Story cover for The Greenhouse on Wren Street by chxrryxadele
The Greenhouse on Wren Street
  • WpView
    Reads 27
  • WpVote
    Votes 0
  • WpPart
    Parts 2
  • WpHistory
    Time <5 mins
  • WpView
    Reads 27
  • WpVote
    Votes 0
  • WpPart
    Parts 2
  • WpHistory
    Time <5 mins
Ongoing, First published Apr 14
Matilda Jane Wells never meant to return to Wren Street.
But when the loss of her beloved grandmother pulls her back to the cottage where she once felt safest, Matilda finds herself standing in the ruins of a messy childhood she barely remembers-and the roots of a self she's not sure she ever truly knew. Between the hum of the kettle, overgrown greenhouses, and the quiet ache of memory, she begins a summer of healing, rediscovery, and writing the songs her heart has long buried.
Then there's him-
The quiet stranger with kind eyes, too many sweaters, and a voice like honey. He's not supposed to stay. But somehow, neither of them can seem to leave.
In a place touched by grief, Matilda might finally learn what it means to stay, to grow, and maybe-to love again.
All Rights Reserved
Sign up to add The Greenhouse on Wren Street to your library and receive updates
or
Content Guidelines
You may also like
You may also like
Slide 1 of 10
Even the Stars Forgot Her Name. cover
so we can make it back cover
Forgotten cover
What Lies Forgotten | Jess's Return cover
Second Chances cover
Jester's Curse cover
Until You [Harry Styles] cover
CASSIA cover
Stoneybridge Farm cover
Shot in the dark cover

Even the Stars Forgot Her Name.

28 parts Complete

Even the Stars Forgot Her Name She wasn't trying to disappear. It just started happening-one forgotten moment at a time. At seventeen, Haley feels like the world has quietly moved on without her. She goes to school, she comes home, she scrolls through life like it's happening to someone else. Her parents are always too busy, her old friends have new lives, and no one seems to notice how quiet she's become-or how much it hurts. She used to dream big. Now she just dreams of being seen. Then one night, in a haze of insomnia and scrolling, Haley finds an anonymous online forum where people share the things they're too scared to say out loud. And something about their pain-the raw honesty, the way it mirrors her own-pulls her in. As the nights stretch on and the stars stay silent, Haley starts to connect with others who feel like ghosts in their own lives. In their stories, she finds flickers of light. Maybe she isn't invisible. Maybe she isn't broken beyond repair. Maybe being lost doesn't mean you'll never be found. This is a quiet, aching story about loneliness, unseen pain, and the fight to remember who you are-especially when the world forgets.