Overview
In 1836, Savannah, a physician, arrives in response to a desperate plea from a close acquaintance and is drawn into a growing disturbance centered around a strange lullaby emerging from within a historic church. What begins as a medical curiosity quickly becomes something far more unstable: a pattern of sound that appears to move through the city itself, carried by buildings, river currents, and human sleep.
As the melody spreads, the physician discovers that the phenomenon is not a haunting in the traditional sense, but a structured force embedded within the environment. The lullaby behaves like a living system-one that responds to observation, adapts to disruption, and reorganizes reality around its continuity. Death, disappearance, and memory become part of its preservation process, as the city begins to synchronize with its influence subtly.
Attempts to resist or interrupt the phenomenon only deepen its complexity. The physician's efforts reveal that the melody is not merely heard but integrated: it records those who listen and incorporates their actions into its evolving structure. Whitaker House, the central site of the disturbance, ultimately collapses inward as the system adapts, dispersing into the river beneath Savannah rather than being destroyed.
In the aftermath, the lullaby is no longer openly audible. Instead, it persists beneath silence-within water, sleep, and memory-waiting for resonance rather than attention. The city remains intact, but altered, as if tuned to a frequency just below perception.
The story closes on an unresolved note: the system is not defeated, only reconfigured. And in its quiet state, it continues to exist as a latent presence, capable of reactivation whenever it is once again heard.
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Details
- ISBN-13: 9798258090782
- ISBN-10: 9798258090782
- Publisher: Independently Published
- Publish Date: April 2026
- Dimensions: 9 x 6 x 0.44 inches
- Shipping Weight: 0.58 pounds
- Page Count: 190
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