The Diary That Loved Me / Chapter 1: The Notebook That Spoke Back
The Diary That Loved Me

The Diary That Loved Me

Author: Kristen Chambers


Chapter 1: The Notebook That Spoke Back

Next →

I stumbled on the diary by pure accident. The kind of thing that happens when you’re bored and poking through the cluttered shelves of an old New England antique shop, the bell jingling behind you. The place smelled like dusty paperbacks and lemon Pledge, with a Red Sox pennant drooping over the counter and a cash register that looked straight out of a black-and-white movie. This was my ritual after work—a little treasure hunt to unwind after another day wrangling seventh graders and their spelling quizzes.

That day, a battered brown notebook caught my eye. Its leather cover was scuffed soft, the corners worn to velvet. The guy behind the counter, silver hair and wire-rimmed glasses, claimed it was from the 1920s. I rolled my eyes—every old thing here supposedly came from the Roaring Twenties—but for twenty bucks, I decided it was coming home with me.

The notebook felt solid in my hands. The pages had yellowed to a warm cream, edges crisp but not crumbling. No coffee stains, no torn corners—just the slow, even aging of something treasured. Someone had cared about this book.

Inside, on the very first page, three big words curved across the top in looping script that looked just like my grandma’s Christmas cards:

Diary.

Right below, faded almost to sepia, was a grumpy little line: "Today the teacher told us all to start writing diaries. Who in their right mind writes a diary? So boring."

I laughed out loud, nearly startling the shop cat off the counter. Some things never change—kids are still kids, even a hundred years later.

The diary was full of quick snapshots—little slices of some boy’s life, his penmanship cocky and a bit dramatic. The kind they drilled into you back when neatness actually counted.

"1925, May 5th

Argued with Dad, got grounded, it sucks."

"May 6th morning, ate at Joe’s Diner, delicious." There was even a doodle—a stack of pancakes, I think.

"1925, May 7th, sunny.

Today I skipped class to play cards with Tommy and the guys. Who would've thought the teacher would actually chase me home and really lay into me. So annoying!"

I pictured some kid in knickers and suspenders sprinting down a leafy street, chased by a red-faced teacher. But when I flipped to the next page, the fun stopped—the rest of the diary was just empty, yellowed pages waiting for words that never came.

So this kid quit after three days. Figures. Typical teenager.

He’s got an attention span even shorter than mine—I once bought a yoga mat I used twice and then turned it into a cat bed.

It made me smile. On a whim, I grabbed my ballpoint pen and scrawled a line right under his last entry. The blue ink looked almost neon next to the faded brown.

"May 8th, 2024. Worked too long, exhausted."

I didn’t think much of it. Closed the diary, set it on my nightstand with the pile of ungraded tests, and passed out.

The next morning, coffee in hand, I cracked open the diary again. My breath caught, heart hammering against my ribs. Right below my writing, three bold words stared up at me, inked in that same old brown:

"Who are you!"

I blinked hard, nearly sloshing coffee onto my jeans. Was this some kind of prank? Yesterday, that page was blank. The new words looked aged, not fresh. My fingers trembled as I held the diary up to the light, searching for hidden tricks or invisible ink.

Every ghost story my students had ever told in October buzzed through my mind. Goosebumps rose along my arms. Still, my teacher’s curiosity won out. I gripped my pen and wrote, my hand shaking:

"Then who are you? Are you human or... a ghost?"

Before the ink dried, new words bled through, the brown lines appearing as if by magic:

"You finally replied. I waited for you for ten whole days. How can you write in my diary out of thin air!"

Ten days? His diary? My mind scrambled, flipping back and forth. The handwriting matched—same flourishes, same tilt. Was this really the owner? Was he writing from 1925?

He said he waited ten days, but only one day had passed here. Did time flow differently? Was a single day here ten days there?

None of it made sense. My thoughts spun, logic failing me, but excitement fizzed in my veins. My heart pounded like I’d sprinted up three flights of stairs.

Me, Rachel Quinn, doomed to a life of recycled lesson plans and summer vacation essays, had stumbled into something impossible—a conversation with someone from a hundred years ago.

I took a deep breath, nerves jangling, and wrote back:

"My name is Rachel Quinn. I’m from a hundred years in the future."

I stared at the old diary, heart pounding, as the words shimmered on the page. Was I really talking to a ghost... or something else entirely?

