At Concord University in the quiet hills of Athens, West Virginia, one dorm room has earned a reputation whispered from generation to generation. Room 316 in Sarvey Hall looks ordinary at first glance-red brick walls, beige paint, a musty closet. But when the lights flicker and the air turns cold, the stories begin. They say students who live there hear voices through the vents. They say the closet door knocks three times, always at 3:16 a.m. They say shadows don't line up with their owners. Most dismiss it as campus folklore-until the disappearances begin again. Freshman Mara Ellison thought it was just nerves when she moved into Room 316. Her journals tell another story: whispers in the night, reflections that don't match, and a creeping sense that she wasn't alone. Then she vanished without a trace. Her case joins a growing list-Dina Moser, Lena Jang, Harper Rhodes, Kayla Bishop-all names swallowed by the same room. Chief Steven Kent, a Concord alumnus turned campus officer, tries to uncover the truth. His reports, interviews, and collected evidence reveal a chilling pattern the university would rather bury: every time the room reopens, another student disappears. Kent becomes both guardian and witness, drawn deeper into the mystery with each passing semester. But the more he uncovers, the more he realizes Room 316 isn't just haunted. It's a threshold. A wound. A mouth that never stops hungering. Room 316 is the second book in the Psalms of the Tear series, following The Lady in Flesh. This dust cover edition preserves the story in full color, presenting journals, photographs, and artifacts exactly as they were found-stained, smudged, and often unsettlingly clear. Step inside, if you dare. But remember: some doors don't open. They wake up. And once you hear the knocking, it already knows your name.
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