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The Mysterious BenefactorShaina TranquilinoSeptember 27, 2024
The Mysterious Benefactor Shaina Tranquilino September 27, 2024

The rain drummed steadily on the roof of the small, run-down house, its once vibrant red paint now chipped and fading. Inside, the Urban family huddled together in the dim light of a single flickering lamp. Susan Urban sat by the table, her face etched with worry, as she scanned the stack of overdue bills. Her husband, Tom, sat across from her, his hands calloused from years of manual labour, his eyes distant as he pondered their bleak future. Their young daughter, Asha, played quietly on the floor with a worn-out doll, oblivious to the storm brewing inside her parents' hearts.
Suddenly, there was a knock at the door.
Tom stood up, startled by the unexpected visitor. He opened the door to find no one there, just the cold wind and the steady patter of rain. But at his feet, resting on the porch, was a small package wrapped in brown paper and tied with string.
“Who could it be at this hour?” Susan asked, her voice tinged with suspicion.
Tom picked up the package and brought it inside. He placed it on the table, and the three of them stared at it in silence for a moment. The handwriting on the note attached was elegant and unfamiliar:
"For the Urbans. May this ease your burden."
Cautiously, Tom untied the string and unfolded the paper. Inside were neatly stacked bills—thousands of dollars. Enough to pay off their debts and more.
Susan gasped, her hand flying to her mouth. "This can't be real," she whispered. "Who would do this?"
Tom shook his head, equally baffled. "There’s no name, no explanation. Just the money."
Despite their disbelief, the Urbans used the money to settle their bills, pay off the mortgage, and buy a few essentials they had gone without for so long. The relief was immense, and for the first time in years, they felt a glimmer of hope.
But the gifts didn’t stop.
Every week, another package arrived at their door. Sometimes it contained more money, other times fine clothes for Asha, groceries, or even luxurious items they could never have afforded on their own. Each one came without a trace of the benefactor's identity, just the same cryptic note:
"For the Urbans. May this ease your burden."
At first, the Urbans were overwhelmed with gratitude. They no longer worried about their next meal or the mounting bills, and Asha seemed happier than ever. But as the weeks passed, Susan began to feel uneasy. Who could be sending them these gifts? And why?
She voiced her concerns to Tom one evening after another anonymous package had arrived.
“We can’t just keep taking these things,” Susan said. “It feels wrong not knowing who’s behind it. What if there’s a catch?”
Tom frowned. “We’ve searched for clues, asked around the neighbourhood, even checked the mail routes. No one knows anything. Whoever they are, they clearly don’t want to be found.”
“I don’t care,” Susan said firmly. “We have to find them. There’s something off about all of this.”
The next week, when the familiar knock came at the door, Tom was ready. He rushed outside, hoping to catch the mysterious benefactor in the act. But once again, no one was there—just the rain-soaked street and the faint echo of footsteps vanishing into the night.
Determined, the Urbans began their investigation. They asked neighbours, tracked down delivery drivers, and even visited the local post office, but every lead came up cold. No one had seen anything suspicious, and no one could explain the origin of the packages.
Then, one night, Asha came to her parents, holding something tightly in her hand. "Mama, Papa, look what I found," she said, her innocent eyes wide.
She opened her palm to reveal a small, gold-embossed pin in the shape of an eye. It had been tucked inside the latest package, hidden beneath layers of fine silk.
Susan's heart raced as she studied the symbol. It was unfamiliar, yet somehow it filled her with a deep sense of dread. "Where did you find this?" she asked.
"It was in the box," Asha replied, shrugging. "I thought it was pretty."
Tom took the pin, his face darkening. "I’ve seen this symbol before," he said quietly. "There’s an old lodge on the outskirts of town—I've passed it on my way to work. They have this emblem on the gate."
The next day, Tom and Susan went to the lodge. It was a sprawling, gothic structure surrounded by high walls, hidden deep within the woods. The gate was adorned with the same eye symbol. It seemed abandoned, but a faint light flickered inside.
They knocked on the door, half expecting no one to answer. But to their surprise, the door creaked open, revealing a tall man in a dark suit. His eyes were cold, his smile unsettling.
“Ah, the Urbans,” he said, as if he had been expecting them. “Please, come in.”
Against their better judgment, they stepped inside. The interior was grand but suffocating, with heavy drapes and dark wood paneling. The man led them into a room where several others sat in silence, all wearing pins with the same eye symbol.
