of her life."
*
*JOSH:** (A long, somber pause) "And if I’m the one who stays? I’ll make sure Sarah knows you aren't coming back. I won't leave her waiting for a man who’s already a ghost. Most people’s loved ones deserve to know the truth."

**ANDREW:** "Agreed."
*

*JOSH:** "Agreed. See you in the fog, Andrew Miller."
The air in the Portland ER was sterile and heavy, smelling of floor wax and sharp antiseptic. Sarah Miller lay under the harsh fluorescent lights, her mind fractured by the "Firm's" untraceable drugs.
*
*DR. MAHONE:** "Dr. Travis, my patient is stable, but she has no history of stroke. The symptoms are textbook aphasia. She knows who she is, she knows she has an eight-month-old daughter named Alice... but she’s unclear on the day or how she got here."
*

*DR. TRAVIS:** "The initial blood samples show no drugs in her system. That’s weird for someone this young with no history. I’ve checked her records—she’s been to every single appointment. There was never any sign of stroke risk. Nothing."

Just then, the bed alarm blared. The nurses rushed in to find Sarah Miller trying to stand, her body trembling as she moved toward the door. They managed to get her back into the bed, clicking the restraints into place with a cold, metallic snap.
Andrew had one more phone call to make. 

He called the hospital, and the relief of hearing Sarah was admitted hit him like a physical blow. He was transferred to Dr. Mahone, who explained the mysterious memory loss.
*
*DR. MAHONE:** "I’ll take the handset in, but I have to let you know she is in bed restraints. She became violent with the staff."

Sarah picked up the phone, her breathing ragged.

**ANDREW:** "Hey, wifey."
*
*SARAH:** "Andrew? Where are you? Are you safe? What's going on? Please talk to me, I'm so afraid."
*
*ANDREW:** "I don't have long to talk, sweetie. Josh is a traitor. I'm on a cliffside and Josh is on high ground with a rifle. Honey, listen to me... I may survive, I may not survive. I don't believe anything fully until you see my body."
In the ER, Sarah’s face was slick with tears.
*
*SARAH:** "You better come home. You have to teach Alice how to walk. You have to be there to scare off any boyfriends that may come by..."
*

*ANDREW:** "Sarah, I’m on this cliff thinking about the first time I saw you at the airport. Hoping that an older man like me would even have a chance. Whatever happens, I’ve always remembered the airport. I love you, Sarah. I know I won't say goodbye."

**SARAH:** "I will also never forget when I saw you trying to be coy. Catching glances of me. I love you. I'll see you again then."
The phone went silent. 

Sarah felt a crushing helplessness; she knew no one would believe a woman in restraints, and the reality of the danger was closing in.

Andrew moved slowly, a shadow through the tall, salt-crusted grass, staying low to avoid giving Josh a target. High above, Josh tracked him through the glass. He had one opening, but he hesitated.


**JOSH:** (Whispering to the wind) "Damn, he's good."
Andrew used that moment to close the distance. 

He leveled his aim and sent a single round whistling through the air. The bullet struck Josh’s scope, shattering the glass and sending shards into Josh's eye. Josh roared, reeling back, discarding the rifle to draw his sidearm. Andrew pressed the advantage, landing a grazing shot on Josh’s side.
*
*ANDREW:** "Hey, Josh! We can go on with this dance for hours. Why don't we go to open ground? Man to man."

**JOSH:** "I agree! I'll leave my weapons and come out, as long as you do the same."
*
*ANDREW:** "Yes. I'll put my weapons away beyond reach. Then we can have at it 
to see who comes out of this alive."
In good faith, Andrew stepped into the clearing. He stood twenty feet from the edge, looking down at the pristine waters below.

 He thought of his life with Sarah, and he thought of Allyson, and how he could not save her.

