Leviathan
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Completed, First published Mar 02, 2026

The salt-stained timbers groan with the weight of a dying world. Hobbes doesn't offer salvation, only the cold calculus of decay. This is a sea steeped in black ichor, mirroring the rot within the ship's belly—and within the hearts of men. Fog clings to the masts like spectral shrouds, obscuring not just the horizon, but the very line between predator and prey. Each wave crests with the memory of drowned things, their silent screams swallowed by the leviathan's shadow. The vessel isn’t merely adrift on water, but on the fracturing currents of reason itself. Every splintered plank, every rusted chain, whispers of a contract broken, a dominion forfeited. The air hangs thick with the tang of brine and the coppery stench of ambition turned to dust. It is a voyage not to new lands, but deeper into the abyss—where the only law is the hunger that gnaws at the hull, and the only god is the monstrous thing that circles below, waiting to claim what remains. The darkness isn't merely around you; it’s *in* you, feeding on the brittle remnants of hope. This is not a story of escape, but of becoming another tooth in the leviathan’s jaw.
Copyright: Public Domain
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20 Part
A creeping dread clings to the salt-laced air of Blackwood Isle, where the crumbling manor of the Virgins stands sentinel against a bruised, perpetual twilight. Old Man Hemlock, the last of the island’s keepers, speaks in whispers of eleven daughters swallowed by the sea, each vanishing on her wedding night. They say the manor demands a bride—a virgin, untouched—to feed the ravenous hunger of its stone foundations. The latest ward, Elara, arrives not as a willing sacrifice, but a desperate castaway fleeing a mainland shame. But Blackwood Isle offers no true refuge, only a slow, suffocating unraveling. Shadows twist into the shapes of drowned girls in the manor’s echoing halls. The scent of brine and decay clings to every breath, and the rhythmic crash of waves against the cliffs feels less like a natural rhythm than a heartbeat counting down to Elara’s own watery demise. Each night, the manor’s hunger swells, manifesting as phantom touches, icy currents, and the haunting scent of lilies. The portraits of the lost Virgins seem to watch Elara with vacant, accusatory eyes, their painted smiles promising not salvation, but an endless descent into the cold embrace of the sea. Is Elara fleeing a sin, or walking willingly into the jaws of Blackwood’s ancient, monstrous appetite? The truth, like the Isle itself, is shrouded in a fog of salt and sorrow, promising a chilling revelation born of salt-stained lace and the ghosts of forgotten vows.