PattycakesFirework
The Murder House has always been loud with ghosts.
With screams, with looping memories, with grief that never learned how to rest.
But this story is not about the ones who haunt.
It is about the one who stays.
Lynn is already dead when the story begins - a ghost who does not loop, does not rage, does not demand. She does not haunt the house so much as hold it, steadying the walls and the souls within them simply by bearing witness.
The others know of her long before they know her story.
Addie sees her first.
Tate struggles against her silence.
Violet begins to understand.
And the house itself learns how to breathe again.
This is a quiet companion to Murder House - not a retelling, not a romance, not a redemption arc.
It is a meditation on grief, presence, and what it means to choose stillness in a place built on pain.
Some ghosts scream to be remembered.
Some stay so others don't have to.
All rights go to Ryan Murphy for the characters in Murder House and the characters of AHS
Lynn is the only character I lay claim to