"Who are you?" Susan demanded, her voice trembling. "And why have you been sending us these gifts?"
The man’s smile widened, but it didn’t reach his eyes. "We are simply benefactors. We help those in need, those who can be…useful to us."
"Useful?" Tom echoed, his fists clenching. "What do you mean?"
The man’s gaze hardened. "Nothing is ever truly free, Mr. Urban. The gifts were merely the beginning. We have plans for you and your family. But do not worry, your loyalty will be rewarded. All we ask in return is…obedience."
Susan's blood ran cold. "We don’t want anything from you anymore. We never asked for this!"
The man’s smile disappeared. "It’s too late for that, Mrs. Urban. You’ve already accepted our gifts. Now you must honour your part of the bargain."
Before Tom could respond, the door behind them slammed shut, and the lights flickered ominously. The Urbans were surrounded by the silent figures, their faces expressionless, their eyes glinting with malice.
In that moment, Susan realized they had walked into a trap far darker than they could have imagined. The gifts had been bait—luring them into the clutches of something ancient and sinister. The benefactors weren’t saviours. They were puppeteers, pulling the strings of unsuspecting souls.
And now, the Urbans were caught in their web.
"We don’t belong to you," Tom growled, stepping protectively in front of his wife.
The man chuckled softly. "But you do. And soon, you will understand why."
The Urbans knew then that there was no escape—not from the gifts, nor from the dark society that had marked them.
The only question that remained was how much they were willing to sacrifice to be free.
-
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The Playground Whisperer Shaina Tranquilino October 14, 2024

The playground on Maple Street was always buzzing with laughter, from the squeal of children on the swings to the crunch of sneakers on the sand. Parents sat on benches, talking among themselves or scrolling through their phones while their kids chased each other in circles. No one paid much attention to the old swings near the back. They were worn and rusted, their chains creaking in the breeze. The kids didn’t like them—they said they felt weird sitting on them, like someone was watching. Then one autumn afternoon, the whispers began.
It was Lucas who heard it first. He had wandered away from the group, bored with the usual games of tag, and found himself standing in front of the two swings swaying gently in the wind. No one else was around. He kicked at the dirt, thinking about nothing in particular, when he heard it—a voice, soft and raspy, like a breathy whisper.
“Come closer.”
Lucas froze. His heart skipped a beat as he scanned the playground. No one was near the swings. The parents were still chatting, their backs to him. He took a cautious step forward, his gaze locked on the empty seats.
“We need your help.”
The voice was clearer now, as if it were coming from inside his own head. Lucas glanced over his shoulder again, but nobody was paying attention. He took a few more steps, drawn by the eerie pull of the voice. It wasn’t scary—just… strange.
The swing nearest to him gave a metallic groan, its rusty chains rattling as it moved. The whisper came again, but this time it was louder.
“Push us. We can’t swing without you.”
Against his better judgment, Lucas reached out and grabbed the cold chain. His hand tingled as he gave it a gentle push, and the swing moved more smoothly than it should have, as if some unseen force guided it.
“Faster,” the voice urged. “Harder.”
He pushed harder, and the swing began to fly back and forth, the wind whistling through its chains. Lucas stared, wide-eyed, but he couldn’t bring himself to stop.
“Good,” the whisper cooed. “Now, let go.”
Lucas dropped the chain, stepping back, but the swing kept moving, higher and higher. He backed away, his heart thudding in his chest, but the voice followed him, growing darker.
“Now, go to the top of the jungle gym. Jump from there. Fly.”
Lucas stumbled, fear prickling at the back of his neck. He glanced at the jungle gym, a towering metal structure with a steep slide and ladders. He wasn’t afraid of heights, but something about the whisper—its insistence, its strange pull—terrified him.
Before he could move, he heard a scream. Across the playground, a girl named Abby was standing on top of the jungle gym, her arms stretched out wide like she was ready to jump. Her face was pale, her eyes vacant, as if she wasn’t really there.
The parents rushed toward her, pulling her down just in time. Abby looked dazed, confused, as if she had no idea how she’d gotten there.
Over the next few days, more kids heard the whispers. The voices came from the swings, soft at first, coaxing them to do small things—climb too high, swing too fast. But the requests grew darker, more dangerous. They began asking the children to leap from the highest bars, run into the street, or step into the deep end of the nearby pond.
The kids couldn’t explain why they listened. They just did.
