Dead Line is not just a haunted house story. It is a recording - one that plays itself back, again and again, until you realize you've become part of it.When the Granger family moves into a long-abandoned house deep in the pines, they want nothing more than a fresh start. But from the first night, they discover an old answering machine that should not work. No power. No line. And yet, its red light blinks. Each time they press play, voices emerge - some belonging to strangers, some to themselves, and some from people who should not exist.At first, the messages seem harmless, eerie fragments of domestic life: a woman reminding her husband to heat dinner, a child's laughter echoing through static. But quickly, the recordings turn personal. They call the Grangers by name. They describe events that haven't yet happened. And worse - the machine begins to play messages no one in the family remembers speaking... until after the events come true.The deeper they listen, the more the boundaries between memory, time, and identity begin to collapse. Shadows move where reflections should be. Footsteps descend stairs no one climbed. A little girl in a yellow dress waits in the attic, whispering truths the family is not ready to face. And through every voice, every repetition, every unfinished sentence, one figure grows stronger: the Playback Man - an echo of cruelty that feeds on repetition and rewinds reality itself.For Eleanor, Thomas, Mara, and Jamie, survival isn't just about leaving the house. It's about escaping the recording before they are erased from the present entirely. But how do you fight something that doesn't live in space, but in time itself? How do you silence a story that insists on being told?Dead Line is a relentless psychological and supernatural horror novel that asks: Are you listening, or are you already being played back?Fans of Shirley Jackson's The Haunting of Hill House, Paul Tremblay's A Head Full of Ghosts, and Stephen King's Pet Sematary will find themselves trapped in these pages - where silence isn't safety, but the loudest sound of all.