Mag-log inShe thought the worst thing that could happen to her had already happened. Her husband. His assistant. Eight years of marriage quietly falling apart on a Tuesday afternoon while she was at work. She was wrong. Evelyn Harper bought the house on Harrow Hill to disappear. Remote. Abandoned. Cheap enough to make her laugh out loud at two in the morning. She should have asked why it was so cheap. From the very first night, something in the walls knew her name. Evelyn. Low and unhurried. The way someone speaks your name when they have been waiting a very long time to say it out loud finally. Then came the touch. Fingertips, cool and deliberate, ghosting along the inside of my thigh. I shifted, half asleep, my legs parting before I could think better of it. The touch climbed higher, slow and patient, tracing the seam of me, circling the ache that bloomed hot and sudden between my legs. I was embarrassingly wet, instantly wet ,hips rocking into nothing, chasing the sensation. Then she knew that; Something ancient lived in that house. Something that had chosen her specifically. Something that had been waiting for her bloodline for over a century. And the lonely man who follows her into its darkness may be the only thing standing between Evelyn and losing herself forever. Some houses don't just haunt you They own you.
view moreI told myself it was just a house.
The moving truck disappeared down the gravel road, swallowed by the trees crowding Harrow Hill, and I stood there with my arms crossed against the chill, repeating that lie until it almost felt true. Brick and mortar. Old wood and older windows. Nothing that could want anything from me. The marriage ended on a Tuesday. Not with a fight. Not with screaming or throwing plates or any of the dramatic endings you see in movies. It ended with me coming home early from a work trip, walking into my own bedroom, and finding my husband of eight years in our bed with a woman I recognized. His assistant. Twenty six years old, pretty in an annoying way, wearing the expression of someone who had not expected to be caught. Daniel didn't even try to lie. He sat up, ran a hand through his hair, and said I was going to tell you.Like that was supposed to help. Like the timing was the problem. I stood in the doorway of my own bedroom for what felt like a very long time. Then I walked back out, closed the door quietly behind me, and sat on the kitchen floor until it got dark. I didn't cry that night. The crying came later, in waves, at inconvenient moments. In the grocery store. In the shower. Once, memorably, in the middle of a client meeting when someone used the word partnership. The divorce was quick and civil. Daniel felt guilty enough to be generous. I felt hollow enough not to fight about anything. By the time the papers were signed I had a settlement, a storage unit full of furniture I didn't want, and an apartment that felt like a waiting room. Neutral walls. Other people's history. A place to exist in while I figured out what came next. I hated it. Every corner of that city had a version of us in it. The restaurant where he proposed. The park where we walked on Sunday mornings. The dry cleaner where the woman behind the counter still asked after him by name. I couldn't buy coffee without feeling like a ghost haunting my own life. I needed to go somewhere that had never heard of us. Somewhere that held none of his fingerprints. Somewhere so far removed from the life I'd built that I could almost pretend I was a different person entirely. A normal apartment wouldn't do it. Another city might have helped but still felt too familiar, too full of the same kind of streets and coffee shops and ordinary life that Daniel and I had shared. I needed something different. Something that matched the feeling inside me old and neglected and full of rooms nobody had bothered with in years. The listing found me on a Tuesday night exactly two weeks after the divorce was finalized. I was on the kitchen floor of my empty apartment, cheap red wine beside me, scrolling through foreclosure sites the way some people scroll through old photos. Looking for something I couldn't quite name. Victorian Gothic Mansion. Harrow Hill. Motivated seller. The price made me laugh out loud. Actually laugh, the first real laugh in weeks. Something about that absurd number felt like the universe making a joke I was finally in on. A falling down mansion on a hill that nobody wanted. Perfect. I called the realtor the next morning before my coffee finished brewing. By Friday it was mine. No one in the small town at the bottom of the hill would look at me directly. The woman at the gas station handed me my change without meeting my eyes. An old man outside the hardware store watched my car leave with something I couldn't quite read on his face. Not unfriendly exactly. More like sorry. I told myself small towns were like that with strangers and turned the radio up louder. The house emerged from the tree line slowly, like it had been waiting to be seen on its own terms. Victorian Gothic, tall and narrow, with a roofline that seemed to reach for something unseen. Ivy strangled the facade in thick possessive ropes. The gardens were overgrown, stone paths vanishing into tangled hedges, a fountain cracked down the middle and long dry. It felt less like a home and more like something holding its breath. I shook that thought away, got out of the car, and walked up the steps. The key turned too easily in the lock. Inside, the air was cool and still and smelled of dust and something faintly sweet underneath, like dried flowers left too long in a vase. Afternoon light slanted through grimy windows in long pale strips. The foyer stretched upward into shadow, the grand staircase curving away into darkness above me. My footsteps sounded too loud. The house itself made no sound at all. That was the first thing that felt wrong. I spent the rest of the day hauling boxes, refusing help, needing the burn in my muscles and something real to focus on. By the time dusk bled purple across the sky the essentials were in place. I chose the master bedroom because it overlooked the ruined gardens. Four poster bed, dark wood paneling, a fireplace cold and gaping. I made the bed up with crisp white sheets I'd brought from the city. A small rebellion against all that dark wood and faded burgundy. I showered in the cracked marble bathroom, stood under the hot water longer than necessary, tried to rinse away the last traces of my old life. When I stepped out and wiped the steam from the mirror I stared at my reflection for a long moment. Thirty two years old. Eyes