Next →

You may also like

He Loved Her, Not Me
He Loved Her, Not Me
4.9
He loved her—just not me. On the night of our fourth anniversary, I watched Carter Langley slip further away, his heart claimed by another while our marriage became nothing but a headline. I was supposed to smile, play the perfect wife, and pretend not to notice the pitying looks or the silence that suffocated our home. But pain demands a witness. When betrayal cuts deeper than bone, how far will a woman go to make her absence felt? Carter’s indifference is legendary—until my final act leaves him with a haunting question and a secret he can never bury. If love is dead, what’s left for the living to regret?
Expelled for Loving My Teacher
Expelled for Loving My Teacher
4.6
When my secret love letter is discovered, my mother is forced to read every word aloud in front of the whole class—exposing not just my shame, but my forbidden obsession with my own homeroom teacher. My family's poverty, my sacrifices, and my hopeless longing are laid bare for everyone to judge. Now, as I stand humiliated and broken, I must choose: run from my feelings, or confess the truth and walk away from the only future I've ever wanted.
Rejected by the Genius, Chosen at the Reunion
Rejected by the Genius, Chosen at the Reunion
4.6
Three years of secret love, endless humiliation—Lila fought her way into the top class just to be invisible to Caleb, who only ever saw the perfect Aubrey. But when betrayal and public shame shatter her last hope, Lila tears up her diary and vows to stop being their doormat. Years later, at the reunion, Caleb returns with her broken diary, desperate for the love he once ignored—but will Lila finally choose herself over him?
I Died Begging—Now I Refuse to Love
I Died Begging—Now I Refuse to Love
4.9
I jumped to prove I mattered—but even my death didn’t make them love me. When I’m sent back to the day I was adopted, I see every lie and manipulation for what it is. My parents and brother treat me like a burden; my so-called sister sets traps with a smile. I won’t beg for scraps of affection this time—I’ll carve my own place, even if it means being alone. But freedom comes at a price: every move I make, Ava is there, twisting the story, turning my family further against me. Each memory is a warning: loving them almost destroyed me. Now, I’ll risk everything to love myself instead. Can I break the cycle before they break me again—or is it too late to escape their web?
He Loved Me, But Never Said It
He Loved Me, But Never Said It
4.5
For seven years, Natalie loved Caleb—a brilliant, deaf scholarship boy who always kept her at arm’s length, no matter how hard she tried to bridge the silence. Humiliated at reunions, left out of weddings, and ignored by the man she thought was her forever, Natalie discovers the ring he never gave her and the secret he always hid: he was never sure he deserved her love. Now, standing on the edge of heartbreak, Natalie must decide if love can survive when the words are never spoken.
When Love Becomes a Cage
When Love Becomes a Cage
4.8
Dylan’s journey is one of quiet endurance and painful self-discovery as he finally walks away from a long-term relationship defined by control and emotional manipulation. Battling guilt, public judgment, and old wounds, he slowly reclaims his independence, learning to set boundaries and honor his own needs. The story is a raw exploration of heartbreak, resilience, and the difficult road to self-acceptance.
I Loved Him in Every Lifetime
I Loved Him in Every Lifetime
4.8
A single act of mercy binds Lila, an ordinary fisher girl, to the world of Maple Heights’ most powerful family. Haunted by fragments of another life—and a love that left her in the shadows—she finds herself thrust into a battle of inheritance, secrets, and whispered betrayals. As the new heir ascends and old wounds resurface, Lila faces an impossible choice: reach for the love that destroyed her once before, or settle for safety in a world that never wanted her to belong. When survival means giving up her heart, will Lila finally break the cycle—or be forced to relive her heartbreak again?
He Loved My Sacrifice, Not Me
He Loved My Sacrifice, Not Me
4.7
Natalie gave up everything—even her Olympic dreams—to protect Caleb, only to discover years later that he never loved her, only repaid a debt. Betrayed by the boy she trusted most and humiliated by his cruel friends, she finally reads the journal that shatters her last hope. Now, with his first love back in town, Natalie must choose: cling to the ghost of his gratitude, or walk away and reclaim her pride before she loses herself forever.
The Love That Wasn't Mine
The Love That Wasn't Mine
4.8
Lila, a young dance instructor, becomes entangled in the shadow of her boyfriend Ethan’s bittersweet past when she discovers his ex-wife’s Instagram, triggering a spiral of doubt and longing. As secrets and heartbreak surface, Lila must confront the reality that love’s most intense moments are not always hers to claim. In the end, she chooses self-worth and hope, while Ethan reflects on what was lost—and what might still be possible.
He Left Me, But I Paid the Price
He Left Me, But I Paid the Price
4.9
Some endings are silent, but the ache never is. I thought Eli and I were forever—until a single betrayal tore us apart, leaving me clutching memories and a cheap county fair kite. Years later, I’m called back to his side as his emergency contact, thrown into a whirlwind of old wounds and unfinished business. He’s surrounded by new admirers, but the past still claws at both of us. I want closure, maybe even forgiveness, but Eli only offers distance. My friends say I’m a fool for loving him, but they never saw the sacrifices he made, the debts unpaid. Now, as I watch him slip away for the last time, I’m haunted by one question: Was I the one holding him back—or was he always running from something he could never name? If love is letting go, why does it hurt so much to set him free?
He Hates Me, But I Stay
He Hates Me, But I Stay
4.9
Natalie has spent three years trying to save Tyler, a brilliant artist trapped in darkness, but his coldness is breaking her spirit. When the charming Mia enters Tyler’s life, Natalie faces a gut-wrenching choice: let him go and risk losing herself, or fight for a boy who might never want her in his corner. One message could end everything—or start something neither of them expects.
Scarred by Love
Scarred by Love
5.0
After sacrificing everything for the woman he adores, Derek is left broken when his girlfriend Natalie turns his devotion into humiliation. As betrayal and shame pile up, Derek must decide if loving her is worth losing himself—or if it's finally time to walk away. His heart is on the line, and the next move could shatter it for good.