In a remote Sumatran village where the fog arrives before dusk and the bells toll warnings no one dares ignore, the rule is simple: Never return after sunset.When journalist Arvin Kumar travels to Merapi to investigate a series of disappearances tied to an ancient village curfew, he expects superstition, not ritual sacrifice, whispered names, and mirrors that don't reflect the living. But Merapi is more than a village, it's a story that remembers who forgets it.The locals speak of the Penjaga, the guardian spirit fed through silence and fear. Those who break the rules vanish without a trace, unless their names are remembered. When Arvin digs deeper into the truth, he uncovers a buried horror: it was never the fog they needed to fear... it was the forgotten.Now, with the boundary between memory and myth dissolving, Arvin must decide, he will run from the story or become part of it.A chilling Indonesian folk horror about what we bury to surviveAnd what comes back when we forget?