Echos at Lake Crescent

Leesfragment
€3,49

Every choice creates an echo. Every echo creates a life.

Echoes at Lake Crescent asks what happens when four of those lives — running parallel across time, choice, and loss — finally collide.

Some things cannot be explained. They can only be felt — in the marrow, in the dark, in the space between one heartbeat and the next.

In the quantum fabric of every life you have lived, an echo is running. It wears your face. It carries your wounds. And it has been moving, through every choice you ever made, toward a reckoning you cannot see coming.

Ava Woodbridge has been haunted by psychic dreams since she was nine years old. She has learned to live with them — until the women in her dreams begin to wear her face, and the questions they leave behind are ones she can no longer ignore. Hanna Stone, a former NYPD detective, has built her life on pattern and logic. Until a missing woman surfaces who mirrors her exactly, and logic offers nothing. Kate Sinclair has followed impossible threads her entire career. Now, every one of them leads to the same shore. And Mandy Cromwell, who wanted only to disappear into freedom, has vanished into something far darker instead. Born on the same day of the same year, Ava, Hanna, Kate, and Mandy have never met.

They are about to become inseparable.

When Mandy disappears at Lake Crescent, the world does not hold. Reality bends. Time stutters. Lives bleed into one another like ink in water. What begins as a search becomes something older — a convergence written into the fabric of things long before any of them drew breath.

In the shadow of a man who has hunted at least one of them for years, four women will discover that the distance between their lives was never as wide as they believed — and that recognising the woman you almost were may be the only thing that saves you.

In 1957, a Princeton physicist named Hugh Everett III proposed something that got him laughed out of the scientific establishment: every time a quantum event occurs, the universe doesn't choose one outcome. It branches. Both outcomes happen. Both worlds continue, running parallel, neither aware of the other. Echoes at Lake Crescent asks a simple, devastating question: what if he was right? If every choice you have ever made created a branch — every yes, every no, every road not taken — then somewhere, a version of you is still walking it. She is just as real as you are. She has your face, your blood, your mother's hands. But she made different choices. She became someone else entirely.

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