Something is killing people in moments of isolation.Not places.Not patterns.Moments.In a forgotten valley, deaths begin with no wounds, no witnesses, and no explanation-just bodies found where someone was briefly, fatally alone. When the violence spreads beyond the town, two survivors realize the truth is worse than any haunting.It isn't bound to a location.It isn't bound to the past.And it doesn't need to be unseen anymore.Nathan Cross learns that visibility disrupts it-that being watched, loud, present, can delay what it wants.Imogen Reed learns something far more dangerous-that listening allows it to reach farther, faster, through attention itself.Together, they discover the only thing slowing the entity is refusal: Refusal to look away.Refusal to respond.Refusal to be cleanly alone.But delay is not victory.As the horror adapts-learning cities, crowds, public spaces, and distance-their survival becomes a balancing act that cannot last forever. One of them must remain visible. One of them must keep listening.And the thing that walks when people sleep is patient enough to wait for the smallest lapse.This is a brutal, atmospheric horror novel about isolation, attention, and the terror of being briefly unseen-where survival doesn't mean escape, only postponement.Perfect for readers who crave: Psychological horror over expositionSupernatural terror without rules or systemsSlow, inescapable dreadStories where the ending doesn't comfort-it warnsSome things don't need permission to exist.They only need you to stop looking.