Delpha Beauchamp lives in a downtown apartment with high ceilings, layered rugs, and the ghost of a little girl in a "Girl Power" T-shirt.
She makes her living off curated detachment-older men, small payments, soft lies. But when a man named Daniel offers more than money-control, ritual, a key to a house that smells too clean-Delpha begins to unravel. The ghost girl starts moving. Then speaking. And the rules stop feeling like choices.
Inside that house, mirrors don't just reflect. They watch.
Ashes for Pretty Things is a hypnotic, quietly ferocious novel about memory, control, and the kind of survival that doesn't look heroic-but is. With lyrical precision and haunting restraint, it slips between ghost story, psychological horror, and something stranger.