Friday, December 12, 2025

Whispers in the Static: Part 9

Part 9 – Masks Off

Arthur waited for them, as he always did. The ritual had become the anchor of his days — the tea poured into her mug, the whispered conversations in empty rooms, the quiet anticipation of dusk. By the time the red glow of the dial painted the walls, his heart was already beating in time with the hiss of static.

Helen’s voice came first.

“…Arthur… my love…”

He closed his eyes, smiling faintly. “I’m here.”

His father followed, as steady as stone.

“…proud of you, son…”

Then his mother, her words warm as blankets in winter.

“…always watching…”

Michael’s laughter trailed after, quick and sharp.

Arthur let the voices wash over him. But something was wrong. They were speaking too quickly, one over the other, as though the tide had grown rough. Helen’s words blurred into his father’s, his mother’s into Michael’s.

“…the gardenias…”
“…Rowboat, remember…”
“…so proud…”
“…love you, Arthur…”

He pressed closer to the radio, straining to separate them, but the words tangled, overlapped, frayed. He thought he heard Helen again — but the memory she spoke twisted, wrong.

“…the roses on our wedding day…”

“Gardenias,” Arthur whispered, his throat tight. “They were gardenias.”

The voices surged. His father’s voice bled into Michael’s, his mother’s into Helen’s.

“…Arthur… let us in… Arthur, do you want us… Arthur, we miss you… Arthur, Arthur…”

His name came from every mouth, spoken again and again until it was no longer words but a rhythm, a chant. The static swelled, filling the room with a storm that rattled the windows and pressed against his chest.

Arthur clutched the radio in both hands, his breath ragged. “Stop!” he shouted. “One at a time! Please—”

The voices froze. For a heartbeat, silence.

Then, all at once, they laughed. Not gently this time, not tender or familiar. A raw, jagged sound, many voices braided into one.

The static shuddered, and when it spoke again, it was no longer Helen, nor his father, nor any of the dead he had loved.

It was something else.

“We wore their voices. You listened. You invited us.”

The sound was guttural, layered, vibrating through his bones. The glow of the dial pulsed wildly, casting the room in red flashes like a warning light.

Arthur’s hands trembled on the cracked casing. His mouth opened, but no words came.

The static roared, alive, pressing closer.

“Now,” the chorus rumbled, “let us in.”


(To be continued in Part 10 – The Hollow Vessel)

Friday, December 5, 2025

Whispers in the Static: Part 8

Part 8 – The Fractures

The nights still belonged to them.
Arthur lay in bed as the static rose, his heart steady with expectation. Helen came first, as she always did — her words faint but certain, each fragment a balm against the silence.

“…my love… I’m here…”

He whispered back, his lips brushing the darkness. “I know.”

His father followed, voice calm, reassuring, every syllable wrapped in the steadiness Arthur had missed.

“…proud of you, son…”

Arthur breathed easier, eyes closing. The voices filled the room, familiar as breath.

But then Michael came, his cousin’s voice slipping sharp through the hiss.

“…remember when we lit the barn on fire?”

Arthur’s eyes shot open. His chest tightened. “No,” he muttered. That had never happened. They had stolen a rowboat once, yes — reckless and laughing. But no barn. No fire.

The static wavered. For a moment, he thought he heard Michael laugh, but it came in the wrong place — not after a joke, not with mischief, but cutting through his father’s next words, tangled and strange.

Arthur pressed his palms to his eyes. He was tired, too tired. Perhaps he had misheard.

Helen’s voice rose again, soft, steady.

“…our gardenias, Arthur… the wedding day…”

He clung to it, to her, to the memory she painted as clear as if it were yesterday. The unease slid away like water down glass. He whispered back, fierce in his need: “I remember. I remember.”

But when he opened his eyes, the red glow of the dial seemed brighter than before, pulsing faintly in rhythm with the static. A heartbeat.

And beneath the tide of voices, he thought he felt another, deeper sound pressing close — waiting.


(To be continued in Part 9 – Masks Off)

 

Friday, November 28, 2025

Whispers in the Static: Part 7

Part 7 – The Bargain in Static

The nights blurred into one another.
Arthur no longer counted the days; he counted the hours until dusk, until the tide of static carried his voices back to him. Helen. His father. His mother. Even Michael, with his sharp-edged laughter. They gathered in the red glow of the dial, a family stitched together by noise and memory.

The house no longer felt empty. Each room seemed to hum with presence. Arthur spoke aloud in the kitchen as he cooked, pausing to listen for answers that never came until nightfall. He set the table for two, sometimes for three, and though the chairs remained unfilled, he felt less alone.

But the voices had begun to change.

They still sounded like his loved ones — warm, tender, familiar — yet their words grew more insistent, their fragments strung with meaning that pressed heavier against him.

“…Arthur, do you want us back?”

He froze, his hand hovering above the radio’s casing. Helen’s tone was soft, aching, the way she once spoke on winter nights when she asked him to stay awake with her a little longer.

“Yes,” he whispered. “More than anything.”

The static swelled, and his father’s voice followed, steady as ever.

“…Would you do anything, son, to see us again?”

Arthur’s chest ached. He lay back, eyelids heavy, drifting at the edge of sleep. His mouth formed words without thought, the answer spilling out half-conscious, almost a dream.