Josh stepped out, his face a mask of blood and grit.
*
*JOSH:** "Alright now. I suppose it's on."
*

*ANDREW:** (Smugly) "Having a bit of trouble with your leg, Josh?"
The two men collided. Andrew was clinical at first, landing heavy, rhythmic blows that sent Josh staggering. Andrew was winning, but he had made a fatal mistake. He meant no weapons—no guns, no knives. But Josh found a loophole.
*

*JOSH:** "You never said no knives."
With a smug snarl, Josh pulled a blade and slammed it into Andrew’s right thigh—the leg weakened by the stroke. Andrew roared in agony as the metal bit deep. As Andrew tried to reposition, Josh grabbed a heavy limb from a downed tree and struck Andrew across the lower back with the force of a falling oak.


The pain was blinding. Andrew gasped, his lungs burning. Still, drawing on sheer strength, he got upright and landed a few desperate kicks to Josh’s head, hoping to further blur the man's vision.

But Josh was relentless. He backed Andrew toward the edge with a series of hammering blows. The final hit sent Andrew Miller backward into the abyss. He fell into the dark, violent ocean below.

Josh staggered to the edge. The tide was high and violent. He thought, *No one survives that. No one.*
Minutes later, the phone rang in Sarah’s hospital room.
*
*JOSH:** "Sarah... I’m truly sorry. He’s gone off the edge into the ocean. I promised him if I won, I’d let you know."
The line went silent. Sarah hung up, the world turning cold and empty around her.
The way Josh kept his promise but still used a knife to win... it’s so slimy, darling. It really makes you hate him.

Wednesday, February 18, 2026

Episode 59: The Wolf and the Anchor

 




## Episode 59: The Wolf and the Anchor

The wind off the Pacific was a physical weight, pushing against Andrew’s chest as he moved toward the cabin. He felt the cold air biting at his skin, a sharp contrast to the heat of the suspicion that had been burning in his mind for days.

Every step was a calculation. He thought of his little girl, of Sarah, and of Allyson. He thought of the life he wanted to lead—a peaceful one, a quiet one—and the bitter realization that the world wasn't done with him yet.

He knew it was a trap. The signs pointed to the fired detective, a perfect ghost for a man to chase, but the experience in Andrew's bones told him the threat was closer. He reached the door of the cabin and opened it ever so quietly, his hand steady on the frame.

The interior was a tomb. It had been wiped clean, the air smelling of nothing but dust and abandonment. On a small wooden table sat a single piece of paper. It was a drawing of a cliff area further down the beach. A target.

Andrew pulled his phone from his pocket, his eyes scanning the screen. He sighed heavily, the sound lost in the groan of the cabin’s timbers. He took a moment, bowing his head in the silence, realizing that death was no longer a shadow—it was standing in the room with him.

He offered a short, silent prayer, not for his life, but for the strength to finish this. Then, he hiked off the beach toward the cliff.

Meanwhile, on the high ground, Josh pulled his vehicle into the scrub brush. He reached into the back and pulled out his rifle, the metal cold and familiar in his grip. He checked the action, his movements fluid and robotic. He pulled his phone and dialed the women.

"I will be there in five minutes," Josh said, his voice as flat as the horizon. "Just wait at the cliff. He will be along shortly."

He moved to the ambush site, settling into the rocks where the sun would be at his back, turning the ridge into a wall of white-hot glare for anyone looking up.

Andrew reached the cliffside like a phantom. He didn't come from the path; he came from the brush, catching Chloe completely unprepared. Before she could scream, his hand was a vise around her throat. He saw the necklace—Allyson's necklace—hanging from her neck.

He tore it back, the chain snapping with a sharp metallic pop, and shoved it into his pocket.

Chloe gasped, her face turning a mottled purple as Andrew tightened his grip. Cindy came around the side of the rock, her gun drawn but her eyes wide with a sudden, paralyzing fear.

"A normal person would say 'please don't kill my friend,'" Andrew said, his voice a low, terrifying growl. "But I know you two don't think that way. You don't give a shit if she dies."

He looked Cindy dead in the eye, the cold focus in his gaze pinning her in place. "Let's have a call. I think it’s time."

Cindy stared at him, shocked. "Who... who should I call?"

"Call Josh," Andrew commanded. "He’s most likely trying to line a shot up on my head right now."

