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OverviewSpanning nearly two centuries, from 1778 to 1963, this story unfolds inside a grand Virginia resort where elegance, routine, and history conceal something far more deliberate. Guests arrive seeking rest, recovery, or quiet escape, but one room quietly determines who leaves and who does not. In October 1963, Evelyn Ashby arrives at the hotel weakened by illness and unsettled by a growing sense that her life no longer fully belongs to her. While settling into her stay, she discovers a hidden notebook left behind by a woman who occupied the same space nearly a decade earlier. The notebook is not a diary of feelings or superstition. It is a careful record of patterns, names, and events tied to a single room. As Evelyn reads, the past begins to unfold in precise, unsettling detail. Across generations, individuals from vastly different walks of life have entered the same room carrying private compromises. A courier who altered truth in wartime. An officer who accepted honor that was not his. A financier who buried harm beneath legal language. A diplomat who delayed speaking when it mattered most. Each believed their actions could be contained, explained, or postponed. The room does not judge loudly or suddenly. Instead, it removes distance. It forces each guest to confront the human cost of what they have justified, delayed, or hidden. The consequences are not theatrical. They are intimate, inescapable, and final. As Evelyn continues reading, the notebook reveals something even more troubling. The woman who wrote it was not merely documenting the past. She was warning the future. Her final entry suggests that the room does not act randomly. It waits for those who excuse themselves, who believe they can step outside consequence, even briefly. Meanwhile, Evelyn's own life begins to mirror the patterns she studies. Drawn toward a connection that offers understanding, recognition, and the possibility of becoming someone new, she finds herself approaching the same quiet line that others crossed before her. The story builds toward a single question that echoes across every era: can a person recognize their own compromise in time to change course, or does the moment pass before it is fully understood? In a place defined by beauty, order, and tradition, the greatest danger is not what the hotel hides, but what its guests choose not to face Full Product DetailsAuthor: Scott Hamele , Scott HamelePublisher: Scott Hamele Imprint: Scott Hamele Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 3.00cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.894kg ISBN: 9798349279546Pages: 546 Publication Date: 06 April 2026 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsAuthor InformationSCOTT HAMELE was born and raised in Kansas and has called the Kansas City area home since 1991. Married for more than thirty years, he treasures time with his two daughters and two grandchildren. Scott studied engineering at the University of Kansas, where he began writing articles and newsletters for university clubs. He was first published in an ASME engineering publication in 1992 and went on to author dozens of published articles in the commercial construction sector. In the 2000s, Hamele turned his research instincts toward historical fiction, developing more than a dozen story concepts, many of which have matured into his recent publishing journey. His work spans a wide range of genres, including historical fiction, near-future thrillers, historical mysteries, narrative biographies, and feel-good short stories. A prolific storyteller, Scott has more than three dozen works to his credit. https: //linktree.com/scotthamele SCOTT HAMELE was born and raised in Kansas and has called the Kansas City area home since 1991. Married for more than thirty years, he treasures time with his two daughters and two grandchildren. Scott studied engineering at the University of Kansas, where he began writing articles and newsletters for university clubs. He was first published in an ASME engineering publication in 1992 and went on to author dozens of published articles in the commercial construction sector. In the 2000s, Hamele turned his research instincts toward historical fiction, developing more than a dozen story concepts, many of which have matured into his recent publishing journey. His work spans a wide range of genres, including historical fiction, near-future thrillers, historical mysteries, narrative biographies, and feel-good short stories. A prolific storyteller, Scott has more than three dozen works to his credit. https: //linktree.com/scotthamele Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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