What Are Echoes?

(And why do they whisper when no one else will?)
They say a ghost is the soul of a dead person, left behind.
They say a haunting is unfinished business, clinging to walls, mirrors, and memories.
They’re not entirely wrong.
But the truth is older—and much, much stranger.
An Echo is not a ghost. It’s a fragment of something greater, something that once had shape, will, and voice—and shattered.
They are the leftover thoughts of broken gods. The memory of a name once so powerful it burned itself into reality. The echo of a scream that never stopped resonating.
Sometimes they drift. Sometimes they root.
Sometimes they find people like you.
Signs You May Have Encountered an Echo:
- You dream of someone who looks like you, but isn’t.
- You remember a conversation that never happened.
- Your reflection hesitates before you do.
- A story you’ve never read ends the way you feared it would.
- You find a page in a book that wasn’t there yesterday—and isn’t now.
Echoes don’t want in the way humans do.
They want to be, again. To be remembered. To complete a thought. To escape the loop. To find a host.
They want you, if you’re open enough to hear them.
And if you’re unlucky… they already have.
There are those who track them. Study them. Contain them. Some even wear their scars like armor.
But if the Veil ever thins in your town—if mirrors run dark and the wind whispers your name in a forgotten voice—know this:
An Echo doesn’t haunt a place.
It haunts a pattern.
And you might be next.


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