No one believed them, of course. Parents chalked it up to imagination or a sudden burst of rebellious behaviour. But the whispers persisted, spreading like a virus through the playground.
One afternoon, after hearing about the incidents, a local teen named Isaac decided to investigate. He didn’t believe in ghost stories, but the talk about the playground had intrigued him. Isaac had always been the skeptical type, brushing off anything supernatural as nonsense. Yet, something about the way the younger kids spoke about the whispers unsettled him. The fear in their eyes felt too real.
On a cloudy Saturday, he made his way to Maple Street, phone in hand, ready to debunk the whole thing. The playground was mostly empty, save for a couple of toddlers and their moms. The old swings, though, sat eerily still in the windless air.
Isaac approached the swings cautiously, feeling a strange chill settle over him despite the warm afternoon. He reached out and touched one of the rusty chains, his fingers grazing the cold metal. He half expected something dramatic to happen—a voice, a sudden gust of wind—but there was nothing.
"Yeah, figured," Isaac muttered, rolling his eyes.
But as he turned to leave, a whisper crawled up the back of his neck, chilling his spine.
“Come back…”
He froze, his heart hammering. It was low, almost like a hiss, but clear enough to send a jolt of unease through him. Slowly, he turned back to the swings.
“We need you.”
His breath caught. It wasn’t just one voice—it was many, layered over each other, like a chorus of hushed voices speaking at once. His fingers trembled as he grabbed his phone, flicking on the camera to record. He panned across the swings, but the chains remained still, nothing out of the ordinary.
"Who's there?" he called, trying to keep his voice steady. His heart pounded louder in his ears.
Silence.
But as he took a step closer, the whispers returned, stronger this time.
“Closer… Isaac.”
The sound of his own name made his stomach lurch. How did they know? He hadn’t told anyone he was coming here.
The swings began to sway, just a slight motion, but there was no wind. The rusty chains creaked louder, almost rhythmically, like a taunt. The whispers grew more frantic.
“Help us. Set us free.”
Isaac's pulse quickened. He felt a pull, like invisible hands guiding him forward. He fought the urge to listen, to obey, but the compulsion was overwhelming. His feet moved of their own accord, carrying him toward the swing that was now swaying more vigorously.
“Just push. One little push.”
Isaac's hand reached out despite his growing fear. He gave the swing a tentative shove, and it moved higher, the chains rattling. The air around him seemed to grow thicker, colder. The whispers turned into harsh breaths, overlapping in a way that made his skin crawl.
Suddenly, he heard something behind him—a soft thud, like footsteps on the sand. He spun around, but there was no one there. His eyes darted across the playground. The moms and toddlers had left. He was completely alone.
That’s when he saw it—faint, but unmistakable. A figure, just a shadow really, standing near the jungle gym. It was tall and thin, with elongated limbs, its form blurry as if it was made of smoke. Its head tilted toward him, as if watching.
Isaac's breath hitched. He stumbled backward, dropping his phone. The shadow figure didn’t move, but its presence bore down on him, oppressive and wrong, like it didn’t belong in this world.
The whispers escalated into a frenzy, their words slurring together into a cacophony of demands.
"Set us free! Set us free!"
Isaac scrambled to his feet, grabbing his phone, and ran. He didn’t stop until he was halfway down the street, panting, his heart racing like he’d just escaped something far worse than he could comprehend. When he finally glanced back, the playground looked just as it always had—quiet, innocent, ordinary.
But Isaac knew better. There was something there, something old and angry, using the playground as its hunting ground. He couldn’t shake the image of the shadowy figure, nor the sound of the whispers that seemed to cling to his thoughts.
That night, as Isaac lay in bed, staring at the ceiling, he swore he could still hear them.
"We need you, Isaac…"
He didn’t sleep at all.
The next morning, his phone buzzed with a notification—a video message. Confused, he opened it. It was the footage he had recorded at the playground, but something was wrong. The video showed the swings moving on their own, violently, without him touching them. And in the background, behind the jungle gym, the shadow figure stood—closer now.
Its eyes, or where its eyes should’ve been, were fixed on the camera.
The message attached to the video read:
"You can’t run forever."
The Weeping Wind Shaina Tranquilino October 8, 2024

In the small coastal town of Harrow’s Bay, the wind had always been strange. It whispered through the crooked streets, sighed between the creaking wooden houses, and moaned as it swept across the sea. To the townsfolk, this was just part of life. They called it "the weeping wind" and spoke of it in low voices, never lingering on the topic for long. Children learned early not to pay attention to the sounds it carried, and even visitors quickly learned to close their shutters tightly at night.
