Washington, D. C. 1997. Superior Court Judge Harlan Reeves is found dead at the base of his Georgetown rowhouse steps before dawn, neck broken by a shove no witness ever saw and no evidence can explain. No footprints. No suspect. No motive strong enough to survive scrutiny. The homicide investigation collapses into silence. Then the courthouse phones begin ringing. Every year on the anniversary of Harlan's death, the switchboard inside his old chambers lights up at exactly 5:30 a.m.
The line comes from nowhere. Clerks who answer hear breathing first. Then Harlan's voice:Object all you want. The sentence stands. Soon the haunting spreads through the courthouse itself. Robes sway in locked chambers. Empty chairs feel warm to the touch. Names appear scratched into telephone handsets in fresh wet lettering no one admits carving. And every person who sits in Harlan's chair eventually receives the same call.
As Harlan's widow Marian tries to uncover who killed her husband, she realizes the horrifying truth hidden beneath the ringing phones and sealed court records:Something inside the courthouse never accepted adjournment. The Verdict Still Stands is a slow-burning dread novella about judgment, institutional memory, unresolved violence, and the terrifying possibility that authority can survive death long enough to become something eternal.
Filled with fog-heavy streets, silent courtrooms, ringing phones, and endless predawn echoes, it blends supernatural legal horror with existential dread. Some rulings are overturned. Others keep calling back.
Washington, D. C. 1997. Superior Court Judge Harlan Reeves is found dead at the base of his Georgetown rowhouse steps before dawn, neck broken by a shove no witness ever saw and no evidence can explain. No footprints. No suspect. No motive strong enough to survive scrutiny. The homicide investigation collapses into silence. Then the courthouse phones begin ringing. Every year on the anniversary of Harlan's death, the switchboard inside his old chambers lights up at exactly 5:30 a.m.
The line comes from nowhere. Clerks who answer hear breathing first. Then Harlan's voice:Object all you want. The sentence stands. Soon the haunting spreads through the courthouse itself. Robes sway in locked chambers. Empty chairs feel warm to the touch. Names appear scratched into telephone handsets in fresh wet lettering no one admits carving. And every person who sits in Harlan's chair eventually receives the same call.
As Harlan's widow Marian tries to uncover who killed her husband, she realizes the horrifying truth hidden beneath the ringing phones and sealed court records:Something inside the courthouse never accepted adjournment. The Verdict Still Stands is a slow-burning dread novella about judgment, institutional memory, unresolved violence, and the terrifying possibility that authority can survive death long enough to become something eternal.
Filled with fog-heavy streets, silent courtrooms, ringing phones, and endless predawn echoes, it blends supernatural legal horror with existential dread. Some rulings are overturned. Others keep calling back.