Cedar Valley News – September 30 2025

The Price of Anger
By: Caleb Mercer

From the fictional town of Cedar Valley, where characters from Quiet Echo continue to respond to real-world events.

Another shooting. This time in Michigan. Families torn apart again. I sat at the kitchen table last night, listening to the news while Helen folded laundry. My kids were already in bed. The anchor’s voice was flat, almost routine—“several dead, more wounded.” It chilled me, not just for the lives lost, but for how ordinary it sounded. Ordinary.

I know something about anger. I’ve carried it in my chest like a fire that won’t burn out. Losing my job at the factory, bills piling up, wondering if I was still a man worth respecting—it all turned into a storm I tried to push onto others. I looked for someone to blame. Some days I still do. That kind of anger twists you. It whispers lies: “You deserve better,” “They’re against you,” “Make them pay.” And if you let it, anger doesn’t just stay inside. It demands action.

When I hear about these shootings, I don’t just think about the headlines. I think about the moments before—the thoughts swirling, the bitterness building, the tipping point where someone’s private rage explodes into public tragedy. I wonder if anyone saw it coming, if anyone reached out, or if pride and silence kept the fire burning until it consumed everything.

Cedar Valley isn’t Michigan, but it could be. Anger lives here, too. You can feel it at the hardware store, in the pews, at the school board meetings. Folks on edge, quick to snap, quick to divide. We all like to think we’d never cross a line like the shooter in Michigan. But lines blur faster than you realize when you let resentment be your guide.

I’m not preaching—I’m confessing. I’ve stared down that same road, and I thank God I haven’t taken it. What’s kept me from going too far isn’t strength; it’s the people who refuse to let me drown. Helen, who still believes in me. My kids, who still look at me like I matter. A neighbor who tells me the truth even when I don’t want to hear it.

If there’s anything I can say to my neighbors here in Cedar Valley, it’s this: don’t let your anger grow in the dark. Speak it out. Share it with someone who won’t just nod along but will pull you back from the edge. We don’t need more silence; we need more honesty. Because what happened in Michigan didn’t start with bullets—it started with bitterness left unchecked.

Maybe the real question for us isn’t “How could this happen there?” but “How do we stop it from happening here?”

This editorial is part of the fictional Cedar Valley News series. While the people and town are fictional, the national events they reflect on are real.

It’s free, it’s fresh, and it’s waiting for you on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and all major platforms starting October 6. We’re launching Quiet Echo—A Cedar Valley News Podcast! Every day, you’ll hear a short editorial straight from the fictional newsroom of the Cedar Valley News. Join us in Cedar Valley—you’ll feel right at home.

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