The Haunted Hotel
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Completed, First published Mar 02, 2026

A suffocating dread clings to the Pall Mall Hotel, a labyrinth of shadowed corridors and echoing chambers where the past refuses to stay buried. Collins weaves a narrative steeped in the scent of decay and hushed confessions, a place where the spectral residue of broken hearts and desperate schemes permeates the very stonework. Guests arrive seeking oblivion, unaware they are drawn into a web of inherited sorrow, each room a reliquary holding fragments of forgotten tragedies. The air itself seems to thicken with unspoken guilt, the opulent furnishings becoming morbid witnesses to clandestine meetings and veiled betrayals. A creeping unease settles over every page, fueled by flickering gaslight and the unnerving stillness of long-abandoned suites. The hotel isn’t merely haunted by ghosts; it *is* a haunting, a slow, deliberate unraveling of lives consumed by obsession and shadowed by the weight of a past that demands to be remembered – or to drag the living down into its cold, suffocating embrace. The narrative unfolds like a slow poison, dripping with suspicion and the chilling realization that within these gilded walls, every smile masks a secret, every silence a carefully guarded lie.
Copyright: Public Domain
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6 Part
A suffocating dread clings to the cobbled streets of a London steeped in perpetual twilight. The air itself seems to thicken with the phosphorescent haze emanating from the titular cloud—a malevolent entity born of alchemical hubris and cosmic decay. Within its violet embrace, reality fractures, dissolving the boundaries between the sane and the delirious. Our protagonist, a man haunted by spectral echoes and a creeping sense of unreality, finds himself drawn into a labyrinthine pursuit of the cloud’s creator, a figure shrouded in whispers of blasphemous science and forbidden rites. Each shadowed alleyway pulses with a subtle, sickening vitality, the city’s underbelly mirroring the cloud’s insidious growth. The narrative unravels not as a linear chase, but as a descent into a fever-dream logic, where logic itself dissolves into the purple efflorescence. Rooms twist into impossible geometries, faces morph into grotesque masks, and the very stones beneath your feet seem to breathe with a cold, expectant hunger. The cloud isn’t merely seen, it’s *felt*—a pressure on the temples, a tremor in the lungs, a chilling awareness of something vast and ancient stirring just beyond the veil of perception. It seeps into the minds of those it touches, breeding paranoia, mania, and ultimately, a terrifying acquiescence to its alien will. The story doesn’t offer escape, but a spiraling immersion into the heart of a darkness that threatens to consume not just London, but the very foundations of reason itself.