When the Night Listens
In these stories, the darkness is not an empty space. It listens, it remembers names, it waits. Villages, paths, wells, and houses seem familiar, yet something within them is shifted. Rules that once applied no longer hold. Voices come from places where nothing should speak. Whoever answers reveals more than words.
Places That Forget Nothing
The settings are not imagined constructs, but places that live because people live there. Wells, rivers, farmyards, and huts carry memories within them. What happens there does not remain without consequence. The surroundings observe, store, and pass things on. Anyone who believes they can simply leave soon realizes that some places follow.
Encounters Without Protection
The characters are young, vulnerable, and forced to make decisions they are not ready for. They face authorities, rituals, and powers that cannot be explained. Help is rarely clear. Adults know more, but do not say everything. Knowledge does not always protect; sometimes it makes everything worse.
Horror Without Distance
These stories do not rely on sudden shocks, but on closeness. The horror emerges slowly, grows out of subtle shifts, and becomes inescapable. There are no safe observers. Readers stand in the middle of events, hear the voices, see the signs, feel the pressure. What begins cannot simply be ended.
After the Final Sentence
Nothing resolves completely. Some doors remain closed, others only slightly ajar. What survives is a sense of unease and the question of what one would have done if one's own name had been called. The stories end, but something of them remains.