Lluvia y refugio
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Ongoing, First published May 23, 2026

La historia se abre a una joven, Erin, que encuentra refugio inesperado tanto de una tormenta literal como de las consecuencias del rechazo familiar después de salir. Inicialmente a la deriva y vulnerable, el camino de Erin se cruza con Billie Eilish, que ofrece no solo refugio sino un paisaje emocional complejo. Estos capítulos rastrean los intentos de Erin de navegar por la delicada aceptación junto con las ansiedades sobre la falta de vivienda y ocultar su angustia a Billie y su familia..
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39 Part
A salt-laced dread clings to the rigging of the *Walhalla*, a phantom ship adrift in a sea of simmering betrayals. Verne doesn’t merely chart a voyage, he maps the rot within men’s hearts. The sun bleeds crimson across the decks as young Dick Sands, thrust into command by a cruel twist of fate, finds himself not master of his vessel, but puppet of a conspiracy woven in the humid shadows of colonial ports. Each wave whispers of mutiny, each horizon hides a lurking threat – not from storms or pirates, but from the elegant poison of civilized deceit. The narrative unfurls like a fever dream, drenched in the ochre dust of forgotten African kingdoms and the sickly sweet perfume of smuggled opiums. The air hangs thick with the stench of desperation, of fortunes gambled on the backs of slaves, of lives bartered for a handful of glittering coins. Every act of bravery is shadowed by the gnawing suspicion of a trap, every rescue tainted by the knowledge of a hidden hand pulling the strings. This is not adventure; it is a slow unraveling, a descent into a darkness where the boundaries of loyalty and betrayal blur until they vanish entirely. The reader is left adrift alongside Sands, choking on the salt spray of paranoia, wondering if the boy captain commands his fate, or merely sails toward the inevitable wreck of his soul. The islands themselves seem to mourn, shrouded in mists that conceal not just land, but the ghosts of those consumed by avarice and despair.
59 Part
A creeping fog clings to the ancestral halls of Blandings Castle, not of mist, but of expectation – expectation of scandal, of clandestine engagements, of fortunes lost and won on the whims of porcine deities. The air hangs thick with the scent of prize-winning swine, damp earth, and the simmering discontent of a household teetering on the brink of absurdity. This is a world where shadows stretch long and lean, cast by the imposing figures of Galahad Payn, Lord Blandings, and his perpetually exasperated secretary, Beach. Within this suffocating atmosphere of rural decay, a phantom of indolence drifts: Psmith, a gentleman of exquisite apathy, whose arrival unravels the threads of propriety with a languid smile. He is an observer, a catalyst, a master of the subtly disruptive. His influence seeps into the castle's very stones, stirring up the dust of forgotten grievances and the embers of reckless ambition. The narrative unfolds not as a straightforward progression, but as a slow unraveling – a tapestry of whispered plots, stolen glances, and the unnerving stillness of long afternoons. Every room breathes with the weight of inherited secrets, every garden path conceals a hidden tryst. A sense of looming, mischievous chaos pervades, threatening to engulf the rigid order of Blandings in a tide of good-natured, utterly ruinous delight. The very estate feels haunted by the possibility of a perfectly executed, exquisitely pointless rebellion. It’s a darkness lit by the wry, cynical brilliance of Psmith’s knowing gaze.