But you cannot escape something that lives in the walls.
“Do you want to see a miracle?” the voice asked.
“Soon.”
“I will break you first. Then I will take the girl.”
Lorraine stood in the doorway, trembling. Her sight had opened fully now. She saw the truth: Bill Wilkins was just the bait. The real predator was a demon of mockery. It had attached itself to the house decades ago, feeding on grief. It had no name, no form—only a voice. And that voice whispered directly into her mind: The.conjuring.2
Ed ran downstairs. He saw Janet suspended, her nightgown floating in still air. He grabbed her legs and pulled her down, praying the entire time. She collapsed into his arms, sobbing, human again. For a moment, the house was silent.
The battle lasted three more nights. Janet wrote backward in Latin on the walls. A chair folded itself into a perfect origami of splinters. Ed’s tape recorder captured a voice that said, “My name is Legion,” before melting the internal wires. But you cannot escape something that lives in the walls
Across the Atlantic, in a modest home in Georgia, a chain-smoking demonologist named Ed Warren woke from a nightmare. He had seen a crooked house and a little girl floating above a bed. Beside him, his wife Lorraine—a clairvoyant whose sight had shown her the face of a demon in a doll named Annabelle—pressed her cold fingers to his chest.