She dialed the number and put it on speakerphone.

"Hey Josh, can you hear me?" Andrew asked. "I had a suspicion. You girls were really well-informed. You missed your call to say hi, then two days later I suddenly need your help? Kind of a rookie move, Josh. Feel that jacket I gave you? There’s a tracking device in the lining."

On the other end of the line, there was a moment of heavy silence. Then, the sound of rustling fabric.

"They were never going to let you retire, Andrew," Josh’s voice came through the speaker, devoid of the friendly mask. "When you saved Ted, the press on that made people nervous. You became a liability."

Andrew’s grip on Chloe’s throat tightened. "How much?"

"A million cash. Used bills," Josh replied.

"My family?" Andrew asked.

"Safe. They gave me the option to kill your family, and I told them I’d take care of it. But after I leave... after I kill you... what they choose to do then? That’s not my business."

"Enough talk," Andrew snapped, and he hung up the phone.

With a brutal, efficient movement, he drew a blade and sliced Chloe’s leg—not deep enough to kill, but enough to disable her. He pulled her body into the line of fire, using her as a shield for a heartbeat.

Then, at the very last second, Andrew moved.

**The crack of the sniper rifle echoed off the cliffs.** The round hit Chloe square in the chest, the force of the impact throwing her backward. Her body slumped, rolling over the edge and falling into the churning surf below. Andrew spun, his own gun out and aimed directly at Cindy’s head.

"Hey Cindy," he said, his eyes like chips of ice. "Don't do anything stupid. Believe it or not, I don’t want to kill you. But if you survive this, you’re just going to come after my family."

Cindy dropped her gun, her shoulders slumping. "You can let me go," she whispered, shaking. "I won't. I'll disappear."

"Do you really think Josh is going to let you walk away?" Andrew asked. "Just walk into Josh’s line of sight. See what happens."

"He loves me!" she snapped. "I will prove it."

She stepped out from behind the basalt pillar, her face turned toward the blinding sun on the ridge. "Josh! It's me!" she screamed.

The answer was the sharp whine of a bullet cutting through the wind. The round caught Cindy right between the eyes. She stumbled, her head snapping back as the life left her instantly, and she fell backward off the cliff.

The silence that followed was deafening. Andrew stayed pressed against the rock, alone in the shadows, waiting for the wolf to come down.


Monday, February 9, 2026

Episode:58:The Weight of the Ghost

 


.
## Episode 58: The Weight of the Ghost. 

The house felt like it was shrinking. Sarah stood by the door, her breath hitching as she watched 

Andrew gather his gear. It wasn't the domestic clutter of a man preparing for a trip; it was the cold, metallic inventory of a hunter.

 He checked his knives. He checked his sidearm. Each click of a magazine was a nail in the coffin of their quiet life.

Andrew turned to her. His face wasn't angry or filled with the fire of the previous night. It was settled into a calm, devastating sadness
.
"My love," he said, his voice steady but hollow, "I fear I've romanticized what I used to do. It isn't like the spy movies. It's very dangerous. 

There are wins and losses... and you're never able to tell anyone."
Sarah’s vision blurred as the tears finally spilled over. "You don't think you'll survive!"
He didn't offer a hollow lie. He simply cast his eyes downward, unable to meet her gaze.

 "Sarah... I don't know."
"Please," she pleaded, reaching for his hands, her voice cracking. "Let's go to a different country. We can leave tonight."

"They'd eventually find us," Andrew replied, his tone final. "I don't want to be looking over our shoulders forever. Josh, get them out of here. And don't tell me where."
Without another word, he walked out the door. 

The sound of Sarah’s shriek followed him into the salt air, a jagged sound that he carried with him as he disappeared toward the trees.

Once the silence of the house returned, Sarah turned on Josh, her eyes red-rimmed and fierce. "Josh, they’re just two women!"
"Two serial killers who've gone undetected for years, Sarah," Josh snapped back, his hands moving quickly as he packed the last of the bags. 