But for Thomas Harker, the wind was a fascination he couldn’t ignore.
Thomas had moved to Harrow’s Bay six months ago, a broken man looking for solitude. He had lost his wife, Cadence, in a car accident the year before, and the grief still sat heavy on him, an invisible weight pressing down on his soul. The quiet town by the sea seemed like the perfect place to escape the noise of the world and his memories.
Yet, from the first night he arrived, the wind seemed different.
It wasn’t just the usual gusts rattling the windows or the occasional high-pitched howl; the wind here carried voices. Soft, murmuring at first, as though speaking in a language he didn’t understand, but the longer he listened, the more they seemed to make sense. At first, he brushed it off as fatigue or the remnants of his grief playing tricks on him, but the whispers persisted. They beckoned him, always at the edge of hearing, tugging at his curiosity like a distant echo calling him closer.
One cold autumn night, Thomas sat by his window, listening to the wind as it battered the house. He could hear the faintest trace of voices again, almost melodic in their rhythm. This time, though, he strained to listen harder. Beneath the layers of howling gusts, he swore he could make out words—fragments of sentences.
“The sea… the sea is hungry…”
“Blood in the water…”
“A mother weeps…”
His pulse quickened. He wasn’t imagining it. He grabbed a notebook and began to scribble down the phrases, each more cryptic than the last. He stayed up all night, chasing the voices through the wind, trying to decipher their meaning.
The next morning, Harrow’s Bay woke to tragedy. A fishing boat had capsized, all hands lost to the cold depths of the ocean. The locals said it was a freak accident, a sudden storm no one had predicted. But Thomas felt a chill that had nothing to do with the weather. The whispers—those voices—they had warned him.
Over the next few days, the wind’s whispers grew louder, more urgent. Thomas began spending more time listening by the window, waiting for the voices to return. They always did, bringing with them warnings of death and disaster.
“She’ll fall… break… gone forever…”
That same evening, a child playing by the cliffs slipped and fell to her death. The townsfolk were devastated, but Thomas had known. He had heard the voices speak of it, yet he had done nothing.
The guilt gnawed at him, but so did the curiosity. What was this strange force in the wind? Was it truly a warning or just a curse? He started listening more intently, writing down everything he heard, hoping to stop the next tragedy. But with each new warning, he became more obsessed. He no longer ventured into town; he barely ate, barely slept, consumed by the voices that filled his nights.
“Fire… flames… ashes…”
Two days later, a house on the edge of town burned to the ground, killing an elderly couple trapped inside. Thomas had heard the warning but couldn’t bring himself to speak of it. He was losing his grip on reality. If he told anyone, would they even believe him?
One stormy night, when the wind seemed to wail louder than ever, Thomas sat by the window again, the notebook trembling in his hands. The voices were clearer now, sharper, as if the wind itself had grown impatient.
“The one who listens… must pay…”
He froze. The words felt directed at him.
“A debt is owed… your name… your blood…”
The wind battered the house, howling with a fury that rattled the walls. Thomas stood up, heart racing. He tried to shut the window, but it wouldn’t budge. The voices grew louder, more insistent.
“Your time… has come…”
Suddenly, a cold gust burst through the room, knocking him to the floor. The wind swirled around him, and in the chaos, he could hear them—hundreds of voices now, overlapping, shrieking, whispering, weeping. He clamped his hands over his ears, but it was no use. They filled his mind, clawing at his sanity.
And then, as quickly as it started, the wind died. The room was deathly still.
Thomas shakily got to his feet, heart pounding in his chest. The notebook lay open on the floor, pages fluttering. He reached down to pick it up, but something caught his eye. Written across the page, in a jagged, hurried script that wasn’t his own, were the words:
“You listened too long.”
A sudden knock at the door made him jump. He stumbled toward it, pulling it open to reveal a figure standing in the rain, cloaked in shadow. Before he could react, the figure stepped forward, its face pale and hollow, eyes sunken and dark.
It was Cadence.
Her lips moved, but the words didn’t come from her. They came from the wind.
“You listened too long,” she repeated, her voice empty, a hollow echo of the woman he had once loved.
