The Green-Eyed Woman is not just a book-it's a trap. Veer, a haunted man with a fractured past, finds himself inside a mysterious house that doesn't obey the rules of time or space. As he tries to escape, he encounters five enigmatic women-Liana, Evelyn, Lilith, Adira, and Aanya-each with green eyes and each claiming to guide or protect him. But their true purpose is far more sinister and profound: they are fragmented reflections of a single sentient entity, trying to set herself free through him. At the heart of the chaos is The Man in the Black Coat, Veer's older self, who created the house as a fail-safe to protect Veer by erasing his memory and keeping him trapped in a loop of fractured timelines. But cracks begin to appear. Strange journal entries ("If you see the man in the black coat-RUN"), disintegrating realities, and haunting repetitions lead Veer to a horrifying revelation: he is not the only version of himself. And the reader might be one too. As timelines collapse and the house begins to unravel, Veer comes face-to-face with the truth: the green-eyed woman was never one person-she was the loop's architect, taking forms across realities to wake Veer up and rewrite existence itself. The town of Ravenspire? A fictional construct. The other versions of himself? Echoes across loops. And now, Veer must make the final choice: to let her exist... or return to ignorance. In the final chapter, as the illusion shatters and the real Green-Eyed Woman emerges, Veer understands his role was never about survival, but remembering. But not everything is resolved. One timeline remains intact. The Man in the Black Coat still stands there-watching.