The five serial unalive had nowhere else to go.
Not in the way the world understood it—not as fugitives ducking alleyways or changing license plates in midnight parking lots. They weren’t running from the law. Most of them had never even been suspected. They moved through society like ghosts with clean hands, polite smiles, and résumés that listed “community volunteer” under hobbies. They held jobs. Paid taxes. Attended PTA meetings. One of them taught Sunday school.
But inside, they were hollowed out by silence. Not the peaceful kind. The kind that gnaws. The kind that builds a cathedral of absence in your chest and fills it with echoes you can’t unhear.
They came to Kym not because he was like them—though in the darkest corners of their minds, they believed he might be—but because he was the only one who wouldn’t flinch when they finally spoke.
The first arrived in winter, a man with frost in his beard and crimson liquid under his nails that wouldn’t wash off, no matter how hard he scrubbed. He’d been a mortician. Said the gone started talking to him after his wife left. Not in voices—never voices—but in the way their eyelids didn’t close all the way, or how their fingers curled slightly when he touched them, as if reaching for something he couldn’t give. He’d begun keeping them longer than necessary. Then he’d begun choosing who got to pass away. He sat in Kym’s parlor for three days without speaking. On the fourth morning, he walked into the sea and didn’t come back.
The second was a woman. Sharp-eyed, sharp-tongued, a librarian who knew where every book belonged except herself. She’d strangled three men with piano wire—men who’d abused in the youth choir she directed. She didn’t regret it. She regretted that no one had thanked her. She stayed in the guest room upstairs for two weeks. Wrote letters to the families of the gone boys, sealed them, then burned them in the fireplace. One morning, she left a single volume on Kym’s desk: The Anatomy of Silence. Inside, on the flyleaf, she’d written: “You listen like a grave. That’s why we come.”
The third never gave his name. Just showed up one evening with a suitcase full of newspaper clippings and a .38 revolver wrapped in a child’s blanket. He’d been a soldier. Came home to find his daughter gone—taken by a man who’d been acquitted twice before. The man was found in his garage with a projectile through his eye and a photo of the girl taped to his chest. The soldier didn’t run. He waited. But no one came for him. No one ever does, when the victim has no voice. He asked Kym one question: “Do you think she knows I tried?” Kym didn’t answer. The man left at dawn. The blaster remained on the porch.
The fourth was young—barely twenty-five—with hands too soft for what they’d done. He’d unalived his stepfather after years of watching him hurt his mother. Then he’d unalived the uncle who covered it up. Then the judge who dismissed the restraining order. He didn’t see himself as a bad guy. He saw himself as a correction. He wept in Kym’s kitchen for two nights straight, clutching a stuffed rabbit his mother had given him when he was six. On the third day, Kym drove him to the state line and handed him a new ID, a bus ticket, and a single rule: “Don’t become the thing you unalived.” The boy nodded. He hasn’t been seen since.
The fifth was Kym himself.
He hadn’t realized it until they were all gone—until the house was quiet again, until the journal filled with names that weren’t his victims but his kin in ruin. He hadn’t come to this cliff to hide. He’d come because, like them, he had nowhere else to go. The world had no place for men who remembered too much, who felt too deeply, who turned grief into grammar and violence into verse.
He wasn’t their leader. He wasn’t their savior.
He was their echo.
And now, sitting across from the woman who had walked in soaked and shaking, who had written her truth in his journal and slept in his silence, he understood something deeper still.
They hadn’t come to him because he was a bad guy.
They’d come because he was the only one who knew how to mourn.
Outside, the wind shifted. The sea sighed. The house held its breath.
Kym closed the journal gently and placed it on the table between them.
“You don’t have to carry it alone,” he said.
She looked at him, her eyes clear, her hands steady.
“I know,” she said. “That’s why I’m still here.”
And in that moment, the fifth bad guy—the last of them—let go.