Thomas stumbled back, his mind reeling. He tried to speak, but his voice caught in his throat. The figure stepped closer, the wind picking up again, howling through the open door. The voices returned, louder, deafening.
“Now you belong to us…”
The wind surged into the house, pulling at him, dragging him toward the open door and the dark, stormy night beyond. He screamed, but the sound was swallowed by the storm. The last thing he saw was Cadence's face, cold and unrecognizable, before the wind took him.
By morning, Thomas Harker was gone, his house empty, the windows open, and the wind once again weeping through the streets of Harrow’s Bay.
The townsfolk would speak of him only in whispers, their voices low, just like the wind.
The Phantom Operator Shaina Tranquilino October 10, 2024

Macy sat alone in her dimly lit apartment, the glow from her TV flickering across the walls as an autumn storm rattled the windows. The wind howled through the trees outside, and rain pattered against the glass like skeletal fingers tapping to get in. She had always loved October’s eeriness, but tonight, an unfamiliar dread settled over her. It started with a ring—sharp and shrill, cutting through the white noise of the storm. Macy glanced at her phone, confused. The screen displayed “Unknown Caller,” a designation she hadn't seen in years. She hesitated but eventually swiped to answer.
“Hello?” she said, her voice tentative.
There was silence on the other end, only the faint hiss of static. Macy was about to hang up when she heard it: a whisper, faint and distant, but unmistakable.
"Macy…"
She froze. The voice was achingly familiar, one she had buried in the deepest recesses of her memory. Her throat tightened as chills crept up her spine.
"Maverick?" she whispered, her voice trembling.
The static crackled again, louder this time. The whisper came through once more, clearer now, unmistakably his voice. "Macy... I miss you."
Her heart pounded in her chest. It had been five years since Maverick died in a car accident. The grief had been suffocating, but she had moved on—or so she thought. The sudden resurgence of his voice felt like a knife turning in a half-healed wound.
“This isn’t funny,” she said, her voice rising. “Who is this?”
But the voice on the other end didn’t respond. The static grew louder, filling her ears, drowning out the storm outside.
“I miss you,” the voice repeated, echoing like it was coming from far away, from somewhere it shouldn’t be able to reach.
With a gasp, Macy dropped the phone onto the couch, staring at it in horror. Her hands were shaking. This had to be a prank—some cruel, heartless prank. But how? Maverick was dead. She had attended his funeral, seen his body lowered into the ground.
The phone went silent. For a long minute, she just stared at it, hoping the nightmare was over. But then, it rang again.
Macy nearly jumped out of her skin. “Unknown Caller” flashed on the screen once more. She didn’t want to answer, but her hand moved involuntarily, as though compelled by some unseen force.
She pressed the green icon and brought the phone to her ear, her pulse hammering in her throat.
This time, the voice came through immediately, but it was different. It wasn’t just a whisper. It was distorted, warped, as though Maverick’s voice had been dragged through layers of static and something darker—something inhuman.
"Why did you leave me?"
Tears welled up in her eyes. "You... you died, Maverick. You’re gone. This isn’t real."
"I’m still here," the voice rasped. The words were drenched in agony, in longing. "I’ve been waiting for you."
The hairs on the back of her neck stood up. She tried to reason with herself—this was impossible, a trick of the mind. Maybe it was the storm, maybe it was grief resurfacing after all these years. But the voice… it was too real. Too familiar.
The call cut out, plunging the room into silence once more. Macy stared at the phone in her hand, her breath coming in shallow gasps. Her fingers hovered over the call log. She needed to know where the calls were coming from.
With trembling hands, she tapped the number.
Nothing.
No record. The call didn’t exist.
A chill swept over her as the storm outside raged on, the wind howling like a mourning soul. She stood, pacing the living room, her mind racing. It couldn’t have been Maverick. He was gone. He had to be.
Suddenly, the phone rang again.
This time, Macy didn’t answer immediately. She let it ring, her stomach twisting into knots as the shrill sound echoed in her small apartment. Finally, with a deep breath, she answered.
“Maverick, please stop this,” she pleaded, tears streaming down her face. “Please… just let me go.”
There was a long pause, the kind of silence that felt like the dead themselves were listening.
"Come back to me," the voice said. It was louder now, more insistent. "You promised."
Her mind raced back to the night of his accident. They had fought—bitterly. She had told him she was leaving him, that she couldn’t take the jealousy, the paranoia anymore. He had driven off in a storm not unlike tonight, his last words to her echoing in her mind: “If you leave, I’ll never let you go.”
