Some buildings do not just keep secrets. They keep the tenants.
Disgraced true-crime podcaster Ethan Kovac needs a cheap place to hide from his ruined career, and Unit 3F at 4511 Harker Avenue seems like the perfect escape. But the old brick building holds more than just leaking faucets and flickering fluorescent lights.
It holds an impossible secret: Unit 4.
The apartment does not appear on any modern floor plan. The door only manifests when the hallway stretches to impossible proportions in the dead of night. And behind that door waits Arthur Marten, a pale man who died nearly fifty years ago but never truly left.
Arthur does not haunt the building. He curates it. He whispers through the vents to the lonely and the curious, learning their names and inviting them into a space where time stops. When tenants go missing at Harker Avenue, they are not just killed—they are unwritten from reality, erased from the memories of their own families and the physical records of the world.
As Ethan's own digital evidence begins to corrupt and the architecture of his apartment shifts to absorb him , he realizes he isn't investigating a cold case. He is being collected.
The Man in Unit 4 is a claustrophobic, slow-burn supernatural thriller that weaponizes liminal spaces and urban isolation. Perfect for readers who check their deadbolts twice and know better than to investigate the footsteps in the hallway.