When Caleb returns to his childhood home after years away, he expects dust, silence and the ghosts of old memories. Instead, he finds a house that rearranges itself when he is not looking, corridors that stretch into places that should not exist, and a voice that sounds too much like his own. The town will not speak about what happened to his family. His father vanished without explanation. His sister's room has been left untouched, as if she might walk back in at any moment. But the deeper Caleb goes into the house, the more he realises the truth did not stay buried. It waited. The Red House does not haunt. It studies. It corrects. It builds versions of Caleb that are more complete than he ever was, versions that know what he fears, what he regrets, and what he once wished for as a child. The house remembers the moment he asked to be someone else, and it intends to finish what he began. As the walls collapse and the truth of his family's disappearance comes to light, Caleb must confront the version of himself the house created and decide whether he can hold on to who he is, or whether the house will decide for him. A quiet, suffocating psychological horror about identity, memory and the cost of being unfinished, The Red House lingers long after the final page.
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