Agua fría, Purple Goo
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Ongoing, First published May 24, 2026

Esta novela se abre a un mundo ensombrecido por intensas pesadillas y conexiones inesperadas. La narrativa sigue la lucha de un personaje con sueños aterradores y sofocantes, y la presencia reconfortante de Bucky Barnes mientras se enfrenta a ellos. En otros lugares, un maestro redescubre la alegría en la música, cautivando a un joven Peter Parker con un talento oculto..
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20 Part
A creeping dread clings to the stone of Fontainebleau, where whispers of fallen dynasties and spectral courts haunt the shadowed galleries. This is a story exhaled from the very dust of France, a slow poison of memory and ambition. The Fifth Queen, a phantom born of regicide and desperate lineage, is not sought amongst the living, but within the decaying grandeur of a palace built upon secrets. Each gilded room breathes with the weight of betrayals, each tapestry unravels a legacy of blood and stolen crowns. The narrative is a descent into fractured histories, a labyrinth of unreliable accounts and echoing obsessions. A man, driven by a fevered quest to legitimize his lineage, unravels not glory, but a rot of the soul. The air is thick with the scent of lilies and decay, the chill of marble floors mirroring the icy detachment of those who claim the throne. It is a tale of possession—not of kingdoms, but of minds. The phantom queen’s influence seeps into the present, twisting loyalties and blurring the lines between reality and the fevered dreams of a man consumed by his own ancestry. The castle itself is a character, a suffocating womb of stone and shadow where the past doesn’t merely linger, but *breathes*—a suffocating, glacial presence that promises to drown all those who dare to seek its secrets within its cold embrace. A darkness, not of the supernatural, but of something far more human and insidious, waits within the ornate chambers.
25 Part
The river breathes in shadow. A slow, glacial unraveling of grief clings to the banks where the village of Älvborg surrenders to the encroaching mire. Old Man Hemlock, they say, drowned his bride in these currents – or perhaps the river *became* her grief, drawing her down into the silt and weeping willows. Now, decades later, a silence heavier than the fog settles with each passing autumn. It isn’t a place for remembering; it’s a place where memory itself dissolves into the water’s cold embrace. The narrative drifts like wreckage, fragments of lives snagged on submerged roots. A daughter returning to settle her father’s affairs finds the house filled not with absence, but with the residue of his obsession. He'd charted the river’s moods, cataloging the debris, the whispers carried on the tide. Each item pulled from the water feels less like discovery and more like an exhumation. The air tastes of decay and damp earth. The scent of bog iron and something older, something clinging to the stones beneath the water. Every reflection is distorted, mirroring not the world above but the dark, churning heart beneath. The further downstream one travels, the less certain the land is, the more insistent the river’s claim. It isn't merely a journey *along* the water, but *into* it – a descent into a past that refuses to stay buried, a current that pulls at the soul until it too is lost to the depths. The house itself seems to exhale the river’s chill, and those who linger too long find themselves shadowed by the same spectral currents that claimed Hemlock’s bride. The river isn't just a setting; it's an entity, a hunger, and it’s waiting to collect what’s left to be taken.