Wendy Adams is barely holding her life together. Fired from her job, stretched thin by single motherhood, and haunted by a childhood she refuses to remember clearly, she has learned how to survive by calling the impossible a lie. Neverland was only a story. Peter Pan was never real. Growing up meant leaving all of that behind.
Then her teenage daughter, Angie, vanishes.
When Wendy is forced back into Neverland to find her, she discovers a realm far darker than the fairy tale she once believed in. This Neverland is a beautiful, decaying place that feeds on belief and corrodes everything it touches. Peter Pan is no symbol of freedom, but a dangerously manipulative figure who thrives on control and devotion. The Lost Boys linger as hollow echoes of stolen childhoods. Mermaids haunt the waters as something feral and unforgiving. Nothing here is safe, and nothing wants to let go.
To survive, Wendy must make uneasy alliances with Neverland's most feared inhabitants: pirates who live on the edge of extinction, hunted and vilified in a land that has already decided their role in the story. As Wendy searches for Angie, she is forced to confront not only the horrors of Neverland, but the fractures in her own life-the grief she buried, the truths she was told to forget, and the growing distance between herself and the daughter she loves but no longer fully understands.
What begins as a desperate rescue becomes a reckoning. Wendy's journey is not about reclaiming a childhood fantasy, but about facing it as an adult-acknowledging the damage it caused and choosing, finally, to grow beyond it. In a world that punishes change and glorifies eternal youth, Wendy must decide whether breaking the cycle is worth the cost.
A dark fairy tale retelling that blends fantasy and psychological horror, this novel explores motherhood, trauma, and the danger of escapism, asking what it truly means to grow up-and what we lose when we refuse to.