BOOK 2: THE LOST

BOOK 2: THE LOST

  • WpView
    Reads 23
  • WpVote
    Votes 0
  • WpPart
    Parts 6
WpMetadataReadOngoing16m
WpMetadataNoticeLast published Wed, Jan 14, 2026
Everglade High was never meant to break. At first, the glitches were small-printers acting strange, hallways shifting, notebooks writing back. Students laughed them off. Teachers ignored them. Reality bent just enough to seem harmless. Then people began to disappear. Not dead. Not gone. Just... lost. Book 2: The Lost dives deeper into horror. The System's fixes fail, and the cost becomes clear. Students, teachers, and memories begin slipping out of reality. Hallways remember things wrong. Printers document absences that were never announced. Classrooms wait for people who never arrive. Lyla and her friends search for those who have been lost-Kayoyin, Miss Puffer, Amy Wawa-while learning that being erased doesn't mean being gone. It means being misplaced in a broken system that no longer understands what it controls. This book is darker, quieter, and more terrifying, focusing on fear, absence, and the struggle to stay present in a world that keeps forgetting. I am sorry that I am leaving you on a cliff hanger
All Rights Reserved
#702
now
WpChevronRight
Join the largest storytelling communityGet personalized story recommendations, save your favourites to your library, and comment and vote to grow your community.
Illustration

You may also like

  • 𝐁𝐚𝐫𝐳𝐚𝐤𝐡𝐩𝐮𝐫
  • "အမုန်းပင်"
  • ﮼Teacher's pet || +18
  • Favorite Fixation (Yandere boys x Reader)
  •  අහවර [ Ongoing fiction  ]
  • ငါ့မှာ အမတတစ်ပိုင်းစွမ်းရည်ရှိနေတယ်[BL]
  • The Prototype's Real Mother
  • Scream- Psycho killer, qu'est-ce que c'est
  • ROOM 8 - STRAY KIDS x READER FF
  • Echoes of Playtime Past (Poppy Playtime) Poppy Playtime AU

She came looking for a story. The story was looking for her. In the mountains of Pakistan lies Barzakhpur - a village that phases in and out of existence. A place where the fog lingers too long and the dead don't leave. Taniksha Shah rents an old haveli for creative solitude. Instead, she finds Aslan Ijaz - silent, severe, and far too watchful for a mere caretaker. He tells her not to leave after dark. He doesn't tell her he's chained himself to a bed every night to keep something inside him from reaching her. Because the entity wearing his bones has started to hate the way he looks at her. And in Barzakhpur, love is a weakness the dead do not forgive.

More details
WpActionLinkContent Guidelines