Wet Magic
  • 103
  • 0
  • 14
  • Reads 103
  • 0
  • Part 14
Completed, First published Mar 02, 2026

A creeping dampness clings to the crumbling coast of Cornwall, mirroring the rot within the ancient manor house of Blackwood. Old Man Truscott’s legacy isn’t gold or jewels, but a chilling inheritance: a sea-soaked spellbook bound in kelp-stained leather, promising power born of the tide’s cold embrace. The children, orphaned and restless, stumble upon a world where the line between dream and brine blurs, where drowned things whisper secrets in the echoing hallways. Fog hangs heavy, smelling of salt and something older, something *waiting*. Each spell cast with a dripping wand draws the manor deeper into the sea’s shadow, unleashing forgotten currents and creatures from the watery depths. A suffocating dread settles with the perpetual drizzle, as the children discover their magic isn’t merely wet, but *hungry* – demanding sacrifice, and twisting innocence into something pale and glistening with the ocean’s hunger. The house breathes with the tide, and soon, it will swallow them whole.
Copyright: Public Domain
This license allows anyone to use your story for any purpose, including printing, selling, or adapting it into a film freely.
Recommended for you
12 Part
A creeping dread clings to the Scottish Highlands, a suffocating weight born not of stone and shadow, but of ambition and icy calculation. Buchan doesn’t offer roaring castles or spectral apparitions, but a far more insidious haunting – the slow, deliberate erosion of a man’s soul within the brutal architecture of his own making. The estate of Aird’s Glen isn’t merely a house, but a fortress of will, built upon a foundation of stolen secrets and shadowed deeds. The air within its walls is thick with the scent of peat smoke and the ghosts of fortunes won and lives broken. It’s a place where the very landscape seems to conspire to conceal, and the silence holds a tremor of violence barely contained. Every polished surface, every perfectly aligned stone, reflects a ruthlessness that chills the bone. The narrative doesn’t rush towards a climax, but coils like a viper in the darkness, tightening with each whispered conversation, each carefully placed rumour. The true horror isn’t what is *in* the Powerhouse, but what it *becomes* – a monument to the terrifying elegance of a man who dares to play God amongst the heather and the rain. The oppressive isolation isn't merely geographical, but a suffocating imprisonment within a mind determined to conquer not just land, but the very spirit of the glen itself. It’s a story where the landscape itself is a witness to sin, and the wind carries the lament of those consumed by its ambition.