In the quiet town of Briar Hollow, children begin chanting a rhyme no adult can remember hearing. The words slip away the moment they are spoken, leaving only unease behind. The children know who the rhyme is about. They know her name. Adults do not.As the chanting spreads, something else follows. Adults start dying in horrific, inexplicable ways-alone, terrified, and certain they are not alone. When questioned, the children fall silent, as if silence itself is a rule they have learned to survive by. Teachers, parents, and authorities dismiss it as stress, imagination, or mass hysteria. Denial comes easily. Consequences do not.Social worker Evelyn Marsh begins to notice a disturbing pattern. Every adult who dies shares one thing in common: a past marked by unresolved childhood trauma-memories minimized, buried, or outright denied. As Evelyn digs deeper, she realizes the truth is far worse than superstition. The woman in the rhyme does not haunt children. She is born from adults who refuse to remember.The entity exists only when pain is dismissed and silence is enforced. Forgetting is not protection-it is an invitation.Dark, unsettling, and psychologically intense, Every Child Knows Her Name is a slow-burn horror novel that explores the cost of denial, the power of memory, and the terrifying idea that some things return only when we pretend, they never happened. This is a story where silence kills, children see what adults refuse to face, and forgetting is the most dangerous act of all.