Nocturne in the Garden of Silence
Chapter 1
The blackout shades pressed against every window on Maple Avenue, swallowing any stray beams from the gaslamps. Even the stars seemed muted, as if the war’s shadow had reached up and smudged them out. It was in this hush that Clara Hayworth tiptoed through her dim corridor, careful not to wake four-year-old Lottie slumbering in the nursery at the back of their semi-detached.

Clara paused by Lottie’s door. Beyond it, a gentle amber glow pulsed in time with the slow crash of ocean waves. The little device on her daughter’s side table—round and pale, its soft light soothing—had become indispensable since Tom left for France. She’d discovered its sound machine settings by accident, fiddling with the app on her phone in those restless midnight hours when Lottie’s nightmares came thick as artillery fire. Since then, the Hatch Rest had grown into more than just an object: it was guardian and routine-keeper, offering structure in days defined by uncertainty.
Tonight, however, Clara’s unease had little to do with sleep. She slipped inside and crouched beside Lottie’s bed, adjusting the time-to-rise alert—a ritual she’d started to give her daughter some stability amid ration lines and bomb drills. Her fingers brushed the bottom panel of the device. To her surprise, it shifted slightly.
Curious, Clara tugged gently. A folded paper slipped out and fluttered onto the rug. She stared at it—a single sheet, edges singed as if torn from a larger whole. In neat block letters:
“THE LIGHT AT DAWN REVEALS WHAT NIGHT TRIES TO HIDE.”
Her heart thudded; she glanced at Lottie (still breathing slow and deep), then at the silent house around her.
The next morning brought no answers. The men were away—Tom among them—and most neighbors exchanged only tired smiles over hedges now. Still, Clara couldn’t let go of the note. Was it meant for her? For another family? Or simply a child’s game?
At dusk, as anti-aircraft sirens wailed in the distance, Clara found herself speaking quietly with Mrs. Fenwick next door while their children played hopscotch along the curb. She mentioned nothing about the letter but watched for any sign of recognition when she described how well Lottie slept with her nightlight-sound machine—how the gentle birdsong helped during noisy raids.
Mrs. Fenwick smiled thinly but said nothing unusual.
That evening after supper, Clara sat with Lottie as she readied her for bed. “Mummy,” Lottie whispered as Clara dimmed the night light via her phone app (a small rebellion against blackout regulations), “sometimes I hear tapping from my wall.”
Clara’s skin prickled. She set the device to emit soft rainfall—masking any stray noises—and kissed her daughter goodnight.
Later still, when silence blanketed Maple Avenue once more, Clara returned to the nursery. This time she unscrewed the back panel completely. Nestled inside was a tiny mechanism unlike anything she’d seen—wires and copper wound tightly together around a small crystal vial.
She pocketed it just as footsteps sounded outside—the measured tread of boots on cobblestones.
In that suspended moment, Clara understood: someone had hidden something inside what appeared to be an ordinary child’s sleep aid, counting on wartime chaos and domestic routine to keep it safe.
She hurried downstairs and pressed herself to the window’s edge. A tall man lingered beneath Mrs. Fenwick’s hedge before continuing down the lane.
The next day Clara waited until Lottie napped—her daughter lulled into dreams by wind-in-trees sounds from her device—and slipped across to Mrs. Fenwick’s house under pretense of borrowing sugar.
Over weak tea in a drawing room half-lit by afternoon sun (and careful not to mention what she’d found), Clara asked about Tom’s last letter and how odd things sometimes happened at night.
Mrs. Fenwick lowered her voice: “Strange times breed strange secrets.”
Clara left soon after—her mind racing with possibilities.
That night she returned to Lottie’s room as soon as darkness fell. In one hand she held the folded letter; in the other, her phone open to adjust settings on the Hatch Rest—this time shifting its glow to pale blue instead of amber and setting it to emit no sound at all.
As midnight approached, Clara watched from a chair by Lottie’s bed while shadows gathered in corners.
A faint click came from within the device; then a series of rapid taps against glass—a code? She wrote down each tap (short or long), matching them against dots and dashes until she made out another message:
“SAFEHOUSE UNDER IVY TRELLIS.”
Clara exhaled slowly. The forbidden knowledge wasn’t just about technology smuggled into ordinary homes—it was about resistance, about messages passed under cover of bedtime routines and suburban peace.
In days that followed, Clara kept careful watch over both neighbors and strangers alike—and every night, she made sure Lottie’s Hatch Rest glowed softly beside her daughter’s bed: equal parts comfort and warning signal in an age where even sleep was suspect.
And when Tom finally came home on leave weeks later—haunted but alive—Clara greeted him with an embrace strong enough for all those who would never return…and whispered that sometimes even innocence could hide danger if you listened closely enough through walls of silence.
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Hatch Rest Baby Sound Machine, Night Light & Time-to-Rise
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