Medo na Escola
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Ongoing, First published May 12, 2026

A narrativa acompanha os primeiros dias de um estudante na escola, onde a rotina e as regras rígidas logo se transformam em um medo crescente da autoridade. A busca por aprovação em sala de aula, recompensada com pequenos tokens, convive com a constante cobrança e a sombra da inadequação. Conforme a ansiedade aumenta, um confronto com o professor Baldi revela um ciclo de decepção e arrependimento, deixando o aluno à mercê da vergonha. A história explora a dinâmica complexa entre aluno e professor, e o peso das expectativas.
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27 Part
The Welsh borderlands breathe with a chill older than stone, clinging to the shadowed valleys where the Solent family—a lineage steeped in lunar madness and the scent of peat—holds dominion. This is a land where the wolf howls not just in the wilderness, but within the very blood of men, a primal yearning mirrored in the restless tides of the Solent’s inheritance. A web of obsessions—for the land, for the spectral echoes of ancestors, for the forbidden bloom of passion—tightens around the young, impulsive Robert Solent. He is drawn into a vortex of ancestral dreams and the suffocating weight of his mother’s decaying grandeur. The narrative unravels like a fog-wreathed moor, steeped in the claustrophobic intensity of the Solent household. Every room whispers with the past; every glance carries the weight of inherited madness. The air is thick with the scent of decay, the rustle of secrets in long corridors, and the unnerving stillness of a world where the boundary between the living and the dead is porous, worn thin by generations of ritual and grief. Robert’s awakening is not a blossoming, but an exposure—to the raw, unbridled forces of nature, to the suffocating embrace of his mother’s grief, and to a darkness that stirs within him, mirroring the wild, untamed landscapes he is bound to inherit. The story coils inward, suffocating in its own verdant, shadowed depths, a haunting meditation on the inheritance of obsession and the wolf-hunger that gnaws at the heart of the Solent line.
40 Part
Dust motes dance in the perpetual twilight of a forgotten monastery clinging to the precipice of the Eastern mountains. The air hangs thick with the scent of incense and decay, a miasma of regret clinging to the stone walls. This is a tale not of heroes, but of shadows—the creeping doubt that gnaws at the heart of a hermit saint, Barlaam, and the restless yearning of Ioasaph, a prince turned penitent. The narrative unfolds as a slow unraveling, a descent into the labyrinth of the soul. Each chapter is a stone rolled away from a crypt, revealing not flesh and bone, but the fragile architecture of belief. Sunlight feels like a violation here, exposing the rot beneath the gilded icons. The prose is a whisper of wind through skeletal branches, laced with the chill of unyielding stone. It breathes with the claustrophobia of caves carved into the living rock, where the echoes of Ioasaph’s questions—questions that fracture faith—reverberate for centuries. This is a story steeped in the melancholy of conversion, the weight of renunciation. It's a landscape of barren faith where the only true company is the gnawing emptiness that blooms within the hollowed shell of a life surrendered to the void. The narrative isn’t driven by plot, but by the insidious erosion of certainty, leaving behind a landscape of bone-white despair. The final revelation, like the last breath of a dying candle, offers not light, but the chilling realization of a darkness that dwells within us all.