Jamie Mitchell is being watched.
Confined to her home under house arrest, fitted with an ankle monitor that tracks her every movement, and even her heartbeat, Jamie tells herself the figure she glimpses at the edge of her vision is nothing more than stress, guilt, and memory playing tricks on her mind.
A man in a long dark coat.
A wide-brimmed hat.
Always watching.
Never moving closer.
Until he does.
As the days of suffocating isolation pass, Jamie's carefully buried past begins to surface. Nightmares bleed into waking life. Childhood memories resurface, of a time she vanished into the woods at four years old and returned unharmed, inexplicably healed, and forever changed. Of a mother who whispered, "He's coming", long before Jamie ever knew what fear was, of a father whose lies, addictions, and violence left scars that never truly healed.
Doctors insist it's trauma.
Police insist it's paranoia.
Her psychiatrist insists the mind can invent guardians, and monsters.
But when the storm of the century descends, and the knocking begins, Jamie realizes the truth may be far more terrifying than madness.
Because some stalkers don't want to hurt you.
They want to claim you.
And some are not bound by this world at all.
Stalker is a haunting psychological thriller that blurs the line between memory and reality, faith and obsession, protection and possession-leading to a chilling conclusion that lingers long after the final page.
You are never as alone as you think.