He waited eleven weeks to get into the grief group.
By the time Daniel Croft finally receives a spot at the Aldgate Center, he has already started noticing things that don't quite fit.
Former participants remember how the program made them feel - calmer, lighter, able to continue - but struggle to remember anything specific about what actually happened inside the room.
No names.
No conversations.
No clear memories of the sessions themselves.
At first, Daniel tells himself there are reasonable explanations.
Grief distorts memory.
Therapy changes people in ways they cannot always describe.
Systems built around healing do not always leave clean records behind.
But the longer he waits, the more the pattern repeats.
And once he enters the room himself, Daniel begins to wonder whether the Aldgate Center is helping people process grief-
-or teaching them how to live beside absence without fully remembering what it cost to get there.
Quietly unsettling, emotionally grounded, and sharply observant, is a restrained psychological procedural about grief, memory, systems, and the spaces that shape human behavior.
Perfect for readers of slow-burn literary suspense, institutional mystery, and emotionally intelligent psychological fiction.