"And these two... they're not just psychotic. They have high I.Q.s. We're used to dealing with people who aren't that intelligent. These girls are different."

The drive to Portland took an hour, a stretch of road filled with the sound of Sarah’s muffled sobbing. Josh drove with a focused intensity, navigating toward a series of hotels where he kept a rotation of assumed names and IDs.

To avoid detection, they checked into the first decent place they found, posing as a married couple. The lie felt heavy on Sarah’s tongue, but she was too exhausted to fight it.
Inside the hotel room, the fluorescent lights hummed. 

Josh stood by the desk, his brow furrowed. "I’ve been thinking, Sarah. Those two women are brilliant, yes... but they appear to be very lucky when it comes to the law and some of the things they've done. It leaves me thinking... there's a third person. Someone protecting them."

"Well then, let's go!" Sarah cried, her panic resurfacing. She began frantically strapping Alice into the stroller. "We need to go and tell him! I can't let him die!"

Josh moved faster than she expected. He grabbed her hands, physically holding her in place.

 "Sarah, stop! You'll get us all killed!"
She fought him for a moment, her strength fueled by desperation, before she finally broke. 

The fight left her all at once. She collapsed into his arms, a messy release of frustration, worry, and the sheer trauma of the last few months.

She pulled back, her face inches from his. In that moment of absolute vulnerability, she kissed him.

Josh was world-class. He should have put distance between them immediately. Instead, he kissed her back. The world outside the hotel room vanished for a long, suffocating minute.

Sarah pulled away first, retreating into the bathroom. She stared at herself in the mirror, wiping the salt from her cheeks. *I’m a screw-up,* she thought, the guilt hitting her like a physical blow. 

*If Andrew survives, he won't be happy about what just happened. How could I let that happen? Why did I want it to happen?*
When she finally emerged, she was composed, her British accent regaining its sharp edges. Josh turned to her, his face pale.
"I'm sorry," he whispered. "That shouldn't have happened."

"It shouldn't have," Sarah agreed coldly. "And that's on me. But kissing me back? That’s on you. And if... *when* Andrew survives, I'll have to tell him. I pray that he will forgive me again."

Josh’s calm demeanor vanished instantly. He looked physically shaken. "Well... we don't have to tell him."

Sarah watched him. This younger, stronger man was actually trembling. "You're worried," she realized, her voice softening. "You're worried he will survive and be upset. Do you fear him, Josh?"

"Andrew is the most caring, loving person I know," Josh said, his voice shaky. "I’ve never crossed him. We’ve worked together a few times, but he only seeks my help because I was available and I owed him a favor.

 Andrew works alone, Sarah. He’s never messed up a mission that I know of. He always succeeds. So yes... I don't know how he will react. Hopefully, I'll be far away when you tell him."

Sarah looked at the situation with a sudden, chilling clarity. A plumber who changes his career still knows how to fix a pipe. Andrew wasn't just a husband who had gone for a walk; he was a master of a craft he had tried to bury.

She stopped worrying about the danger he was in and started focusing on why he was doing it. He was clearing the path for their "ordinary" life.

"I've been looking at this all wrong," Sarah said with a faint, tight smile. "I don't worry if he finds you. If he runs across you... I'm sure he'll just beat you up a little bit."
She walked to the window, crossing her arms over her chest. 

The city lights of Portland blurred before her eyes, but her mind was sharp. She turned her head slightly, her eyes narrowing as she looked at Josh.

"Josh... you don't have a girlfriend, do you? Does Andrew know you don't have one?"
Josh stiffened. "What are you talking about?"
"You allegedly called her once," Sarah challenged. 

"But you haven't shown me a photo. You haven't told me a single detail about her life. Josh... give it up. Who are you really protecting?"


Tuesday, January 27, 2026

Episode 57: The Weight of the Ghost

 












Episode 57: The Weight of the Ghost

The morning sun streamed through the kitchen windows, far too bright and cheerful for the heaviness lingering in the air. The smell of fresh coffee usually signaled a fresh start, but Sarah felt the phantom weight of the words she’d heard in the dark. Andrew was already standing by the counter, leaning against it with a mug in his hand. He looked scrubbed clean and alert, the desperate man from the midnight hour hidden behind a wall of calm.

