Cherreads

Chapter 8 - Trace #008 — Memory Left Behind

Trace #008 — Memory Left Behind

The knock at the window didn't come again.

It didn't need to.

I stared at the glass, frozen, half-expecting a face to appear in the dark.

But there was nothing.

Twelve stories up. Locked. Undisturbed.

Still, I couldn't shake the feeling that something had been there. That whatever knocked… hadn't needed a way in.

It had already left something behind.

---

By sunrise, I was outside.

I hadn't slept. Again.

I didn't tell Rey. He'd only insist I rest. That I let forensics handle it.

But this wasn't about the case anymore.

This was about what I couldn't remember.

---

I walked aimlessly at first, letting the wind decide my direction.

Then I saw it — a construction site, three blocks away from the building.

Fenced off. Silent.

The sign read:

FUTURE LOCATION — KARL MEMORIAL CLINIC

Groundbreaking Delayed.

My last name.

I didn't remember this.

I didn't know who had started the project, or why.

But something about the site tugged at me. As if part of me had been waiting to return.

I climbed the fence.

---

Inside, the place was barely cleared. Rubble everywhere. Broken tile. Dirt. Cement bones from an older building that had been torn down.

And in the far corner — half-buried beneath a tarp — was a bench.

Old. Weathered.

I knew that bench.

I sat there once, didn't I?

With—

A sudden ache bloomed behind my eyes.

I knelt down, pulling the tarp aside fully.

Underneath, half-wedged between concrete blocks, was a music box.

Dusty. Cracked.

And familiar.

My hands trembled as I picked it up.

---

The moment my fingers touched the brass dial, it struck me like a flood:

> My mother's voice.

Laughter.

Warm hands helping mine wind the box.

My father pretending to hate the song, but always humming along anyway.

"You're off-key," she'd tease.

"He gets it from you," he'd reply.

And then—

The memory changed.

I saw myself.

Sitting alone on the bench.

Music box on my lap.

Tears in my eyes.

> "They're not coming back," I whispered.

And someone answered.

A child's voice.

From the shadow just beyond the trees.

> "Don't cry. If you remember them too much, it'll find you."

---

I fell back, gasping.

My head hit the concrete, hard.

I stared up at the gray sky, wind spinning dust into my eyes.

That voice...

I hadn't remembered it until now.

Someone had been with me.

Back then.

They'd spoken like they knew something.

Like they'd seen it happen before.

---

Back at HQ, I locked myself in the case room.

I ran the music box under forensic trace scans. Emotionally sensitive residue came back strong.

Unfiltered readout:

> Grief. Comfort. Warning. Echo Memory Detected.

Residual Link: Unknown Entity — Age Estimate: 10-13.

Possible Match: Subject 014.

Rey finally found me two hours later.

"You look like you've been hit by a truck," he said.

"I remembered something," I told him. "A place. A music box. And a voice."

He raised an eyebrow. "From the trace?"

"No," I said. "From me."

---

I showed him the box.

He ran his own scans. Quietly. Carefully.

"This is personal," he said.

I nodded. "It was mine."

"And you forgot it?"

"I didn't forget," I replied. "It was taken."

---

That night, I stood in my apartment, staring at the music box.

I didn't wind it.

I didn't need to.

Because the moment I touched it again, I felt something shift in the air — like someone had turned to face me.

And then…

A small voice echoed in my head:

> "You weren't supposed to remember me."

---

I spun around.

Nothing.

But I could feel them — like cold fingers brushing the edge of my mind.

They were close now.

Not threatening.

But afraid.

> "Don't trace anything else. Please. He'll know."

I whispered, "Who is he?"

Silence.

> "He never forgets what he kills."

---

Outside, the streetlamp flickered.

And for a second, I saw a figure standing at the far end of the block.

Not moving.

Not watching.

Just waiting.

Like it had all the time in the world.

---

To be continued...

More Chapters