Let me check Re:Vision's website. If the user has an RJ number or partial title, they might search for it there. Since I can't access the internet, I'll have to rely on existing knowledge. Alternatively, the user might have misspelled the title. For example, maybe it's "Kao and the haunted house" or another similar title.

I don't recall a specific visual novel called exactly "Kaori and the haunted house", but there might be a game with a similar title. Sometimes the titles get translated or abbreviated. Let me check some databases or fan forums. Maybe searching for "Kaori haunted house visual novel" on Google or in visual novel communities.

Another angle: maybe the user is looking for an English fan translation of a Japanese visual novel that originally isn't in English, and they want an RJ link for it. But RJ1 is specific to Re:Vision, which hosts doujin works. So if there's an official English version, it might not be on that site. Unofficial translations might be shared elsewhere, like through torrents or specific fan sites. However, sharing those links might violate copyright laws, so I need to be cautious.

The user is asking for an RJ1 link. RJ1 is a category on Re:Vision (now Re:Vision Web), which is a Japanese platform for distributing doujin (self-published) works, often in PDF format. RJ numbers are like identifiers for specific works there. So they probably want a link to download or view the English version as an RJ1 file.

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