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THE BOOK OF UNLIVED LIVES

THE BOOK OF UNLIVED LIVES

Last Updated: 2026-03-21 12:11:18
Language:  English4+
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Synopsis

A ruined world. A hidden library. A sister who should not exist.


When Elena opens the book of a life where her sister survived, she unleashes something that was never meant to become real.


Now she must choose:


rewrite the past… or become part of a story that can never end.


Chapter1


At the end of the world, silence did not arrive all at once.

It accumulated.

It gathered slowly, patiently, like dust settling over something that had once been alive. It filled the hollow shells of buildings, stretched itself across abandoned streets, and seeped into every crack where voices had once lived. It was not the silence of peace. It was the silence of something that had ended without permission.

Elena Vale had learned to recognize its weight.

Some silences were light, like the pause before a question.

This one pressed against her chest.

She had been walking for eleven days.

Or perhaps twelve. Time had become unreliable after the clocks stopped agreeing with the sky. Her watch had died somewhere between the second city and the third, its hands frozen at an hour that no longer existed. Since then, she had measured time by hunger, by exhaustion, by the slow erosion of certainty.

Her boots scraped softly against the pale ground.

The dust here was strange—too fine to be sand, too soft to be ash. It clung to her like memory, coating her ankles, settling into the creases of her clothes. When the wind rose, it did not scatter. It hovered.

As if even the world itself was reluctant to let go.

She adjusted the strap of her satchel and kept walking.

The leather bag had once belonged to her father. It still smelled faintly of oil and paper, though the scent had faded with the years. Inside, its contents were carefully arranged, each item occupying a place that had been decided long ago and never questioned since.

A flask. Half-empty.

A folded map. Incomplete.

And a photograph.

Elena stopped.

Not because she needed to rest, but because the photograph had shifted slightly inside the satchel, and she could feel it.

That was enough.

She reached inside, her fingers brushing against worn paper before she pulled it free. The edges were soft from use, the folds deep enough to threaten the image itself. She handled it carefully, always carefully, as if one careless movement might erase what remained.

Two girls stood side by side.

The older one—Elena—stared at the camera with a seriousness that had never quite left her. The younger one leaned slightly toward her, smiling with a brightness that seemed almost excessive in retrospect.

Lia.

Even now, the name felt fragile.

Elena traced the outline of her sister’s face with her thumb, stopping just short of touching the paper fully. She had learned not to linger too long. The past had a way of tightening its grip if you allowed it.

Lia had been eight.

Elena folded the photograph again, precisely along its old lines, and slipped it back into the satchel.

Then she looked up.

The city stretched around her like a broken thought.

There were no windows left.

Not a single one.

At first, she had assumed they had shattered, fallen, been taken by wind or time. But the edges were too clean. The frames remained, empty and hollow, like sockets without eyes. Every building stared outward in the same way—open, but blind.

It had taken her three days to understand.

The windows had not been broken.

They had been removed.

By whom, she did not know.

For what purpose, she could not begin to guess.

But the absence of them had changed something fundamental. Without glass, there was no reflection. Without reflection, the city could not see itself.

Perhaps that was why it had died.

Elena crossed what had once been an intersection, though the roads no longer held meaning. Lines had faded. Signs had collapsed. Direction had become an abstract concept, useful only to those who still believed in destinations.

She followed the map anyway.

It ended in nothing.

That was precisely why she trusted it.

She pulled it from her satchel and unfolded it with care. The paper was layered with markings—old routes, erased notes, corrections written over corrections. Someone had tried to understand the world as it changed. Someone had failed.

In the lower corner, where the ink had bled into something almost illegible, there was a single phrase written in a different hand.

WHERE THE EARTH KEEPS THE STORIES THE WORLD HAS LOST.

No coordinates.

No path.

No explanation.

Just that.

Elena stared at the words.

She had read them a hundred times.

Each time, they felt less like instruction and more like a question.

What kind of place kept lost stories?

And more importantly—

why would it keep them at all?

A sound pulled her attention back to the present.

Not a voice.

Not movement.

Something else.

The wind shifted.

The dust stirred.

And for a brief, impossible moment, Elena thought she heard—

pages.

Turning.

She turned slowly, scanning the square ahead.

That was when she saw the statue.

Or what remained of it.

It had once stood tall, perhaps a monument to someone important, though time had stripped away any indication of who that might have been. Now it lay broken, its upper half collapsed beside the pedestal, its face split cleanly down the center.

Elena approached it.

There was something carved into the base.

The letters were rough, uneven, cut by hand rather than machine. Whoever had written them had not been concerned with precision.

Only with being understood.

BOOKS OUTLIVE CITIES.

Elena read it once.

Then again.

Something about the statement unsettled her.

Not because it was wrong.

But because it felt—

intentional.

As if it had been left for someone.

As if it had been left for her.

She stepped back.

And that was when she saw it.

At first, it looked like a shadow.

A distortion in the ground where the stone had cracked and shifted. But as she moved closer, the shape resolved into something far more deliberate.

A staircase.

Descending into darkness.

Elena froze.

It had not been there before.

She was certain of that.

She had crossed places like this before—ruined squares, broken monuments, empty streets. She would have noticed something like this.

Unless—

Unless it had not existed until now.

The thought should have frightened her.

Instead, it felt—

inevitable.

She moved toward it slowly.

The air changed as she approached.

Colder at first.

Then—

warmer.

A scent rose from below, subtle but unmistakable.

Paper.

Dust.

And something else.

Tea.

Elena stopped at the edge of the opening.

Her heart was beating faster now, though she could not say why. It was not fear, exactly. Not anticipation either.

Recognition.

That was the closest word she could find.

As if she had always known this place existed.

As if she had been walking toward it long before she ever saw the map.

She reached into her coat and pulled out the photograph again.

For a moment, she considered leaving it behind.

Then she shook her head.

“No,” she murmured.

She pressed it flat against her chest, beneath the fabric, close enough to feel.

“I’m not losing you again.”

The words disappeared into the air without echo.

Then she took a breath.

And stepped forward.

Into the dark.

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