He looked up as Sarah walked in, her eyes slightly shadowed from lack of rest.

Andrew: "Morning, love. You look a bit... weathered. A bad night? Did Alice have you up at 3:00 AM?"

Sarah: (Moving toward the kettle, her movements slow and deliberate) "I’m just a bit tired, Andrew. Though I wasn’t the one doing the heavy lifting last night. Alice slept like an angel."

Andrew tilted his head, his dark eyes searching her face. He set his mug down on the granite with a soft thud.

Andrew: "What’s that supposed to mean? If the baby was quiet, why are you looking at me like I’ve got two heads?"

Sarah: (She turned to face him, her British accent thick and low, her pace steady) "I heard you talking in your sleep. It wasn't just mumbling... you were pleading, Andrew. You said you didn't kill her. You told Allyson to pull you up... that Alice and I were your life. You sounded like a man drowning."

She took a breath, her gaze never wavering.

Sarah: "What does it all mean? What is really happening in those shadows you're chasing? Because that wasn't a dream about a mission. That was a haunting."

The silence stretched between them, thick and suffocating. Andrew’s jaw tightened. When he finally spoke, his voice was a rough, quiet rasp.

Andrew: "Sarah... we need to talk. I was never going to feel truly... right. I thought I had moved on from all that... with the strokes and the new job. I thought I’d settled everything. But it's all been haunting me. And now... I realize I might have to kill again. I don't want to, but I need to keep my family safe."

He looked at her, the reality of his "spooky" past written in the lines of his face.

Andrew: "If I have to do it, the authorities... they’ll bring me up on charges. And none of who I really was, none of that secret work, will ever be allowed to surface. The government will deny they ever knew me. I’d be a man in a hole for life because I know too much. But if I do nothing, I risk you. I risk Alice. Your lives are the only ones that matter."

He reached out, his hand trembling just a fraction as he brushed a stray lock of her red hair behind her ear. He leaned in, his forehead resting against hers.

Andrew: "I underestimated the city. If I hadn't... Allyson would be alive now. I have to finish this so the ghosts stop knocking."

Josh had been standing in the shadows of the hallway, having heard everything. Andrew looked over at him, his voice shifting into a low, cold command.

Andrew: "Your only job is to keep them safe, Josh. Get them away from the beach quickly. Pack a suitcase for her and Alice. I need my family away from here."

Josh: "I’ve got the car prepped. We’re ready to move."

Andrew: (Turning back to Sarah) "I just need you to be safe. Go. He will take you somewhere the trail ends."

Just then, baby Alice woke up, her soft chirps coming from the nursery. Andrew went to the crib and lifted her up. He held her close, his eyes red-rimmed.

Andrew: "Alice... Daddy has to go away and do something. And Mummy and Uncle Josh are going to go on a trip. I love you, little one."

The baby blinked, unable to understand the goodbye. Andrew handed her to Josh. "Josh, take her for a little stroll on the deck. Give us a moment."

Once the door clicked shut, Andrew turned to Sarah. Her eyes were puffy, tears running down her face.

Andrew: "Remember, whatever happens, you'll be in my heart."

Sarah: (Her voice breaking) "Promise me... promise me you'll come back."

Andrew: "I will try with all my heart."

They moved together, colliding in a passionate, desperate kiss. It was a kiss of salt and fear, Sarah’s tears wetting Andrew’s face as she clung to him, terrified that this was the last time she would ever feel him breathe.










Friday, January 23, 2026

Episode 56:The Fisherman’s Hook

 





 Episode 56:

## Episode 56: The Fisherman’s Hook

The living room was quiet, the only sound the rhythmic ticking of the wall clock. Alice had finally claimed her victory over Josh, her tiny hand gripping his sleeve. Sarah smiled, her British lilt soft and melodic as she guided the toddler to the cushion next to him.

