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Denny Vasquez has always felt too much. In crowds, the emotions of strangers pour into him like radio static - relentless, crushing, impossible to filter. So when he lands a job as a control room operator at the Salt Lake County Jail, surrounded by structure and rules and walls he can move with his fingertips, it feels less like work and more like sanctuary.
He is exactly what the building has been waiting for.
The control room runs ten degrees cold. Maintenance has been out forty times. There is nothing wrong with the air handling. There never has been.
What there is - buried beneath a capped landfill, beneath the ash of a long-burned asylum, beneath a hundred and twenty-five years of pooled suffering and severed lives - is something very old and very patient that has learned, one small courtesy at a time, to feed. Every time a deputy radios in a door request, every time the operator gives them what they need, the same two words come back across the channel: automatic, warm, unthinking.
Thanks, Control.
Drop by drop, the water begins to cloud.
Control is a psychological horror novella set in a real Salt Lake Valley jail, told by a former corrections officer who spent four years listening to those two words echo off concrete walls - and asking what might happen if something had been listening longer. It is a story about an empath in the worst possible room, about the violence of accumulated suffering, about the people who keep showing up for a building that is slowly eating them, and about the weapons that a century of institutional darkness cannot prepare for: light, connection, and one old man's unbroken voice.
For fans of Paul Tremblay, Stephen Graham Jones, and the quiet horror that lives in the places we build to contain our worst.
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