The static rose again, and beneath it, Macy could hear something else—a distant noise, growing louder. It was the unmistakable screech of tires on wet pavement, the crunch of metal twisting and shattering.
Then, the voice. His voice. Crying out her name in terror.
The memory slammed into her like a freight train, and she dropped the phone, stumbling backward, her breath coming in ragged gasps. She covered her ears, but she couldn’t block it out—the sound of his death was all around her, suffocating her.
The lights flickered and then went out, plunging the room into darkness. Only the faint glow from her phone illuminated the room. The call was still active, the static crackling like fire.
And then she heard it. Footsteps. Soft, deliberate, moving toward her.
Macy backed into a corner, her heart pounding, tears streaming down her face. “Maverick... I’m sorry…”
The footsteps stopped just behind her. She could feel the air grow cold, could sense something—someone—standing there, unseen but present.
A whisper brushed her ear, so close it felt like icy breath on her skin.
“You can’t leave me. Not again.”
And then, the lights flickered back on. The room was empty, but Macy knew—she wasn’t alone.
The phone went dead in her hand, the call finally over. But the fear remained, gnawing at her, whispering in the back of her mind.
She knew it wasn’t the last time he would call.
Maverick was waiting.
And he always would be.
Following Through on My New Year's Resolution: September Update Shaina Tranquilino September 30, 2024

At the beginning of the year, I set a resolution that felt deeply meaningful and personal: every month, I would donate to a different organization that I felt called to support. My goal wasn't just to give financially, but to invest in causes that resonate with my values, communities, and ongoing efforts for change. As we are at the end of September, I want to share a little about this month's donation and reflect on what this journey has meant so far.
For the month of September, I chose to donate to the Legacy of Hope Foundation (LHF), an Indigenous-led charitable organization that is dedicated to educating the public and raising awareness about the history and lasting impacts of the Residential School System in Canada. Established in 2000, the LHF has been doing the vital work of helping Canadians understand the trauma and ongoing challenges faced by Indigenous communities—particularly those who survived these schools, as well as their families and descendants.
I was moved to donate to the Legacy of Hope Foundation because of the important role they play in truth-telling, healing, and reconciliation. The Residential School System is a painful chapter in Canadian history, one that forcibly separated Indigenous children from their families, stripped them of their languages, cultures, and identities, and subjected them to harsh, abusive conditions. The effects of this system continue to ripple through generations, impacting the well-being of Indigenous communities.
Through education, exhibitions, and workshops, the Legacy of Hope Foundation not only illuminates this dark history but also provides a pathway for healing and fostering just and equal relationships between Indigenous Peoples and Canadians. Their work in expanding awareness, honouring survivors, and encouraging reconciliation is inspiring, and supporting them this month felt like a small but meaningful way to contribute to this vital movement.
What has been particularly powerful for me is the Foundation's focus on creating a space for healing and understanding. The work they do to showcase the resilience and strength of Indigenous Peoples, while also making known the injustices they have faced, is something we need more of in our world. It’s a reminder of the importance of not only learning from history but also taking active steps towards repairing harm.
Over the course of this year, each donation I've made has been an opportunity to reflect on what I value and how I can help create positive change in the world. From environmental causes to social justice initiatives, each organization I've supported has been a piece of a larger puzzle, one that is about compassion, equity, and the belief that even small actions can lead to big differences.
As I continue with this New Year's resolution, I'm filled with gratitude for the work being done by organizations like the Legacy of Hope Foundation. Their commitment to truth, reconciliation, and healing reminds me that while the road may be long, we are all part of the process of building a better, more inclusive future.
In the months ahead, I look forward to learning about new organizations, supporting diverse causes, and keeping the spirit of this resolution alive. It's been a rewarding and eye-opening journey, and I'm excited to see where the next few months take me.
If you're interested in learning more about the Legacy of Hope Foundation or supporting their work, I encourage you to visit their website and explore the many ways they're contributing to education and reconciliation across Canada.
Here’s to continuing the path toward positive change, one month, and one organization at a time. https://www.canadahelps.org/en/charities/legacy-of-hope-foundation/
The Echo in the Walls Shaina Tranquilino October 1, 2024

Amelia and Jonathan had been searching for a fresh start, away from the noise and chaos of the city. The mansion they found, nestled deep within a forest, seemed like the perfect escape. Towering and ancient, with ivy crawling up its stone walls, it was a place shrouded in mystery. But the price was too good to ignore.