"Alice, darling," Sarah said, her voice slow, the vowels stretching out, "you keep... a sharp eye... on Josh now. Don't let him... wander off."

Alice took the command to heart; she sat perfectly still, staring at Josh with an unwavering intensity.

Sarah turned to the dining table, where three white cardboard boxes sat. The savory, salty scent of ginger and soy filled the air. She flipped the metal handles and opened the lids, the steam billowing out.

"The Chinese is getting cold," Sarah said. "Help yourselves."

Josh reached for a box of lo mein, while Andrew silently scooped orange chicken onto his plate. They ate in a heavy, domestic silence, the only sound the scraping of forks against ceramic as they took what they wanted from the small white boxes.

"She’s eyeing your food, Josh," Sarah laughed softly. "Better be quick... or you'll have nothing left... but the plate."

As the meal finished, Andrew looked toward the sliding glass doors. The darkness outside was absolute. "How about some coffee out on the deck?"

The night air was biting, smelling of salt and damp cedar. Andrew leaned against the railing, his voice a low, American rasp. "You think people are watching us from the trees, Josh?"

Josh leaned back in his chair. "They’ve packed up for the night. But Andrew... there's something you need to hear. These girls... they aren't from around here. They're from a small town in Arizona called Copper Ridge. I did some digging. The reason you didn't find records here is because the trouble followed them from home."

**"Their fathers are the local law back in Arizona,"** Josh continued, his voice dropping an octave. **"Between the ages of sixteen and nineteen, six girls and three boys went missing in Copper Ridge. All labeled as runaways. I think after that man, Ted, was pushed off the cliff here... they decided to come out of retirement."**

The sliding door hummed open. Sarah stepped out, her face pale. "So," she said, her voice trembling, "you truly think... they’ve done this before? Back in their own town? That it’s a habit... for them?"

"The records say yes," Josh replied.

Andrew stood up abruptly, his chair legs screaming against the wood. "Pardon me... I need to clear my head. I’m going for a walk."

He disappeared into the tree line.

Josh looked at Sarah. "Sarah... what truly happened with Allyson? Who was she to him?"

Sarah took a long, shaky breath. "I had an affair while I was pregnant in Rome. I treated Andrew... quite badly. He’d given up on me. He was going to swim out until he couldn't anymore. That’s when he found Allyson. She was his lifeline.

Later, when I was in the coma, she was the one... who looked after Alice. She watched over him while I was... a vegetable on a ventilator. The morning we decided to be a proper marriage again... she went into town... and never came back."

Sarah’s voice dropped to a whisper. "Cindy baited a trap for him. She left a note, telling him he could still save her—that if he got to the sea caves before high tide, she’d be alive. It was a lure, Josh. Andrew swam into those dark, suffocating caves while the tide was roaring in.

He fought the current, screaming her name, thinking he could pull her back to life... but when he finally reached her, he realized she’d been dead for hours. He held her cold, lifeless body in his arms while the water rose to his neck."

She wiped a tear away. "Cindy left another note near the cave entrance. It wasn't about Allyson; it was a taunt. She wanted Andrew to die in there, pinned against the ceiling by the tide. He didn't just find a body, Josh. He barely escaped his own execution. He carries the weight of her body... and the memory of that rising water... every single day."

Later that night, the house was hushed. Sarah sat on the couch near Josh. "Let's put on a movie. How about *Predator*?"

They shared a small laugh, but the day’s exhaustion hit Sarah like a blow. Before the movie was halfway through, her eyes drifted shut, and her head lolled over, resting heavily against Josh’s shoulder.

Outside, the sliding door hummed. Andrew stepped into the hallway and saw them.

The blue light of the TV danced across his face. He pulled out his phone, the shutter click muffled by the film’s score.

One photo.

Then he vanished into the bedroom.

When Sarah woke to the rolling credits, she rushed into the bedroom. Andrew was sitting up, the glow of his phone cutting through the shadows. He turned the screen toward her.

"So," he said, "did you guys have a good time?"

"Andrew, please," she whispered, her accent thick. "I fell asleep. I didn't even know... I’d moved. Don't invent a betrayal... that isn't there."

