When Kevin moved to Massachusetts with his daughter, Lucy, he thought the biggest challenge would be adjusting to the slower pace of life compared to New York City.
Kevin had just moved with his seven-year-old daughter, Lucy, to the quiet town of Ashford, hoping for a fresh start. Their new home was small and worn, but Lucy saw it as an adventure, filling each room with excitement and imagination. After years of raising her alone following his wife Sarah’s sudden departure, Kevin leaned on Lucy’s optimism to adjust. For a moment, life felt simpler, almost peaceful, as if the past had finally loosened its grip.
One rainy afternoon at the town library, that fragile calm was disrupted. While Lucy explored the children’s section, Kevin noticed a girl who looked exactly like her. The resemblance was impossible to ignore—same dark curls, same gray eyes, even the same small scar on her chin. Startled, he called out, thinking it was Lucy. But when the girl turned, her expression was unfamiliar, guarded. Then she ran, disappearing before he could reach her, leaving him shaken and confused.
That night, Kevin couldn’t stop replaying the moment. He tried to convince himself it was coincidence, that small towns often held familiar faces. But the scar troubled him the most—it mirrored Lucy’s exactly, from a childhood accident no stranger should share. The more he thought about it, the less it made sense, and the harder it became to dismiss.
Two days later, the unease returned when he saw the girl again. This time, it was no longer something he could ignore or explain away. Whatever he had stumbled into, it wasn’t coincidence—it was something deeper, something tied to a past he thought was long behind him.