Dead House
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Audible Standard 30-day free trial
Buy for $19.07
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Narrated by:
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Tara Lynne
Riley Cross needs quiet more than she needs answers. A cheap old rental on Weaver Street seems like a fresh start, creaking floors and all. Then she finds the sealed pantry. Behind it is not storage, but a corridor that should not exist, a house that stretches on and on, changing its rules as you learn them.
Rooms echo with half-remembered nights. Photographs do not always show what you saw. A forgotten diary hints at others who walked these halls and never learned how to leave. The deeper Riley goes, the more the walls learn her name, and the more the house feeds on the one thing she cannot outrun.
Set in a small town that pretends not to notice, Dead House is a slow-burn descent into guilt, memory, and the places grief will build when no one is watching. Doors open both ways here. Some invite you home. Some ask a question you cannot unhear.
Riley only needs to choose which ones to trust.
©2025 Gabriella Creighon (P)2026 Gabriella CreightonPeople who viewed this also viewed...
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Riley Cross isn’t chasing ghosts. She’s chasing quiet. That’s what makes this story hit harder. The house on Weaver Street isn’t loud or theatrical. It’s subtle. It bends space. It rewrites memory. It watches. And the longer Riley walks its impossible corridors, the more you feel the walls closing in around you too.
The sealed pantry. The corridor that shouldn’t exist. The photographs that betray what you remember seeing. This isn’t just haunted-house horror—it’s grief turned architectural. Regret with floorboards.
The narration carries the slow-burn tension beautifully. Calm when it needs to be, restrained when things unravel. No overacting. No melodrama. Just a steady descent into something deeply wrong.
What lingers isn’t fear. It’s the question underneath it all—what are we building inside ourselves when we refuse to face what hurts?
If you appreciate psychological horror that respects your intelligence and lets the dread simmer instead of scream, this one’s worth your time.
Doors open both ways. Listen carefully.
Haunting, Intelligent, and Unsettling
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