“This feels like a dream,” Amelia said as they stood in the grand foyer, gazing at the high, arched ceilings and marble floors. The place had a cold beauty to it, untouched by time, as though it had been waiting for them.
Jonathan smiled, squeezing her hand. “It’s perfect.”
But on the first night, as they lay in bed, Amelia heard something strange—a soft, almost imperceptible whisper, like wind sliding through cracks in the walls.
“What was that?” she asked, sitting up, her heart quickening.
Jonathan shrugged sleepily. “Probably just the wind. The place is old, after all.”
Amelia nodded, though she wasn’t convinced. As the days passed, the whispering became more persistent. At first, she thought it was her imagination. But then the whispers began to take shape, forming words—words she didn’t want to hear.
"He’s going to leave you."
She froze the first time it happened, standing alone in the long, dark hallway outside their bedroom. The voice was faint, almost tender, but unmistakable. It sounded like her own thoughts echoing back to her from the walls.
Amelia told herself it was stress. Moving had been difficult. Adjusting to a new place, especially one so isolated, could play tricks on the mind. She didn’t tell Jonathan. How could she explain that the house seemed to know her darkest fears?
But the whispers grew louder. At night, as they sat by the fireplace, she could hear them—soft murmurs hidden beneath the crackling of the flames. The voices whispered of betrayal, of loneliness, of secrets Jonathan was keeping.
"He’s hiding something from you."
One evening, Amelia finally asked, “Have you heard anything strange in the house?”
Jonathan looked at her, frowning. “Like what?”
“I don’t know,” she hesitated. “Like… voices?”
He laughed, though the sound was strained. “You’re just imagining things. This place is big. Old houses settle, creak.”
But that night, Amelia woke to the sound of Jonathan speaking in his sleep. She turned toward him, her pulse quickening.
"You can’t protect her."
She sat up, eyes wide. His lips moved, the words barely audible, but there was no mistaking the fear in his voice. He was dreaming, caught in some nightmare. But whose words were they?
The next morning, Jonathan was quiet, distant. When Amelia asked if he was okay, he brushed her off.
But she knew the truth. The house was getting to him too.
Days turned into weeks, and the mansion’s whispers became an ever-present hum. Amelia began to lose sleep. The whispers echoed in her ears, feeding her anxiety, telling her things she didn’t want to believe.
"He’s tired of you."
"You’re not enough."
The walls felt alive, like they were watching her, waiting for her to break. She avoided the mirrors, terrified of what she might see in them. Her reflection felt foreign, her mind unraveling under the weight of the house’s secrets.
One evening, as the sun set behind the thick trees, Amelia confronted Jonathan.
“Something’s wrong with this place,” she said, her voice trembling. “The walls… they know things. They’re telling me things.”
Jonathan’s face darkened. “Amelia, stop. You’re letting it get to you. It’s just a house.”
“No, it’s not!” she cried. “I can hear them, Jonathan. And I know you can too.”
For a moment, his expression softened. He opened his mouth to speak, but then the whispers came, louder than ever before, echoing between them.
"He’s already planning to leave you."
Jonathan’s eyes flickered, and in that brief second, Amelia knew the truth. The whispers weren’t lying.
With trembling hands, she backed away from him. “What have you been hiding from me?”
Before he could answer, a violent gust of wind tore through the room, rattling the windows. The house groaned, as if waking from a deep sleep. The whispers grew louder, drowning out their voices.
"It’s too late now."
Suddenly, the walls began to tremble. Cracks appeared, snaking across the ceiling like veins. Amelia’s heart pounded in her chest as the mansion seemed to close in around them. The whispers rose to a deafening roar.
And then, silence.
Jonathan stood frozen, his eyes wide, his face pale. "Amelia…" he whispered, but the fear in his voice was unmistakable.
The walls had spoken the truth.
The mansion had been waiting for them all along.
The silence that followed was thick and suffocating, as if the mansion were holding its breath. Amelia felt the chill of dread wrap around her like a shroud. She wanted to run, to escape the walls that seemed to pulse with an unseen energy, but Jonathan stood rooted in place, his face pale and expressionless.
“Amelia, we need to get out of here,” he finally said, breaking the heavy stillness. His voice was laced with fear, and for the first time, she saw the uncertainty in his eyes.
