Green Meadow Stories
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Completed, First published Mar 02, 2026

A creeping mist hangs over the meadow, not of dew, but of forgotten things. Burgess doesn’t offer sunshine and chirp, but a slow unraveling of twilight hours where the rustle in the grass isn’t just a rabbit’s nose, but a breath held too long by something unseen. These are tales whispered by the shadows stretching from the ancient oaks, stories of creatures whose eyes gleam with a wildness that isn’t quite natural. The meadow breathes with a melancholic pulse; a place where the boundary between the living world and the husks of memory dissolves. Each story is a fragment of bone-white moonlight filtering through the reeds, revealing glimpses of a world held together by cobwebs and the fading scent of damp earth. It's a world where the simplest creature can carry a sorrow older than the hills, and where silence isn’t peace, but the weight of something waiting to be remembered – or, perhaps, to reclaim what was lost. The sweetness of berries is laced with the taste of regret, and the songs of birds carry the echoes of promises broken in the long grass. It’s a green place, yes, but stained with the indigo of lingering grief, and the stories bloom not with color, but with a haunting, grey-tinged grace.
Copyright: Public Domain
This license allows anyone to use your story for any purpose, including printing, selling, or adapting it into a film freely.
Chapter List

141

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19 Part
The manor hums with static, a low throb beneath floorboards and within the chipped porcelain dolls that populate its shadowed halls. Old money clings to the Thayer estate like ivy, choking the life from the stone. Our protagonist, a woman named Iris, arrives as the “companion” to the reclusive Mr. Silas Blackwood—a man rumored to have grafted his grief onto the very architecture of the house, weaving it into the electrical wiring that now snakes through every room. But the house *feels*. It breathes with the rhythms of forgotten machines, whispers through copper filaments, and reflects Iris’s own loneliness in the flickering gas lamps. She soon discovers the wiring isn’t merely a means of illumination, but a conduit for Blackwood’s obsessions—a network of surveillance, of control, and of a love so fractured it’s been reassembled into something cold and metallic. The air tastes of ozone and dust. Every creak of the floorboards feels like a watched step. Iris finds herself increasingly drawn to the hidden rooms where Blackwood conducts his experiments—rooms filled with humming devices, spools of wire, and the scent of burnt circuitry. She begins to suspect the manor isn’t protecting Blackwood from the world, but *from* himself, and that Iris, wired into his strange affection, is becoming another layer in his increasingly fragile construction. The further she delves into the house’s heart, the more she realizes this isn’t a love story, but a parasitic entanglement with a man who has made himself a ghost within his own machine.
25 Part
A creeping dread clings to the chalk-white cliffs of the English coast, mirrored in the fractured psyche of Shagpat. This is a novel of suffocating isolation, of a man bound by a self-imposed exile, his very identity dissolving into the sea mist that swallows his ancestral home. The narrative unfolds not as a progression, but as a slow unraveling, a descent into the labyrinthine corridors of a mind fractured by pride and the weight of inherited expectation. The air is thick with unspoken histories, with the ghostly echoes of Shagpat’s forefathers. Every stone, every shadowed doorway breathes with the suffocating legacy of his lineage. A suffocating claustrophobia pervades the narrative, born not of physical constraint but of a spiritual paralysis. The world outside – the bustling cities, the promises of love – feels distant, unreal, accessible only through the warped lens of Shagpat’s decaying inner world. The novel is steeped in a melancholic beauty, a slow burn of longing and regret. It is a landscape of muted colours, of perpetual twilight, where the boundaries between reality and hallucination blur. A sense of impending doom hangs heavy, not through dramatic plot twists, but through the inexorable erosion of a soul. The reader is immersed in the suffocating silence, the oppressive stillness, and the chilling realization that Shagpat’s true prison is not a place, but a state of being. It is a study in the decay of will, the slow, agonizing dissolution of a man into the very fabric of his desolate inheritance.
37 Part
The air hangs thick with the scent of decaying silver and the dust of forgotten ambitions. A shadow stretches from the Cordillera, not of mountains, but of men consumed by avarice. Here, in the heart of a republic built on the bones of empires, a single name—Nostromo—becomes a phantom currency, a legend whispered in the fevered dreams of those who seek to claim a fortune wrested from the earth. But the silver, like a dark god, demands a reckoning. The jungle breathes with betrayal, and the hacienda walls echo with the hollow promises of loyalty. A slow rot creeps through the lives of those entangled in its claim: a captain adrift in a sea of moral compromise, a merchant haunted by the specter of loss, a woman caught between the fervor of revolution and the cold grip of her own desires. Each dawn bleeds into a landscape of simmering unrest, where the lines between honor and desperation blur into indistinguishable shades of grey. The weight of the silver, the weight of a nation’s birth, crushes beneath a suffocating heat. It is a story not of triumph, but of the erosion of faith, of how easily a man, even one of singular strength, can be undone by the very forces he seeks to command. The silence between the crumbling stones holds the screams of the dispossessed, the ghosts of a fortune bought with blood. A darkness rises from the depths of the mines, not just of ore, but of the human heart, and the jungle itself seems to mourn the fall of innocence into the abyss of greed.