THE CONFESSION TREE
The tree remembered every sin. Then they cut it down.
For three centuries, the Confession Tree stood in the Appalachian mountains-an ancient execution oak where the guilty were hanged and their sins absorbed into the wood itself. 256 souls. 256 confessions carved into the grain.
Grace Pritchard knows this because her twin brother was the last.
She watched him hang for a murder they both committed. She's spent forty-six years carrying his confession and hers-the childhood abuse she never reported, the killing she helped hide.
In 2019, the tree was felled. Its wood sold to a craftsman who carved it into forty-three beautiful objects: rocking chairs, kitchen tables, walking sticks, jewelry boxes.
He had no idea what he was distributing.
A mother rocks her infant and feels the urge to silence it forever. A family gathers for dinner and the table whispers strategies for bloodshed. A walking stick spreads violence through every hand that grips it.
The objects don't haunt. They infect. Each piece carries fragments of the sins absorbed over centuries, and they're waking in the hands of the innocent.
Grace is the only one who can collect them. She has Harrow blood-the sin-eater lineage that bound the tree in the first place. But every object she touches brands her. Dark wood-grain patterns spread across her skin like roots seeking purchase.
The tree isn't dead. It's distributed across the country, poisoning lives one carved object at a time.
And Grace is becoming the vessel it always needed-a living tree to hold what wood alone can no longer contain.
The first sin was hers. The last one will consume her.
Book One of The Darkwood Legacy: Folk horror meets object curse. For readers who crave The Ritual's ancient wrong made flesh and Hereditary's inescapable family sin.
The wood remembers. And it's not finished.
About the Author :
R.D. Parrish is an American author whose work blends atmospheric horror, Southern Gothic melancholy, and deeply human storytelling. A Marine Corps veteran and longtime resident of the American South, Parrish draws inspiration from the quiet places-flooded fields, forgotten towns, and the heavy, humid stillness where memory clings to the earth.
His debut novel, Hollow Ground, is an intimate rural-horror tale set in the fictional Mississippi Delta community of Gethsemane Parish, where relentless rain awakens an ancient, listening intelligence beneath the soil. Parrish is known for crafting horror that is slow-burning, emotional, and rooted in character-stories where fear emerges not from monsters, but from misunderstanding, grief, and the fragile ways humans try to connect.
Parrish writes with a focus on atmosphere, psychological depth, and the strange beauty of the natural world. When he isn't writing, he enjoys time with his family, exploring small-town history, and working on the next haunting story set in the world just beneath our feet.
He lives in the United States with his wife, De.