At four years old, Abigail Morrison pedaled her red tricycle in slow loops between her house and the one next door. That’s where she met the man who had just died. He wasn’t frightening—just kind, like a storybook grandfather. They played grocery store beneath the lilac bush, trading pretend coins for invisible apples, while the world inside her house cracked and shouted. His widow, soft-spoken and sad, would call Abigail in to wash her hands before offering warm oatmeal cookies. “Clean hands, clear heart,” she’d say, then sit at the piano and listen while I play for you, child. The music drifted through the walls, drowning out the yelling from Abigail’s kitchen. It became a lullaby, a shield, a kind of magic. In that narrow space between two houses—one filled with music and memory, the other with silence and storm—Abigail learned to listen to the dead. Not because she wanted to, but because the living had nothing kind to say. Long before Connects, before the truth unraveled in Hollow Man, she was just a little girl on a trike, finding comfort in ghosts who showed her more love than her own parents ever could
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Hollow Man: The Sequel to Connects The Intuitive Wife Who Escaped Darkness Twelve years after the publication of Connects, Hollow Man arrives as its haunting sequel, delving deep into the shadowed corners of Abigail’s life. The second book in the series unfolds the chilling revelation that Abigail, known to her friends as Abbey, has been married to a serial killer—her husband, whose criminally insane mind has orchestrated the deaths of twenty-nine people with disturbing indifference. Abbey is no stranger to his cruel and bizarre torture treatments herself. He often tries out some of his methods on her first. It's domestic violence in the most sinister way. Yet Hollow Man is not a tale that revels in the gruesome specifics of his murders; rather, it is a psychological chronicle of Abbey’s awakening and her unique gift. From her earliest memories at four years old, Abbey has been an intuitive medium, able to sense the subtle presences that most cannot. Her journey in Hollow Man is marked by the whispers and guidance of the spirits—victims with voices silenced in life, but urgent in death. Through spectral encounters and intuitive flashes, these lost souls urge Abbey toward truth, pulling her deeper into the mystery of her husband’s monstrous double life. What sets Hollow Man apart is its refusal to sensationalize violence. Instead, the novel traces Abbey’s emotional odyssey out of darkness, guided by her sixth sense and courageous resolve. It is the story of the wife who got away, not just physically, but spiritually and psychologically—escaping the clutches of evil through her own inner strength and the spectral support of those gone before her. Hollow Man is a testament to intuition, resilience, and the uncanny ways in which truth finds its voice, even in the bleakest of circumstances.
Step into the shadows of Gardner, where dreams whisper secrets and spirits refuse to rest. In Connects, Abigail Morrison begins to unravel the mystery of two long-dead souls haunting her country home. But the deeper she listens, the more she realizes the truth isn’t buried—it’s sleeping beside her. In Hollow Man, the veil lifts. Abigail’s gift becomes her curse as the spirits reveal the monster she married. Daniel isn’t just hiding secrets. He’s hiding bodies. Two books. One intuitive. Twenty-nine spirits. One hollow man. And a dream home that was never meant to be safe.