The most dangerous man in the house is the one who takes care of it.
The Bellamys have everything: old money, a private care empire, and a house that never raises its voice.
What they do not have is peace.
Margaret Bellamy is dying by inches. Her family has turned her illness into etiquette, routine, and brand protection. Then Hank Bell arrives: precise, discreet, devoted. The kind of caregiver who knows what a body needs before it asks.
Within months, the Bellamys cannot imagine the house without him.
They should have tried.
Because Hank listens. To everything. A daughter who should disappear. A son who must not become a scandal. A wife who knows too much. A family that mistakes silence for dignity.
Hank does not understand exaggeration. He understands need.
And he has never, in his whole life, left a need unmet.
Raw Hunger is a slow, precise psychological horror about care as a language of hunger and a family that taught the monster every word.









