
In a cramped, forgotten corner of a weather‑worn town, a crumbling house looms over a narrow alley, its boarded windows and sagging “To Let” signs hinting at long‑abandoned lives. Oleron, a solitary tenant juggling two cramped residences, discovers a cryptic notice promising a key to the derelict building and feels an inexplicable pull toward its dark interior. The narrative drifts through the gritty streets, painting vivid scenes of rain‑slicked bricks, stray cats, and the lingering presence of vanished insurance emblems, setting a tone that is both eerie and oddly intimate.
As Oleron ventures inside, the house reveals a labyrinth of dust‑laden stairways, hidden cellars, and boarded doors that seem to guard forgotten secrets. The story balances the mundane—rent worries, misplaced letters—with an undercurrent of something uncanny waiting just beyond the next threshold. Listeners are drawn into a world where the ordinary and the supernatural blur, inviting curiosity about what lies hidden in the shadows of the old square.
Language
en
Duration
~7 hours (428K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2004-11-26
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1873–1961
Best remembered for eerie, intelligent ghost stories, this English writer moved easily between horror, realism, and historical fiction. His work includes the much-admired collection Widdershins and the often-anthologized novella The Beckoning Fair One.
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