What if the past never let go?
When a desert storm forces four friends off a Nevada highway and onto an unmarked road, they find shelter in a town that has no business existing. Greenbriar Gulch. Population uncertain. Year: 1886.
The gas lamps are burning. The saloon is open. And Emma Rose - who has been running the Drunken Coyote for five years, who keeps a rifle beside her desk and her accounts in meticulous order - is not surprised that strangers have arrived in a storm. She has been waiting, though she couldn't have said for what.
The town keeps what it takes.
Matt is a competitive base jumper obsessed with a granite traverse he has failed thirteen times - a problem in the fifth move he cannot yet see. Carmen is a soldier three days back from her fourth deployment, fluent in the language of threats and the particular silence that follows them. Sophia flew from Paris to end a three-year relationship and discovered, on a gallows platform at midnight, that she had been wrong about what she wanted. Charlie booked the trip, packed the telescope, and believed - with the complete and involuntary conviction of someone who has always slept well - that everything was going to be alright.
One night in Greenbriar Gulch will cost them everything. And give some of them something no one expected.
What persists when everything else is taken?
An Echo in Time moves between 1886 and the present with the precision of a novel that knows exactly what it is doing. Emma Rose is one of the most fully realized characters in recent literary fiction - a woman who built something real in a difficult place and refuses to let violence or loneliness or the specific weight of time unmake what she has made. The four modern characters carry their own grief and their own unfinished business into a town that will force every question they have been avoiding.
What Charlotte Rose - highway patrol investigator, careful scientist, Emma's great-grandniece - finds in the months afterward will confirm what the town already knows: some things are too real to disappear. Some people are too fully themselves to be erased.
For readers of The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue, The Midnight Library, and A Gentleman in Moscow.
A novel about chosen family, the courage to begin, and the specific quality of a life lived completely in the place you decided to build it.