He thought it was stress. He was wrong.
When architect Alistair Finch moves his family into a quiet, aging home, he expects a fresh start. Instead, something inside the house begins to shift. The silence grows heavy. The air turns cold. And whispers start to bleed through the walls-soft at first, then impossible to ignore.
His daughter sees it before anyone else.
She stops speaking. She draws things no child should understand. And when she finally does speak, it's not about nightmares-it's about something watching. Something learning.
As Alistair struggles to hold his family together, doctors dismiss his growing fear as a psychological break. Hallucinations. Stress. A mind unraveling under pressure. But the voice in his head knows things it shouldn't. It remembers things that aren't his.
And it's getting stronger.
What begins as a haunting quickly becomes something far more insidious-a presence that doesn't just want to be feared, but understood. Something that studies human thought, emotion, and memory... until it can wear them like a second skin.
The house was never haunted.
It was hunting.
And now, it's inside him.
Pathology of a Possession is a chilling psychological horror novel that blurs the line between madness and the supernatural, where the greatest terror isn't what's in the house-but what's already in your mind.