The urban legend of the Seven Gates of Hell is just a story. But for Maya Joshi, it's about to become a data point she can't erase.
Maya's memory is a fortress. Diagnosed with hyperthymesia, she remembers every moment of her life with perfect, unshakable clarity-a gift that has made her a fierce believer in facts and a staunch debunker of the folklore that haunts her hometown of Hellam, Pennsylvania. To her, the spooky tale of seven cursed gates leading to Hell is nothing more than narrative dust.
But when a glitchy, terrifying video appears on a local forum-a video that seems to defy all logical explanation-Maya's curiosity overrides her skepticism. With her friends-the ambitious filmmaker Chloe, the folklore-obsessed Liam, and the rational Ben-she sets out to find the source of the video and debunk the legend once and for all.
The woods of Hellam, however, are not haunted by devils. They are a wound in time, a place where reality frays and the rules of causality break down. Each "gate" they find is not a physical door, but a temporal anomaly, an echo of a past trauma that offers them a terrible choice: an escape into a perfect, alternate timeline built from their deepest desires, at the cost of their own existence. As her friends are not killed, but seduced and erased from reality one by one, Maya realizes the horrifying truth.
Her perfect memory doesn't make her immune to the curse; it makes her the perfect fuel for it. Only she can see the seams of the world being rewritten around her, a slow, terrifying erasure of the people she loves. She is led to the heart of the anomaly-a vast, impossible library of lost lives-where she is offered a promotion: to use her flawless memory to become the new anchor for the collapsing system, the eternal warden of a prison made of grief, or to be erased herself.
A masterful blend of psychological horror, the uncanny dread of Annihilation, and the meta-narrative chills of House of Leaves, The Hellam Loop is a terrifying story that asks what is more horrifying: the monster in the dark, or the beautiful, perfect lie you'd sacrifice your soul to believe?