The Prince
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Completed, First published Mar 02, 2026

Dust motes dance in the perpetual twilight of shadowed corridors, mirroring the machinations within. A chill, not of stone but of ambition, clings to every surface. This is not a tale of crowns won and kingdoms secured through valor, but of a creeping darkness blossoming within a man’s heart. The scent of iron and old parchment hangs heavy, laced with the subtle rot of decaying morality. Every calculated step echoes in chambers built on deceit, and the whispers of advisors coil like vipers in the ear. The Prince is a study in fracture – a soul unraveling as it grasps power, each victory stained with the crimson of broken oaths and silenced pleas. It’s a landscape of elegant cruelty, where the very air tastes of compromise, and the weight of a nation rests on the fractured spine of a single, ruthless will. Shadows lengthen not from the setting sun, but from the choices made within the heart of a man who understands that to rule, one must become the monster they hunt. The palace itself breathes with the suffocating secrets of its master, a mausoleum of innocence paved with the skulls of the naive.
Copyright: Public Domain
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33 Part
Beneath a veil of perpetual twilight, where ancient forests breathe secrets into the stone of crumbling castles, lies a kingdom shadowed by forgotten paths and the chittering hunger of goblin kind. This is not a tale of valiant knights and gleaming steel, but one of hearth-lit wonder and creeping dread. A princess, luminous and innocent, wanders these shadowed realms guided by a nurse’s lore of hidden doors and the watchful gaze of unseen protectors. Yet, the earth itself remembers the goblins' claim, their greed a festering wound in the mountain’s heart. The air hangs thick with the scent of damp earth and decaying leaves, echoing with the rhythmic thump of goblin hammers and the whispers of a world just beyond the threshold of waking dreams. Every shadow stretches a little longer, every stone seems to watch with cold, ancient eyes. A descent into a labyrinth of winding tunnels, where the very rock weeps with the memory of forgotten miners and the glint of goblin treasure masks a deeper, more insidious hunger. This is a story woven with the threads of childhood wonder, but laced with the chilling awareness of something ancient and malevolent stirring beneath the soil. It is a world where kindness and courage become the brightest lanterns against a darkness that claws at the edges of reality, where the smallest act of faith can illuminate the path to salvation, or lead the unwary soul into the cold, unyielding embrace of the goblin’s lair. A creeping unease settles upon the reader as they journey alongside the princess, drawn into a realm where the boundary between dream and nightmare dissolves with every echoing step.
32 Part
Dust motes dance in perpetual twilight within the crumbling manor of Blackwood, a shadow clinging to the Yorkshire moors. Old Man Hemlock, a recluse haunted by whispers of forgotten sins, claims the earth itself has shuddered – not from earthquake or war, but from a grief so ancient it cracks the very foundations of reality. The tremors coincide with the arrival of young Alistair, a scholar driven by feverish ambition to unearth Blackwood’s lineage. He finds not history, but echoes – a lineage stained by ritual, by bargains struck with something cold and vast beneath the peat bogs. The air thickens with the scent of damp earth and decaying roses, each room a sepulchre echoing with the laughter of children long dead. Alistair’s investigations are shadowed by the silent, watchful housekeeper, a woman whose face is etched with a sorrow that predates the manor itself. As the world *does* shake – subtly, sickeningly – a creeping dread seizes the village. Livestock vanish, shadows lengthen beyond reason, and the villagers speak of a stone circle awakened by Hemlock’s lamentations. The truth, when it surfaces, is less a revelation than an unraveling. Blackwood isn’t merely built upon ancient ground; it *is* the wound in the world, a place where the veil thins and the hunger of the old gods stirs. The tremors aren’t the earth’s agony, but the pulse of something vast and terrible rising from the depths, demanding to be remembered, to be *felt* once more. Alistair, caught in its orbit, must choose between oblivion and becoming another stone in the edifice of its dreadful, silent reign.