She nodded, feeling a surge of adrenaline. They turned toward the door, but as they stepped into the hallway, the whispers returned, cascading around them like a wave.
"You can’t escape your fate."
They hurried down the corridor, each step echoing ominously, but the whispers grew louder, swirling around them, drowning out their thoughts. The shadows seemed to stretch and twist, creeping closer with every passing second.
“Amelia!” Jonathan grabbed her arm, his grip tightening. “We have to stick together!”
She met his gaze, her heart racing. “We can’t let the house take us! We need to find a way to break whatever hold it has on us!”
They raced toward the main staircase, but as they reached the bottom, the house trembled again, and the whispers turned to a cacophony, a terrifying symphony of their deepest fears.
"He will leave you. You are nothing without him."
Amelia clutched her head, overwhelmed. “Stop! Just stop!” she screamed into the dark void.
Then, in that moment of desperation, she recalled the legend she had read about the mansion—a story of a family that had succumbed to the house’s whispers, unable to resist the pull of their own insecurities. But it also spoke of a way to silence the echoes: one had to confront the source of their fears.
“Jonathan!” she shouted over the noise, her voice fierce. “We have to face it! We need to confront what we’re afraid of!”
He hesitated, confusion and fear mingling in his eyes. “What do you mean?”
“The house feeds on our doubts! If we face what we fear the most, it might lose its power!”
Before Jonathan could respond, the walls shuddered violently, and a shadow darted past them. It was as if the very essence of the house was alive, writhing and grasping for them.
“Together,” Amelia urged, gripping his hand tightly. “We can do this together.”
They took a deep breath and faced each other. “I’m scared you’ll leave me,” Amelia admitted, her voice shaking. “That I’m not enough for you.”
Tears shimmered in Jonathan’s eyes. “I’m scared that I’ll fail you, that I won’t be able to protect you. But I love you, Amelia. I don’t want to lose you either.”
With those confessions, the whispers quieted, but they weren’t gone. Instead, they morphed into a softer, almost melancholic tone, as if the house itself were listening.
Amelia pressed on, her voice steady. “I’m afraid of being alone, of not being able to find my way. But I know I’m stronger than this place. We both are.”
The walls trembled again, but this time, they felt more alive than threatening. Jonathan nodded, his resolve strengthening. “I refuse to let this place take us. I love you, and together, we can face anything.”
With their hands clasped tightly, they moved deeper into the house, each step echoing their newfound strength. They faced the whispers together, acknowledging the fears that had haunted them since their arrival.
As they climbed the grand staircase, the air grew lighter, the oppressive darkness fading. The whispers became mere murmurs, like distant memories rather than threats.
Finally, they reached the room at the end of the hall—the library, where the walls were lined with books, tales of love and loss, joy and sorrow. In the center of the room stood a massive fireplace, cold and empty.
Amelia knelt beside the hearth, touching the stones. “This is where it ends,” she whispered, taking a deep breath. “We need to cleanse this place of its hold over us.”
Jonathan joined her, and together they gathered kindling from the surrounding shelves—pages torn from books that had whispered secrets of fear and despair. They stacked the wood in the fireplace, their hands steady despite the trembling walls.
“Are you ready?” he asked, looking into her eyes.
“Yes,” she said firmly. “Let’s burn away the fear.”
Jonathan struck a match and lit the kindling. Flames danced and flickered, casting a warm glow around the room. As the fire grew, the whispers grew frantic, rising in pitch and intensity, but they held their ground.
“Leave us!” Amelia shouted. “You have no power here!”
The flames roared, and with a final wail, the whispers faded into silence. The house trembled violently for a moment, and then—calm.
As the fire crackled, the room felt different. The air was lighter, the oppressive energy that had weighed on them lifted. They looked at each other, tears of relief in their eyes.
“Did we do it?” Jonathan whispered, his voice a mix of hope and disbelief.
Amelia smiled through her tears. “I think we did.”
They embraced, feeling the warmth of each other, of love conquering fear. The mansion, once a prison of whispers, now stood transformed, its shadows retreating into the corners.
Hand in hand, they stepped outside into the golden light of dawn. The forest around them was serene, birds chirping, sunlight filtering through the trees.
“We’re free,” Jonathan said, looking back at the mansion.
“Yes,” Amelia replied, a sense of peace settling in her heart. “And now we can start anew.”
Together, they walked away, leaving the echoes of the past behind, ready to embrace whatever lay ahead.