SOMETHING IN THE NIGHT Audiobook By Ted Lazaris cover art

SOMETHING IN THE NIGHT

Based on the 1884–1885 Servant Girl Annihilator Murders — A Documented True Case

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SOMETHING IN THE NIGHT

By: Ted Lazaris
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Editorial Review:
Something in the Night is a relentless descent into documented terror, transforming a real historical murder case into an unforgettable study of fear, compliance, and survival. Ted Lazaris delivers sustained, intimate horror where violence is personal, unavoidable, and never sensationalized, leaving no safe choices for characters or readers alike. This is prestige historical horror at its most disturbing—unflinching, intelligent, and impossible to shake once finished.

SOMETHING IN THE NIGHT
Based on the 1884–1885 Servant Girl Annihilator Murders — A Documented True Case

They were asleep.
The doors were locked.
The house was occupied.

Between 1884 and 1885, women across Austin were murdered in their beds without warning, without struggle, and without sound. Whoever entered their homes did not force doors, did not wake others, and did not flee in panic. The violence escalated. The methods changed. The killer learned.

Police records failed. Armed patrols failed. Entire neighborhoods stayed awake through the night — and still, it came.

Something in the Night reconstructs the Servant Girl Annihilator murders as they unfolded through witness statements, newspaper reports, and institutional collapse. It does not invent motives. It does not offer explanations. It documents a presence that moved freely through locked homes, adapted to pursuit, and vanished when it chose to.

This is not a story about who the killer was.
It is about what the killer did — and how easily it happened.

Because the most terrifying truth was never the bodies.

It was how quietly the night learned its way inside.

Crime Fiction Historical Fiction Crime Exciting Scary Murder
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