“Yes…”

The static trembled with laughter — gentle, not cruel, but strange in its timing, as though several voices laughed at once and then fell silent too quickly. His cousin’s voice slid in next, playful, teasing.

“…Then let us in.”

Arthur stirred, the words half-reaching him, yet not fully waking him. “What do you mean?” he mumbled.

The radio hissed, flickered, faltered. Then Helen’s voice returned, sweet and certain.

“…Don’t be afraid. Just let us in.”

The red glow of the dial seemed to pulse, faintly, like a heartbeat. The air pressed heavier against him, as though the house itself were leaning close to hear his answer.

Arthur’s lips moved once more, slurred with sleep. A whisper barely louder than breath.

“Yes.”

The static surged, alive, wrapping him in a sound that felt almost like an embrace.


(To be continued in Part 8 – The Fractures)

Friday, November 21, 2025

Whispers in the Static: Part 6

Part 6 – The Chorus of the Lost

Arthur had grown accustomed to the rhythm of it.
Night after night, Helen’s voice drifted through the static like a tide returning to shore. Sometimes soft, sometimes broken, but always hers. His father’s voice now mingled there as well — steady, reassuring, a comfort he had never expected to hear again. Between them, the nights no longer seemed hollow.

But on the sixth night, the static carried more.

It began with Helen, as it always did.

“…Arthur… my love…”

He closed his eyes, smiling faintly in the dark. The red glow of the radio painted the room with its dull warmth. Then came his father, firm yet gentle.

“…proud of you, son.”

Arthur whispered back, his voice trembling, “I can hear you. I’m here.”

The static bent, cracked, and another voice slid in — faint, wavering, but known.

“…remember the summer by the lake?”

Arthur’s eyes shot open. That voice — it was his mother, long gone, the sound of her lullabies still haunting the corners of his childhood.

“Mom?” The word caught in his throat.

“…yes, sweetheart… I’m with you.”

The air in the room grew thick. He sat upright, clutching the edge of the sheets as more whispers trickled through. His mother’s lullabies surfaced first, gentle as ever, and Arthur nearly wept at the sound.

Then another voice joined — one he hadn’t thought of in years.

“…Arthur, remember when we stole the rowboat?”

Arthur froze. It was his cousin Michael — mischievous, sharp-tongued, a boyhood companion whose grin had often meant trouble. He’d drowned in the river the summer they were seventeen.

Arthur’s chest tightened. Why Michael? Why now?

Still, the static carried his laughter, weaving with his mother’s softness, with his father’s steadiness, with Helen’s love.

One by one, they emerged.
A chorus of the lost.

The voices overlapped, tangled, speaking over one another in bursts and fragments.

“…Arthur, I miss you…”
“…so proud…”
“…the lighthouse, remember…”
“…the lake, the boat, the gardenias…”

Arthur pressed closer to the radio, his breath ragged, tears spilling down his cheeks. All of them, gathered together, filling the silence that had once threatened to bury him.

And yet, beneath the flood of voices, something stirred in him — not doubt, not fear, but a small, unsteady hesitation. The sound was too full, too crowded, the words tumbling over one another like stones in a rushing river.

Still, he clung to it. He could not let go.

For the first time in years, he had them all.


(To be continued in Part 7 – The Bargain in Static)

Friday, November 14, 2025

Whispers in the Static: Part 5

Part 5 – The Father’s Voice

Arthur lived for the nights.
Every dusk was a countdown, every evening meal just a formality before the quiet hours when Helen returned. The days grew patterned around her absence: the tea poured into her mug, the pauses before her chair, the gentle care given to the old radio as though it were a shrine.

And when at last he lay down, the static would rise, the tide would turn, and her voice would find him again.

“…Arthur… my love…”

He breathed her in through sound alone, each fragment filling the hollow space of the house. Her laughter came to him one night — whole and bright — and it left him trembling, clutching the sheets as though she were beside him.

But then, on another night, the static bent in a way it never had before. A new rhythm. A weight pressing in.

Through the hiss, another voice cut. Deeper. Rougher.

“Arthur, boy.”

Arthur’s breath caught. The word was plain, but the sound of it filled his chest with old recognition. It was his father’s voice — the timbre unmistakable, the authority still buried in its tone.

He sat up in bed, staring at the radio as though it had betrayed him.

“Helen?” he whispered.

The static shivered. Helen’s soft murmur came back — broken, delayed — “…still here… Arthur…”

But the other voice pressed in again, clearer this time.

“It’s me. Your dad.”

Arthur’s eyes stung. He hadn’t heard that voice since the hospital, since those final rasping hours when the weight of years had crushed the strength out of the man he had once feared and admired. Now it came steady, alive, commanding as it had been when Arthur was a child.

His hands trembled on the sheets. “Dad?”

“…yes… proud of you…”

The words fractured, scattered by static, but they pierced him all the same. For years Arthur had carried questions that had never been answered, aches that had never healed. And here, through the radio, his father returned with the words he had always wanted.

Helen’s voice wove through, fragile, tender. His father’s was firmer, steady. Both voices carried him through the night until dawn crept pale across the floorboards.

Arthur lay awake in the soft gray light, his mind torn.
For the first time, the static had carried two voices.

And though his chest swelled with joy at hearing his father again, a quiet thread of unease wound its way through his thoughts.

The radio was no longer only Helen’s.


(To be continued in Part 6 – The Chorus of the Lost)