Book 6
Hoppy and Day Six in the Abandoned Village (Book 6 of 10)
Day Six isn't about entering the village. It's about realizing you can't leave it cleanly-even if your feet walk out.
The trio goes deeper into procedure: tighter watch rotations, controlled routes, silent signals. They're better now-more careful. And that's what makes Day Six cruel: the village makes their improvement feel useless, as if it has been waiting for them to become predictable.
The tension is surgical: a small sign in the wrong place, a sound repeating with perfect timing, and a discovery that suggests they're being recorded, documented, or tested for someone's purpose.
Why buy this book: because Day Six transforms the series from "survival trip" into operation-and the last four days depend on what they uncover here.
Part of the 10-book series: Hoppy and His Friends in the Abandoned Village.
About the Series
Hoppy and His Friends in the Abandoned Village
Three friends go looking for a story-ten days, one abandoned village, and a clean promise to return with proof.
They don't find ghosts. They don't find magic. What they find is worse, because it can be real.
This series is survival horror built on human behavior: distance, silence, pressure, and the kind of fear that grows when something watches you without rushing. Every day is a new test with one clear goal-make it through the next stretch of hours without making the one mistake that can't be repaired. The village doesn't attack them. It waits. It confuses them. It rearranges small details until their own minds become the danger.
Hoppy is the calm rule-maker who turns panic into procedure. Evan is the methodical planner who believes in notes, patterns, and inventory. Miles is the loud-hearted creator who starts the trip hungry for adventure-and slowly becomes the emotional mirror of the reader as excitement fractures into dread. Together, they learn a brutal truth: you don't survive by being brave. You survive by being disciplined, by paying attention, and by accepting that every solution has a cost.
What makes this story terrifying is not what appears in the dark-but what changes while they blink. A knot tied differently. A door that wasn't open. A signal that should not exist. A footprint where no one should have walked. Each day escalates with grounded cause-and-effect: less sleep, fewer resources, colder nights, and rising conflict inside the group. The threats are never cartoonish. Animals behave like animals. The environment behaves like an environment. And when the pressure peaks, the most dangerous thing is always the same-what fear pushes a person to do.
Every book delivers a complete "Day" with a satisfying ending and a sharp door left open to the next one. The promise stays consistent: realistic tension, tight pacing, short hard dialogue, sensory immersion, and consequences that follow them like footprints they can't erase.
If you enjoy stories where horror comes from realism, psychology, and survival decisions under pressure-welcome to the village.
You won't be asked to believe in the impossible.
You'll be asked to believe in what people can do.