icon 0
icon TOP UP
rightIcon
icon Reading History
rightIcon
icon Sign out
rightIcon
icon Get the APP
rightIcon

When Memories Lie

Chapter 4 

Word Count: 528    |    Released on: 10/06/2025

ved – more aunts, uncles, cousins. The table was laden with

ad," Dad said, gla

t running late," A

it anymore. I

y voice louder than I inten

versation

," Mom said gently. "We're just

Everyone who remembers Leo, tell me one specific thing

he always tells the story about how he accidentally dyed his hair green in college

college roommate. Leo's the quiet one, always has his nose in a book. He's a history

uter whiz. Works for a startup in Seattle. He helped me fix my laptop l

errible singing voice. Another recalled him as an aspiring chef who once set a kitchen on fire. His s

was a vague sense of

y, musical, clumsy contractor, park ranger, software developer, history professor, a

ent quiet.

dawning confusion in their eyes. It was the first time

dvantage, "can remember his parents' nam

few people shift

around," Dad mumbled, but h

tcome. "Someone must have his number, if he called L

ain. A flurry of s

d have

in my co

changed hi

o's arrival had curdled into a palpable unease. The elephant in the room was

. And any proof he'd ever existed outs

Claim Your Bonus at the APP

Open
When Memories Lie
When Memories Lie
“Thanksgiving. I was back home in rural Vermont, sifting through our old attic, looking for ornaments. Then I found it: a Polaroid of a 10-year-old me with a boy named "Cousin Leo," a cousin I'd never heard of, who then vanished from the photo right before my eyes. My family insisted Leo was real, eagerly anticipating his arrival, but their stories about him were a chaotic mess of contradictions-tall, short, professor, contractor, living everywhere and nowhere. They had no photos, no contact info, nothing tangible. Yet, strange toys appeared, my niece claimed he visited, and an unseen voice called from our empty porch. Was I losing my mind, or were they all caught in some bizarre, shared delusion? They blamed my childhood memory gaps, conveniently dismissing the chilling inconsistencies only I seemed to see. The warm, familiar holiday turned cold, filled with an unsettling unease. As their cheerful "memories" curdled into whispers of strange encounters and empty eyes, I realized this wasn't just confusion-something far darker was at play, and I was the only one who could unearth the truth about this phantom cousin.”
1 Introduction2 Chapter 13 Chapter 24 Chapter 35 Chapter 46 Chapter 57 Chapter 68 Chapter 79 Chapter 810 Chapter 911 Chapter 10