Some stories are never meant to be finished.
At a secluded writers' retreat in the Scottish Highlands, privacy is the promise and isolation is the price. Eight acclaimed authors arrive with unfinished manuscripts, each seeking silence, distance, and creative rebirth.
What they find instead is consequence.
When one writer is found dead in a manner identical to the ending of her unpublished novel, the death is dismissed as tragic coincidence. But as more writers die, each murder meticulously mirroring scenes from their private drafts, a chilling pattern emerges: someone is reading what was never meant to be seen and enforcing what was never meant to be real.
Cut off by storms and failing communication, the retreat becomes a closed system of suspicion, guilt, and moral reckoning. As fear spreads, the writers are forced to confront a disturbing question: What responsibility does an author bear for the violence they imagine?
At the center of it all is Daniel Rowe, a crime novelist haunted by a past act of silence he has never confessed. As his own manuscript begins to change without his consent, Daniel realizes the truth may not save anyone, but refusing to speak may cost everything.
Dead Drafts is a psychological thriller that dismantles the illusion of safe fiction. It is not a whodunit, but a reckoning with complicity, authorship, and the danger of turning human harm into art without consequence.
Dark, unsettling, and intellectually sharp, this novel is for readers who want more than twists. It asks what happens when stories stop protecting their creators and start demanding accountability.