Crepúsculo em Paris
  • 31
  • 0
  • 17
  • Read 31
  • 0
  • Part 17
Ongoing, First published May 10, 2026

Em Paris, Harry e Louis encontram um ao outro em meio à beleza da cidade. Entre olhares roubados e encontros inesperados, uma conexão se desenvolve. Enquanto Harry se adapta à nova vida em uma floricultura, Louis enfrenta desafios familiares e o fim de um relacionamento. A história acompanha os passos hesitantes de dois homens que se descobrem em meio à luz e à sombra de Paris. Um romance sobre recomeços, a busca por um novo caminho e a descoberta de um amor inesperado.
Copyright: All Rights Reserved
No person is allowed to use, redistribute, or modify your work in any form without your explicit permission.
Recommended for you
48 Part
Dust clings to the sun-bleached plains, mirroring the grit that coats the heart of young Stella Farraday. This is a story not of grand romance, but of a slow, creeping suffocation within a landscape that promises freedom yet delivers only the stifling weight of expectation. The Australian bush, rendered not as a vibrant Eden, but as a vast, indifferent witness to a woman’s ambition. Every sun-cracked homestead, every whispered rumour carries the scent of decay – not of flesh, but of potential, of dreams left to wither under the relentless gaze of a society that deems brilliance a dangerous bloom in the female soil. A loneliness permeates the narrative, a chill that settles not in the weather, but in the silences between polite conversations, in the measured glances of men who see only duty fulfilled. Stella’s defiance isn’t a fiery rebellion, but a quiet erosion of the self, a chipping away at the stone of convention until only the raw, exposed nerve of her intellect remains. The brilliance itself feels less like a beacon and more like a fever – a consuming heat that isolates her within a gilded cage of her own making. The narrative unfolds like a slow burn, the embers of her passion fanned by the harsh winds of practicality. There's a sense of being watched, not by malicious intent, but by the unforgiving judgement of a world that can’t comprehend a woman daring to choose herself over the prescribed roles. It’s a ghost story of a life unlived, haunting the reader with the question of what blooms in the darkness when a brilliant mind is denied the sun.
16 Part
From shadowed fjords and ice-haunted coasts rises a tale of kings and sorcery steeped in the ancient North. Eddison’s *Styrbiorn the Strong* breathes with the chill of forgotten gods and the clang of steel on frost-rimed shields. A land gripped by the creeping dread of the Nerathi—a race of spectral warriors born from the blackest winters—awaits a champion. Styrbiorn, a giant of a man, forged in the crucible of brutal winters and haunted by ancestral echoes, is that answer. But this is not a simple saga of heroism. The very stones of the North weep with the weight of a dying age, and Eddison’s prose weaves a tapestry of decaying grandeur. Palaces crumble beneath the weight of encroaching ice, while the halls of kings echo with the whispers of ambition and betrayal. A creeping darkness seeps from the desolate bogs, a sickness of the soul mirroring the decay of the land. The air is thick with the scent of brine, woodsmoke, and something older—something woven from the runes carved into glacial ice. Each clash of arms, each whispered curse, feels etched in the very bedrock of the world. *Styrbiorn* is a descent into a twilight world where honor is measured in blood and shadows hold the keys to both salvation and oblivion. It is a world where the line between the living and the dead is blurred by the perpetual twilight of the North, and where even victory tastes of ash and regret. A slow, deliberate unraveling of light, consumed by the encroaching darkness.