There is always one child too many. One desk that wasn't there before. One name that no one remembers calling. In Room Five, the numbers don't lie-but the silence does.
Room Five at Oakhaven Elementary was supposed to be Ainsley Greene's sanctuary. A haven for young minds. A place of chalk dust, construction paper, and the quiet joy of learning. But when a silent boy appears at the red table-a boy with no name, no record, and no voice-her world begins to tilt.
At first, it's subtle. A missing shoe. A vanished crayon drawing. Then the attendance count keeps coming up one too many. The other children seem unaware, or unwilling to admit they've noticed. And Ainsley, grieving the death of her sister and doubting her own mind, starts to spiral.
As the line between perception and reality begins to blur, Ainsley discovers a decades-old diary hidden in a locked classroom closet-its pages filled with frantic notes about a boy who doesn't speak, who watches, and who makes children disappear. A boy eerily similar to the one now sitting silently at the back of her classroom.
Every day, the boy grows more real. Every day, another child grows more distant. With no one to believe her and her own sanity cracking, Ainsley must face the terrifying question: what happens when a child is forgotten by everyone... but still remains?
Chilling, lyrical, and unsettlingly plausible, The Child from Room Five is a psychological ghost story that lingers long after the final bell rings.