In the isolated town of Graywillow, there stands an abandoned structure no one claims to remember building-yet no one dares to approach. Known only as the Ashwood House, it is a place where grief lingers, memories bleed, and unfinished emotions refuse to stay buried.
When Evan Hale, a quiet outsider burdened by his own unresolved past, arrives in Graywillow, the house begins to awaken. People start dreaming memories that are not their own. Loss spreads through the town like a shared illness, blurring the boundary between personal pain and collective suffering.
Guided by Liora, a woman determined to protect what remains of the town, and Marek, the last keeper of its forgotten history, Evan discovers a horrifying truth: the Ashwood House feeds on suppressed memory-and Evan is uniquely capable of resisting it.
But resistance has a cost.
As Evan becomes a living boundary between the house and the people it consumes, his own memories begin to erode. Faces lose their weight. Emotions flatten. Identity fractures. To save Graywillow, Evan must decide whether a town's peace is worth the slow disappearance of the self.
When the house adapts-and tries to turn Evan into its replacement-the final choice is no longer about survival, but about what it means to remain human when usefulness demands erasure.
This is not a story about a haunted house.
It is a story about grief that was never witnessed, memories that refuse to stay silent, and the terrifying