Some houses settle. Some rot. Some remember.
When ___ moves into an old house weighed down by decades of silence, the first signs seem harmless enough-cold spots in empty rooms, faint sounds behind the walls, and the uneasy feeling of being watched when no one is there. But the house is not empty. It is holding onto something.
As strange details begin to surface, the past starts bleeding into the present. Scratches appear where plaster should be smooth. Voices whisper through pipes that no longer work. Rooms seem to change when no one is looking. And hidden inside the walls is the truth about what happened there-a truth someone tried very hard to bury.
The deeper ___ digs, the more the house pushes back. Memories that do not belong to them begin to surface. Every hallway feels narrower. Every night becomes a test of what is real and what is waiting in the dark. Because the house is not haunted by a ghost.
It is haunted by what it remembers.
And some memories were never meant to be uncovered.