the girl who wasn't alone

A Psychological Horror Story About Dissociative Identity Disorder, Love, and a Murder Born From Within
It was a freezing winter night in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Snow clung to the sidewalks like shattered glass under the streetlights, and the old brick houses stood in suffocating silence, unaware that inside one of them, a mind was quietly collapsing. Anna Morris, twenty-four, sat alone in her living room, the blue glow of the television flickering across her pale face. The show playing meant nothing to her. Her thoughts drifted in and out like fog through a hallway — fragmented memories, unfinished emotions, moments that felt borrowed from someone else. Around ten o’clock, the doorbell rang. Three firm knocks. Measured. Deliberate. Anna hesitated before opening the door. Two police officers stood under the porch light, their expressions stiff, unreadable. “Miss Anna Morris?” Her throat tightened. “Yes…?” “You are under arrest for the murder of Daniel Harper.” The name struck her like cold water. Daniel Harper — her former coworker at a downtown Boston art gallery — had been found brutally stabbed in his apartment earlier that evening. “I was home,” Anna whispered. “All night.” But truth has never been something that bends easily to denial.
The Gaps in Her Mind
By morning, the news had spread across local media outlets. Cambridge Woman Arrested in Brutal Gallery Murder Ethan Collins, Anna’s boyfriend, stared at the headline in disbelief. He knew Anna — or at least he thought he did. She was gentle. Thoughtful. Almost painfully sensitive. At the police station, Detective Laura Bennett delivered the facts with clinical precision. The murder had occurred around ten p.m. Security footage showed someone entering Daniel’s apartment building around that time. The figure’s height and build matched Anna’s. Ethan’s pulse quickened. He had texted Anna around ten that night. No response. Nearly an hour of silence — until sometime close to eleven. But Anna had insisted she’d been on the couch the entire time. The inconsistency lingered. Then came the psychiatric evaluation — and the word that changed everything: Dissociative Identity Disorder. A mind fractured to survive trauma.
She Wasn’t Just Anna
Treatment Instead of Prison
Read the Full Therapy Session
Gain access to all episodes, uncensored therapist notes, and classified conclusions.
Become VIP