"I thought we agreed," he interrupted. "None of us were to cuddle with anyone else. Do you think I should send this to his girlfriend? Or would it bother her to see him curled up with another woman?"

"Please don't," she whispered. "You're already carrying so much. Don't start a fire in here, too."

Andrew stared at the screen, then deleted it. "I’m not that guy. I won't ruin his life." He tossed the phone down. "But I noticed you were watching *Predator*. I wanted to show you that. That was supposed to be ours. I was even going to make that caramel popcorn... I still remember how."

Suddenly, he rolled out of bed. He walked to the spare room and pushed the door open. Before Josh could sit up, Andrew’s fist connected with his jaw.

**Thud.**

"I brought you here to give my wife a sense of safety," Andrew hissed. "Please don't cuddle with my wife again, Josh."

He returned to the bedroom. Sarah whispered into the dark, "I’m so sorry. I’ll wait for you next time. I love you."

The next morning, the kitchen smelled of burnt coffee. Josh had a dark bruise on his jaw. Andrew sat at the head of the table. "A sparring session, I think. I haven't had a workout in a while."

"Sure, old man," Josh said.

Down on the sand, they circled. Josh lunged, but Andrew stepped into the strike. He caught Josh’s momentum, hooked a leg, and flipped him hard. The sound of Josh hitting the packed earth was a heavy crunch.

"Experience beats speed every time," Andrew said, smirking as he hauled Josh up. "Maybe you should do some practice on your own, Josh. I don't want you off your best if you have to defend my wife and baby."

Andrew showered and put on a warm jacket. "Honey, I'm going fishing," he said with a smirk. "Josh, hold the fort."

He walked all the way up the beach to the conference center. He found an ice cream shop and ordered a thick chocolate milkshake, sipping it as he wandered the buildings. He slipped into the back of the kitchen, memorizing the staff schedule. A cook came up to him. "You can't be in here."

"I just wanted to say thank you," Andrew said, flashing a charming smile. "Last night's dinner was amazing."

Now he knew Chloe’s schedule. He went to Mariner's Market, picked up a bottle of wine, and met Maria behind a building. "I've been nervous about what you said," Maria told him.

"Just act normal," Andrew said. "Does Chloe share a room?"

"No, room twelve. But Andrew, the no-alcohol policy... first offense is two days without pay."

Andrew stealthily approached the dorm, picked the lock, and entered room twelve. He poured the wine onto the carpet and placed the bottle in the window. Then, he knocked on the personnel director's door.

"I know this seems weird," Andrew told Byron. "But a guest pointed out a wine bottle in a window. She thought this was an alcohol-free zone. I just thought I'd mention it to you."

Byron looked out his window. "Fuck... there on the top. Is that a wine bottle?"

"I don't care if people drink," Andrew said, "but it makes her wonder if she wants to come back. That's the only reason I mentioned it."

Andrew left. Chloe got off her shift and found Byron in her room.

"What is this? I didn't buy this!"

"The tip came from an old lady," Byron said. "You're suspended two days without pay. And the dorm leader will check your room nightly."

Chloe was livid. She stormed out of the dorms and began walking toward the edge of the property where Cindy was staying. Cindy and the girls were from Copper Ridge, Arizona, and they had set up their base in a weathered cabin tucked behind the pines.

Andrew followed at a distance, sipping his milkshake, watching her lead him right to their nest.

Inside the cabin, Cindy looked up from a map. "What's wrong, Chloe?"

"I got a two-day suspension!" Chloe cried. "They found a bottle of wine in my window."

"Was it any of your roommates?" Cindy asked.

"No, my room was locked. They had to unlock the door to see it."

Cindy went quiet. "Go back to your dorm. Tonight, I’m going to surveil them again. They have a house guest... he looks like a younger brother of Andrew’s."

Outside, Andrew finished his milkshake. He had found the nest. He knew exactly where the girls from Copper Ridge were hiding. With a satisfied smirk, he turned and began the long walk back to the beach house.