The House at the End of the Road
  • Reads 5
  • Votes 1
  • Parts 1
  • Time 5m
  • Reads 5
  • Votes 1
  • Parts 1
  • Time 5m
Ongoing, First published Oct 16, 2023
Mature
A young girl has lost her memory. God knows how. She discorvers a house at the end of a street she doesnt know of. Only to find out that she is held captive and costs lost her life.
All Rights Reserved
Sign up to add The House at the End of the Road to your library and receive updates
or
Content Guidelines
You may also like
You may also like
Slide 1 of 9
Behind the Screen cover
She'll do anything for him  cover
To Survive cover
Suddenly A Teen Titans Fanfic cover
Who Are You? 🎭(LCY x LJ) cover
Babysitter [COMPLETE] cover
Mission 481 (Jack Johnson) (completed) cover
Help Me! cover
Asylum cover

Behind the Screen

18 parts Complete

The book follows a protagonist whose mind begins to unravel as they are plagued by eerie occurrences that blur the line between reality and delusion. It begins with subtle shifts-a feeling of being watched, strange reflections, whispers at the edges of perception-but as the story unfolds, these sensations grow more intense and impossible to ignore. The protagonist starts questioning their own sanity, struggling to differentiate between what's real and what's in their head. Is someone-or something-watching them, or are they simply losing their grip on reality? As they spiral deeper into paranoia, the boundaries of their own identity begin to fracture, and they realize they may not be the only one in control of their mind. With each passing day, the tension grows, and the truth becomes harder to discern. The story keeps readers on edge, with unreliable narration and distorted imagery that makes them question everything. As the protagonist's mental state deteriorates, the lines between the observer and the observed blur, and the final revelation leaves the reader wondering if they're trapped in this madness alongside the character. A chilling psychological thriller, this book explores the nature of reality, self-awareness, and the terrifying idea that what you think you know may be nothing more than a reflection of something far darker.