The Quiet That Walks, Season One: The First Echo cover art

The Quiet That Walks, Season One: The First Echo

Preview
Try Standard free
Select 1 audiobook a month from our entire collection.
Listen to your selected audiobooks as long as you're a member.
Auto-renews at $8.99/mo after 30 days. Cancel anytime.

The Quiet That Walks, Season One: The First Echo

By: Stephanie Marcum
Narrated by: Shannon Webber
Try Standard free

Auto-renews at $8.99/mo after 30 days. Cancel anytime.

Buy Now for $20.83

Buy Now for $20.83

About this listen

When the cracked harbor bell of Greyhaven rings without wind, the town wakes to something old and listening beneath the tide.

The Quiet That Walks: The First Echo begins the Greyhaven saga—a slow-burn supernatural thriller about resonance, memory, and the cost of hearing what should remain unsaid. Archivist Nora Callow captures a recording of the bell’s impossible tone; sound engineer Mara Vale studies its frequency; and choir director June Harlow feels the vibration beneath her own voice. Together they uncover a pattern that hums in the air like breath between words—a sound that remembers them.

Objects respond. Walls breathe. Footsteps echo where no one walks. The Quiet doesn’t haunt—it learns. It listens through the living, shaping its voice from their grief and guilt. As Greyhaven spirals into shared dread, faith turns into acoustics and salvation becomes an experiment in silence. What the town believed was absence proves to be hunger.

Written with lyrical precision and cinematic stillness, The First Echo opens the cycle with reverent terror. Each minute pulses with the tension between human intimacy and otherworldly awareness. The question isn’t what the Quiet wants—it’s who taught it how to listen.

©2025 Stephanie Marcum (P)2025 Stephanie Marcum
No reviews yet
In the spirit of reconciliation, Audible acknowledges the Traditional Custodians of country throughout Australia and their connections to land, sea and community. We pay our respect to their elders past and present and extend that respect to all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples today.