HELENA

Helena, a young woman adrift in a sea of familial strife, finds solace only in her boyfriend, Echo. But when her parents' incessant fighting reaches a horrifying peak, a sinister 'solution' emerges, whispering promises of peace. Is Helena a victim, a savior, or something far more terrifying? Dive into a psychological thriller where love, faith, and violence intertwine, leading to a chilling discovery of true identity and a chilling mission.

HELENA

Helena, a young woman adrift in a sea of familial strife, finds solace only in her boyfriend, Echo. But when her parents' incessant fighting reaches a horrifying peak, a sinister 'solution' emerges, whispering promises of peace. Is Helena a victim, a savior, or something far more terrifying? Dive into a psychological thriller where love, faith, and violence intertwine, leading to a chilling discovery of true identity and a chilling mission.

The lingering scent of cigarette smoke still clung to the air in Helena's room, a faint protest against the constant, jarring cacophony from downstairs. Her parents, a broken record of bitter recriminations, were at it again. "Where have you been?!" her mother's voice shrieked, raw with a pain Helena had grown too accustomed to. Her father, predictably, offered only silence, a stubborn wall against the onslaught.

Helena lay on her bed, trying to drown out the noise, trying to find the quiet solace of sleep that had eluded her since the nightmare. The dream, vivid and terrifying, still replayed in her mind: a faceless man, a vase, the sickening thud of impact. But the real nightmare was waking up to this – the familiar, soul-crushing arguments that ripped through the fragile peace of their home. Even Echo, usually her unwavering comfort, couldn't completely block out the grating sounds.

"What's the matter, babe?" Echo murmured beside her, his voice a gentle balm. But Helena didn't answer, her gaze fixed on the ceiling, her mind already drifting to a different kind of solution, a path to a silence far more profound than any she had ever known.