Elena Price has built her life on momentum.
She does not sit. She does not rest. She keeps moving because stopping has always felt dangerous, as if stillness might erase her entirely. But when places designed for rest begin to follow her, Elena realizes the threat is not exhaustion.
It is arrival.
Benches appear where they should not. Rooms offer relief that feels too complete. Entire crowds move in perfect rhythm, walking endlessly without choosing where they are going. As motion itself becomes the trap, Elena must learn a more difficult skill than running.
She must learn how to stop without disappearing.
The Lives That Keep Moving is the third book in The Places We Almost Go, a psychological horror series about habit, identity, and the quiet terror of lives lived on autopilot.