too tired. Mouth set in a line I barely recognized. I looked like a woman who had been chosen second. I looked like someone trying very hard to believe she deserved better. Naked, I walked back into the bedroom. No one here to see. No one here at all. The sheets were cool against my skin as I slipped beneath them. Moonlight sliced across the bed like a blade. Exhaustion pulled me under fast. The dream didn't feel like a dream. It started with a voice. Low and unhurried, speaking my name from somewhere close in the dark. Not threatening. Almost tender. The way someone says your name when they have been waiting a long time to finally say it out loud. Evelyn. Then came the touch. Fingertips, cool and deliberate, ghosting along the inside of my thigh. I shifted, half asleep, my legs parting before I could think better of it. The touch climbed higher, slow and patient, tracing the seam of me, circling the ache that bloomed hot and sudden between my legs. I was wet embarrassingly, instantly wet hips rocking into nothing, chasing the sensation. A body without weight settled over me, pinning me gently to the mattress. Warm breath brushed the nape of my neck. Something thick and impossibly hot nudged between my thighs from behind, sliding through my own slickness before pressing forward, stretching me open inch by burning inch. "Evelyn," the voice whispered again, rough velvet against my ear. "You opened the door, sweet girl. Now I get to come inside." Pleasure hit me like a shockwave sharp, overwhelming. I came hard before it was even fully seated, back arching, a broken cry tearing from my throat as wave after wave crashed through me. It felt too real. Too much. When I surfaced, gasping, the room was empty. Moonlight still cut across the tangled sheets. My thighs trembled. Between them I was soaked my own wetness and something warmer, thicker, faintly scented with cedar and metal. Bruises were already forming on my hips in the shape of large fingerprints. I laughed then, a thin shaky sound. Just a dream. Stress. Isolation. Months without touch. My body playing cruel tricks. I rolled onto my stomach, trying to steady my breathing. The mattress dipped behind me. A phantom hand stroked slowly down my spine, possessive and certain. Somewhere deep in the walls or maybe inside my own skull ,something laughed. Low and hungry. I didn't sleep again that night. By the time gray dawn crept through the curtains I was exhausted, aching, every nerve still humming. I dragged myself from the bed on unsteady legs and crossed to the antique mirror. Written in the condensation, in elegant looping script that was not mine: Welcome home, Evelyn.Dana arrived at seven sharp with a bottle of good red wine and the energy of someone trying very hard not to look like she was trying. She wore a simple black dress that somehow made everything about her feel intentional. Evelyn liked her immediately. She was almost exactly Marcus’s height, with deep, rich skin and natural hair pulled back in a clean, elegant twist. Her eyes locked on with quiet intensity. She handed Evelyn the wine at the door and said, without hesitation, “Your book sounds incredible. Marcus won’t stop talking about it. Like, actually won’t shut up.” “Complete exaggeration,” Marcus called from the kitchen, his voice carrying that familiar defensive edge. Dana leaned in slightly, lowering her voice with a small smirk. “He cried. Real tears.” “I did not cry,” Marcus shouted louder this time, clearly listening. Dana’s eyes sparkled as she looked at Evelyn. “He absolutely cried. Multiple times.” Evelyn grinned, already feeling the warmth settle in her chest. "Yea
Six months later Evelyn was running late. She snatched her coat, bag, and keys—Liam had left them on the counter again like a quiet dare. Three weeks into cohabitation and he’d stopped reminding her. Just adapted. “You’re going to be late,” he called from the kitchen. “I know.” “You said that yesterday.” “And I was late yesterday too,” she shot back, appearing in the doorway. He stood at the stove, left burner blazing too hot like always. He didn’t turn around. “You look nice,” he said. “You can’t even see me.” “Don’t need to. You get this sharp, electric thing when you’re rushing. It’s sexy.” She smiled, helpless. “I’ll be back by seven.” “I’ll have food ready.” “Don’t use the left burner.” “Already using it.” She left before the argument could spark. --- Fiona didn’t waste time. The editor’s office smelled like old paper and fresh ambition. She leaned back in her chair, eyes sharp. “Margaret’s chapter made me cry on the tube. In front of strangers
The flat was on the third floor of a converted Victorian building in a quiet part of the city.Nothing like Harrow Hill.That had been deliberate.No grand staircase. No high ceilings. No ivy strangling the facade or gardens pressing close like conspirators. Just three rooms and a bathroom and windows that looked out over an ordinary street where ordinary things happened at ordinary hours.Evelyn had chosen it specifically for its ordinariness.She loved it completely.They arrived back at seven in the evening.The drive had taken longer than expected. Traffic on the motorway. A detour around roadworks. The particular extended quality of a journey that neither person is in a hurry to end because what waits at the destination is good and they both know it and want to arrive slowly enough to feel it properly.Liam carried the bags up.Evelyn unlocked the door.The flat was exactly as they had left it. Small and warm and smelling of the coffee they had made that morning before driving up
The cafe at the bottom of the hill was small and warm and smelled of bacon and fresh coffee and the particular comfort of somewhere that had never heard of Harrow Hill and didn't care. They took a table by the window. Marcus ordered enough food for two people without apology. Serena ordered tea and a slice of toast and ate half of it. Liam ordered eggs and kept refilling Evelyn's coffee without being asked. Evelyn ordered the full breakfast. She hadn't eaten properly in days. The house pressing and the line on her arm darkening and the particular way anxiety kills appetite had kept her running on tea and determination for most of the past week. Now she was hungry. Really hungry. She ate everything on her plate and considered ordering more. Nobody talked about the house. They talked about ordinary things instead. Marcus's drive down. Whether the cafe's coffee was better than what they had been making at the house. Whether Serena had ever been to this town before her visits to






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