After retreating into a remote forest to escape grief, Maggie discovers that the wilderness is not empty but attentive-a place that rearranges itself around loss and offers comfort with a price. What begins as a quiet search for peace becomes a psychological descent into a landscape that copies voices, bends time, and tempts Maggie with replacements for what she's lost, demanding blood, confession, and surrender in return. As the forest entity known as Bugley escalates from subtle manipulation to open violence, Maggie must learn the rules of a place that feeds on unfinished endings-and decide whether survival means escape, resistance, or accepting pain without letting it be used. Haunting, intimate, and relentlessly unsettling, this novel explores grief not as something to be cured, but as something that must be owned, before it can be taken away.