The whisper starts at 3:17 a.m.-soft, wet, and coming from the other side of the locked bedroom door.Claire's husband is gone. Her pills are on the floor. And a woman is speaking her name in the dark.Since the accident that fractured her skull and stole pieces of her memory, Claire has lived by a simple rule: trust Ethan. He locks the bedroom door at night. He organizes her meds. He reminds her what's real when the headaches and blank spaces make everything feel wrong.But the voice in the hallway doesn't sound like a hallucination-and it knows things no stranger should.Each night, the whispering returns. Always at the door. Always just out of reach. Ethan insists no one is there, blaming her sleep meds and lingering trauma. Her doctors call it post-concussive confusion. But Claire starts to find physical traces-mud on the stairs, indentations in the hallway rug, the faint scent of perfume she doesn't wear.Someone is coming to their room while she sleeps. Someone who waits, patiently, on the other side of the lock.As Claire secretly reduces her medication and starts keeping her own notes, her missing memories begin to claw their way back: flashes of an argument, a woman's silhouette at the foot of the bed, the sensation of falling. The more she uncovers, the more it seems the real danger isn't outside the door-it's already in the house.When the whispering woman finally speaks clearly, what she reveals will force Claire to choose: between the life Ethan built for her and the terrifying truth she once tried to escape.The bedroom door can't stay closed forever. And some ghosts are very much alive.