The Girl the River Chose
PROLOGUE
(15 Years Ago – WoodHollow, California)
They say the forest laughed the night Amy Dawson was born.
Not rustled. Not echoed. Laughed.
WoodHollow had always been strange, but that night? Even the stars held their breath.
Amy was different from the start.
Strong-willed. Wild. The kind of child who chewed her braids off instead of tying them. She chased boys through thorn-choked woods, raced broken bikes through cemetery dirt, and climbed rusted rooftops just to scream at the moon.
She was fearless.
But fearlessness doesn’t make you untouchable.
It makes you visible.
To the wrong things.
She grew up poor, near the edge of the town, in a house that creaked when it rained and wept when it didn’t. The legends were old there—passed through whispers, etched in bones, stitched into lullabies mothers only sang during storms.
One summer evening—long after curfew and deep into the kind of dusk where the shadows thicken—Amy was dared by the boys she called friends.
“Touch the black stream,” they dared her.
“No one’s ever done it. Not after dark.”
Amy has never been one to turn down a challenge. So she accepted.
She didn’t flinch.
She went alone.
The forest swallowed her footsteps. The deeper she walked, the quieter the world became—no birds, no crickets, no breath. Just the slow, pulsing silence of something waiting.
When she reached the stream, it didn’t ripple.
It pulsed.
Black as oil. Reeking of rot. Thick with dead leaves and memory.
She turned back triumphantly, ready to mock the boys about her victory.
But then…a voice called her name. Not loudly. Not sweetly. Just a chilling tone.
“Amy... Amy... Amy...”
Whispers rising like mist off the water.
She turned to run, but that’s when she saw it.
A hand.
Bloated. White. Reaching from the river’s center.
She screamed. But the forest moved faster.
Something cold and ancient wrapped around her ankle and dragged her under.
The boys heard her scream, but didn’t dare go in.
By the time adults came, it was too late to enter the forest.
They waited for sunrise before a search party was sent out.
And when they finally found her, she was soaked, shivering, half-conscious and oddly calm.
They said she was lucky. Some called her a miracle child.
But Amy remembered drowning.
She remembered the river’s hunger.
The corpses below, their eyes still open.
The voice that slithered through her bones.
“We have waited long enough. You are ours now.”
The entity didn’t just possess her.
It became her.
Amy Dawson walked out of Hollow Forest that morning…but the girl who entered never came back.
She returned changed.
A vessel.
A carrier for something that should have stayed buried under centuries of blood and black water.
No one saw the dark vein blooming at the base of her spine.
No one noticed the river dripping from her eyes.
No one knew that everyone who touched her...
Everyone who cared for her...
Everyone who carried even a piece of her...
Would drown too.
Because Amy Dawson died that night in the stream.
And something else returned in her place.
A demon older than language, resurrected into a child’s body.
And it had a purpose.
Pain.
This is a story where every ghost has a name.
Every organ a purpose.
Every forest a memory.





















