The House That Hides
Chapter 1
Britney Mokoena
Age: 22
Occupation: Literature student and part-time library assistant
Location: Suburban Johannesburg
Appearance: Petite and elegant, often in vintage blouses and long skirts; her hair is thick, dark, and usually pinned up. Her eyes hold a permanent sheen of unshed tears.
Personality: Quietly intense, emotionally intelligent, a deeply private person with a sharp intellect. She feels everything deeply but rarely shows it. She writes poetry in secret. She is loyal to the point of self-destruction and carries grief like a second skin.
Arc: Since Kelvin’s death, she’s been unraveling. But in this new arc, she finds a locked journal of his in the attic of the old family home—his voice calling her back into memory. It triggers a quiet journey of emotional resurrection—and danger.
Kelvin Mokoena
Age (at death): 23
Occupation: Film student and amateur documentarian
Appearance: In memory, he’s tall and golden-skinned with a mischievous smile and deep, warm eyes. He wore flannel shirts and always carried his camera.
Personality: Charismatic, creative, emotionally grounded. He was the anchor to Britney’s storm. Fiercely loyal to her and always aware of the line they couldn’t cross—but sometimes did anyway.
Legacy in Story: Through his journal and unfinished film project, we learn more about Kelvin than Britney ever knew—secrets he kept even from her. Including a recording he never meant for her to find.
The House That Hides
The summer before everything changed was thick with heat and silence. In our small coastal town of Bayhearth, where every family tree had roots tangled together beneath the soil, secrets weren’t buried — they bloomed quietly in the hush between whispered prayers and polite smiles.
Britney was sixteen, and Kelvin was seventeen, just a year apart but emotionally light-years away — or so I thought then. He was her cousin. Technically. Their mothers were sisters, raised in a house where pride took precedence over warmth, and they inherited that legacy like a family heirloom no one could return.
Kelvin was taller than she remembered, broader in the shoulders, but the smile was the same—half-warm, half-mischievous. His dark eyes locked onto hers and time folded inward, collapsing the six years into a single, breathless moment.
The rain came softly that summer afternoon, dappling the pavement outside the farmhouse with translucent freckles. Britney stood by the window, arms folded over her chest, watching the droplets race each other down the pane. The countryside was soaked in a gentle melancholy, echoing the weight that had sat on her heart since she learned Kelvin would be returning.
Kelvin was already there when she arrived. Older by two years, he had the same crooked smile and warm gaze she remembered from childhood. But something had changed. He was broader now, his features sharper. Time had carved confidence into his walk, a quiet command in his voice.
"Hey, Brit," he said as she stepped out of the car, lifting her suitcase with ease. "Still the city girl, huh?"
She rolled her eyes, but her heart beat faster. "Still the country boy, she sees."
From the start, they gravitated toward each other. In a house full of cousins, aunts, and uncles, they were satellites in perfect sync—staying up late on the back porch, sharing music through split earbuds, telling stories under a blanket of stars. For Britney, those moments blurred the line between familial affection and something deeper.
Kelvin had the kind of gaze that made silence feel like music. He spoke rarely, but when he did, people leaned in — even the wind seemed to pause for him. She’d catch glimpses of him at family gatherings, watching him laugh with his friends from school, always half a world away from her. Still, Britney noticed the way his smile sometimes faltered when he met her eyes, like he recognized something dangerous there.
They grew up like branches from the same tree, bending in different directions. But that summer, something shifted. It began with glances that lingered too long, touches that buzzed with unspoken electricity. They never said anything outright, of course. The taboo was etched into their bones — cousins weren’t supposed to feel this way. But feelings, she learned, don’t care about rules.
It wasn’t one thing, but a thousand little moments. The way Kelvin laughed at her jokes like no one else did. The way his hand brushed hers when passing the popcorn. The way he looked at her sometimes—too long, too quietly.
They were cousins. It should have meant everything, and yet somehow, it hadn’t been enough to keep her heart from straying.
"There’s a room in our grandmother’s house that no one talks about. It’s not locked, but it might as well be. Dust clings to the shelves like forgotten memories, and the windows haven’t been opened in years. It used to be his room—Kelvin’s—before his parents moved to the other coast and took him with them.
But every summer since I turned thirteen, he’s come back.
And every summer, that room becomes ours.
Not in the way people would think. Nothing ever happens in that room. Not really. But it’s where he tells me things he doesn’t tell anyone. Where I laugh too loud and he looks at me too long. Where we speak in the spaces between words, and silence feels safer than truth.
The family thinks we’re just close. That it’s sweet, the way we get along. They say, “They’re like siblings,” and I nod and smile, pretending that doesn’t slice right through my ribs.
Because I know. I’ve always known.
I’m in love with my cousin."
I sighed ,
He didn’t ask why, and I didn’t offer. Because the truth would break something. Or someone. Or maybe just me.
Instead, I asked, “Do you ever wonder how we got here?”
Kelvin looked at me then. Really looked. His eyes were that deep, unreadable brown—like the last few moments of sunset before night.