Biography
The Town Where Birds Spoke Names
In a remote Scottish village, birds began calling out names — full, human names — none belonging to anyone alive. Villagers thought it was witchcraft until a linguist discovered the names matched old parish records of plague victims. Then new names appeared — those of the living.
By GoldenSpeech4 months ago in Chapters
The Radio That Broadcasts From the Afterlife
In 1983, an amateur radio enthusiast in New Mexico began receiving an unidentified signal at 2:11 a.m. each night. The station had no frequency registration, no call sign. It only played songs that listeners later described as “impossibly personal.”
By GoldenSpeech4 months ago in Chapters
The House That Aged Backward
In rural Bavaria, a travel journalist found a pension that seemed too perfect — pristine floors, freshly painted walls, the smell of spring in the air. The owner, a quiet elderly woman, told her, “It’s an old house, but it never lets itself decay.”
By GoldenSpeech4 months ago in Chapters
The Engineer Who Built a Second Moon
In 2032, billionaire inventor Darius Koenig announced a private project: to launch a reflective satellite designed to “softly illuminate the night sky.” Within months, amateur astronomers began noticing something odd — the object’s orbit shifted unpredictably, as though it were avoiding observation.
By GoldenSpeech4 months ago in Chapters
The Composer Who Wrote Silence
In 1803 Vienna, an eccentric composer named Karl Voss claimed he could “score the sound of absence.” His symphony, Nocturne of the Dead Air, was rumored to contain no notes — only instructions for pauses, breaths, and rests. The audience laughed when the orchestra played nothing for twelve minutes. But by the tenth, a low ringing filled the hall — tinnitus, some said. Others heard whispers. When the performance ended, five people had fainted, and the conductor was gone. The sheet music resurfaced in 2014, written in ink invisible to sound frequencies. The score, when played, isn’t heard — it’s felt in the bones.
By GoldenSpeech4 months ago in Chapters
The Watchmaker’s Son
In 1912, a clockmaker named Henri Voltaire lost his son in a factory fire. Months later, he began constructing a pocket watch “to keep the boy alive.” It was said the watch ticked to the rhythm of a heartbeat. When opened, its hands spun in reverse, whispering faintly like a lullaby. The watch was buried with Voltaire, but in 1977, it was sold at auction — still warm to the touch. Its buyer reported strange dreams: a child knocking from inside a glass dome, begging to be “wound again.” When the watch stopped, so did the buyer’s heart.
By GoldenSpeech4 months ago in Chapters
The Bell That Rang Underwater
In 1874, a flood swallowed the village of Rocavella in northern Spain. Only the church steeple remained visible — and even that vanished a year later beneath the reservoir. Yet, each December 23rd at midnight, locals swear they hear the church bell tolling from deep beneath the lake. Divers sent to investigate in 1968 found the bell cracked, fused with coral and salt, yet when touched, it vibrated faintly — as though responding to their heartbeat. Scientists dismissed it as underwater acoustics. But the diver who led the mission wrote in his logbook:
By GoldenSpeech4 months ago in Chapters
The Book That Read You
In 1923, an unnamed librarian in Prague catalogued a book bound in mirrored glass, titled Speculum Animae — The Mirror of the Soul. Unlike other tomes, its pages were blank until opened. The words that appeared were always written in the reader’s own handwriting, recounting secrets, regrets, and desires they had never confessed. Those who read it too long reported the text continuing beyond the pages, curling up their arms like tattoos. The librarian locked it away, but the book vanished during the Nazi occupation. Occasionally, rare book collectors whisper of a mirrored journal that writes itself in your voice — and erases the memory of reading
By GoldenSpeech4 months ago in Chapters











