When drought exposes the steeple of a drowned church beneath Blackwater Reservoir, Mara Sayer returns home for her mother's funeral and finds the town already remembering what it survived by forgetting.
Old roads surface from the mud. Bells ring from below the waterline. Her mother's ledgers point toward a hidden history of shorekeepers, vanished children, and names the town refused to keep honestly. And when something wearing her dead brother's voice comes knocking at the house above the basin, Mara realizes Blackwater was never only a place that drowned.
It was a place that kept answering.
As the reservoir recedes and the buried town rises into view, Mara is drawn into the old church, the lower roads, and the underwell beneath them all: a system of grief, memory, record, and false mercy that has shaped Blackwater for generations. To survive, she must learn what her mother knew, what the church concealed, and why some dead are not gone so much as misfiled.
The Blackwater is a literary gothic horror novel about grief, buried truth, haunted infrastructure, and the terrible cost of keeping a town alive by lying about what lies beneath it.