The Adventures of Pinocchio
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Completed, First published Mar 02, 2026

Beneath a sky perpetually bruised plum-color, a wood carved with shadows of regret, this is not a tale of simple boyhood, but of a creature born of splinters and silence. The scent of sawdust and brine clings to every page, a melancholic perfume rising from the coastal towns where Pinocchio’s limbs stumble into being. Each lie he utters is not merely deception, but a splinter lodging deeper within his wood, twisting his form into grotesque parodies of life. The puppet’s journey is a descent into a labyrinth of avarice and regret, where every gilded promise is laced with tar and every kindly face conceals a hunger for the boy’s impossible currency. The puppet theater itself breathes with a suffocating claustrophobia, its velvet curtains swallowing light and hope. The sea, a ravenous maw, laps at the shores of morality, pulling Pinocchio towards abyssal depths. Transformation is not reward, but a grotesque blooming—first a donkey’s stubborn grief, then a scaled, suffocating rebirth. The Blue Fairy is a phantom of fragile porcelain, her kindness a brittle, icy reprieve. The world is stitched together with threads of desperation, where a boy’s hunger is mirrored by the hollow gnawing within the heart of Geppetto, and where every step forward echoes with the cracking of wood, the inevitable splintering of innocence. It is a story not of becoming human, but of being irrevocably, beautifully *made* of sorrow.
Copyright: Public Domain
This license allows anyone to use your story for any purpose, including printing, selling, or adapting it into a film freely.
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117 Part
A perpetual twilight clings to Blackwood Grange, mirroring the shadowed corners of Lady Eleanor’s heart. Married to the infamous Lord Tony, a man whispered to have dealings with shadows and debts owed in crimson, she finds herself a gilded cage within his ancestral estate. The air hangs thick with the scent of decay – not just of crumbling stone and overgrown gardens, but of promises broken and lives forfeit. Each echoing footstep in the vast, labyrinthine halls hints at a history of betrayal, while the portraits lining the gallery seem to watch Eleanor’s descent into a chilling awareness of her husband’s true nature. A creeping dread permeates every room, woven into the very fabric of the house; a dread born not of ghostly apparitions, but of the suffocating weight of secrets held too long. The moorland surrounding Blackwood Grange breathes with a cold, hungry wind, carrying fragments of rumors and the cries of those lost to Lord Tony’s machinations. Eleanor is trapped within a suffocating elegance, where every smile feels like a calculated threat and every shadow a potential witness to her unraveling. The narrative unfolds like a slow poison, drawing the reader into a suffocating atmosphere of suspicion, where love is measured in bartered favors and loyalty is purchased with blood. The very stones of Blackwood Grange seem to weep with the despair of those who dared to cross Lord Tony’s path, and Eleanor’s fate hangs precariously balanced upon a single, unraveling thread of hope.
55 Part
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